THE QUALITY OF LIFE Hmm... now TNG's repeating itself. "The Quality Of Life" had a title reminiscent of "The Cost Of Living", a guest star reminiscent of Leah Brahms from "Booby Trap" and "Galaxy's Child", and a plot that seemed to have been drawn from "Evolution". The guest star, Dr. Farallon, seemed to be as irritable as Brahms was in "Galaxy's Child", though her personality seemed to flip-flop all over the place at times, from being pleasant to being annoyed. Which might have worked except that I was unimpressed with the actress playing her. She seemed to be reading her lines from a prompter, and didn't really put much passion into the character. At least, none that I could really believe in. All of which really hurt the episode because her character was so pivotal to the events being handled. On the other end, we've seen all this "tools evolving into living beings" stuff before, and it's not new here. In fact, really, NONE of it is new here. We pretty much saw ALL of the relevant "are they or aren't they alive?" stuff in "Home Soil" and "Evolution", so the plot really seemed to be rote. Which left the Data aspect of the story as the only really new and interesting piece of the story. And, well, frankly, it could have been better. This struck me as one of Spiner's more lackluster performances, and his debate with Riker seemed a little too pat (to say nothing of the solution being a little too obvious). Though I found it interesting that they decided even after saving the particle fountain not to use the exocomps as workers anymore. What if the exocomps *want* to be used as workers? After all, that's how they learn! A little more thought was needed there. Finally, the technobabble reached a plateau here where I just could deal with all the pseudoscience being spewed during the first twenty minutes. Mercy, please! I actually thought that the best bit in the episode was the opening card game, where Dr. Crusher had one of her best character bits in some time. (She really is quite good at playing the imp, isn't she?) Overall, this episode really was nothing new, and so it leaves me without a whole lot to say. We've seen it all before, really. Even Data's concern about the exocomps has been shown to some degree in "The Measure Of A Man" and "The Offspring". It's not really an awful story, but it doesn't give me much to jump up and down about. Just a straight science/ethics story. This might have been a more interesting episode back in the first or second season. Here in the sixth, it's just "ho-hum; not this *again*?" Grade: C+ SEASON SIX AT A GLANCE: Time's Arrow II: B- Realm Of Fear: C Man Of The People: C Relics: B+ Schisms: B- True Q: D- Rascals: D+ A Fistful Of Datas: B The Quality Of Life: C+ --- Total Points: 20 Season Average: 2.222 (C+) (Rise of 0.014 from last episode)