In reply to barefootskater5000 :
I agree with you. I think the tinkers were done very well also, probably the best part of the show. The rest of your points, I agree with. In a series that's already very diverse, they decided to go overboard, and I think it definitely goes into the realms of pandering.
Here's one of the things that drove me nuts: how the locals of Emond's Field were cast with actors from all different races. That's the exact opposite of the book, and making Emond's Field a multi-cultural place is problematic for several reasons. First, it's pretty well established in the books that no new blood has gone into Emond's Field in centuries, so everyone has sort of homogenized into being white with brown hair and brown eyes--making it super multicultural just isn't realistic. Second, that monoculture is important, because there's ONE GUY in particular that just so happens to be half a foot taller than everyone else, and he's the only guy with red hair and gray eyes, and he sticks out like a sore thumb, at least in the books. In the show, it becomes a moot point. Everyone looks different, so it doesn't matter than the one main character looks different.
Nynaeve has turned into a superwoman and has defeated a trolloc in hand-to-hand combat, done some kind of uh, force explosion and saved the day multiple times, cursed out the Amyrlin Seat (to which the Amyrlin went all soft and was like "Oh Nynaeve, pwease, we weally need you"), and the list goes on. They should call it the Nynaeve show.
They completely ruined Lan. In the books he's known for saying "Death is light as a feather, duty heavier than a mountain." In the show he's soft-spoken and is seen screaming and beating his chest when some no-name warder dies. What the hell? Also, instead of a tall, heavily armed warrior that's usually wearing a breastplate and/or his color-shifting cloak, he's now some generic hollywood samurai. I also noticed they gave the actor a bunch of scars...on his back. No scars on his chest or arms. Lan is legendary with a sword, so why would he be getting slashed across the back constantly?
Mat in the books: young, charming rogue. Honorable but brash and crass. Plays practical jokes. Flirts constantly.
Mat in the show: Young, homeless-looking jerk that robs his neighbors, is a prick to everyone, then abandons everyone.
I could go on and on, but overall it's a poorly cast, poorly done show that cares more about social pandering (and I say that as a very liberal person) than about telling a good story. It's a jumbled mess that's overly rushed and makes us care very little about the characters.