American Horror Story: Double Feature (Season 10) features minor incidental progressive elements consistent with Ryan Murphy's style, such as the inclusion of LGBTQ+ actors like Angelica Ross (transgender) and a gay couple in the Death Valley storyline, but these do not drive the narrative or dominate the horror anthology format. The season splits into Red Tide (satirical vampire tale critiquing Hollywood influencers and fame, with pale vampires portrayed negatively as they ravage society) and Death Valley (alien conspiracy with hybrid experiments, including pregnant men in a grotesque, bloody context rather than celebratory). Casting is predominantly white leads (Sarah Paulson, Lily Rabe, etc.) with no race- or gender-swapping, forced diversity clashing with material, or overt lectures on systemic issues. Some light elements like women as survivors or environmental messaging from a black hybrid character exist but feel organic to the plot. Notably, the Hollywood satire mocks 'woke' tendencies, and politics are presented multidimensionally without heavy activism. No significant creator-stated intent for social justice mandates, and audience reception criticizes the season for poor writing and plot holes, not wokeness—some even praise it for toning down progressive preaching compared to prior seasons like Cult. This focus on entertainment over ideology makes it a refreshing return to horror fundamentals.