Bridgerton Season 4 exemplifies heavy progressive ideological intrusion through its persistent color-blind casting that defies historical Regency England norms, exemplified by race-swapping book character Sophie Beckett—a white maid—into Sophie Baek, played by Korean actress Yerin Ha, complete with an Asian stepfamily (Katie Leung as scheming stepmother, Chinese-named stepsisters). This forced diversity clashes jarringly with the source material and setting, prioritizing DEI checkboxes over narrative coherence or immersion. Benedict Bridgerton, portrayed as bisexual with diverse sexual appetites as a plot focal point, amplifies non-traditional identity representation without organic integration. Themes delve into class divides with upstairs-downstairs critiques of staff exploitation and invisibility, alongside female solidarity against patriarchal competition, injecting systemic social justice undertones into what should be pure escapism. Creator Shonda Rhimes doubles down on activist intent, dismissing 'woke' criticisms as 'cute' while insisting on reflecting her own image in casting, confirming inclusion mandates drive decisions. Audience backlash is rife, with fans decrying 'DEI hires' like the underutilized Mondrich family, casting wars over Yerin Ha's 'historical liberties,' and accusations of sidelining POC despite the diversity push—manifesting as 'go woke go broke' sentiments and promo disparities that expose the inauthenticity. These elements overwhelm the Cinderella romance, diluting chemistry and story quality into ideological pandering that alienates purists and compromises entertainment value.