Full disclosure: I am a huge Daniel Ricciardo fan, love Mick Schumacher and adopted Oscar Piastri while he was still in F3 so...episodes 4-6 were like being put through the emotional wringer as all three of these guys get put through it.
If Gene Haas and Gunther Steiner thought episode 4 was going to show them in a good light and make it look like their decision to drop Mick Schumacher was justified...they're in for a rude awakening. Mick, who wasn't in season 4, comes across as sweet, intelligent, thoughtful, grounded, and well aware of the pressure on his shoulders and the size of the shadow he walks in; Haas and Steiner, in contrast, come across as narcissistic, incompetent bullies who should never have hired a young driver because they're not prepared to accept the mistakes and issues that sometimes happen. The episode of course does not shy away from hitting us in the feelings with the talk about his father, and his mother coming on the radio to tell him how proud she is when he scores his first points is an absolute tear-jerker because you know who it should have been...but if ever there was speculation that Steiner signed Mick because of his last name and then expected him to be his father, this episode confirms it.
Otmar Szafnauer, the team principal at Alpine, should be nicknamed Houdini for how Netflix lets him get away with the colossal mismanagement and incompetence at Alpine that led to them losing both Fernando Alonso and Oscar Piastri. Alpine paints both of them as disloyal traitors who broke contracts and agreements, when the problem was actually that Alpine didn't actually offer either a contract for 2023. By the time Alonso announced he was leaving, Oscar already had another contract. But Netflix don't call this out, and let Otmar completely get away with it. This is REALLY BAD for Oscar because he's a rookie this year and this is the media image he now has.
And then finally there's the parts of the episode that talk about Daniel. Poor Daniel and his endless struggle with that useless tractor McLaren. Of course, problems he faces with the car, the terrible strategies he's put on, and the myriad of team orders issued to him are totally ignored by the series; they opt to swallow Zak Brown's slimy little story hook, line and sinker, that everything that went wrong at McLaren is Daniel's fault, that he lost it, that he's slow now. And I know he isn't.
Ugh. I'm so upset and angry.