Coco is a shining example of traditional storytelling focused purely on entertainment, family bonds, cultural celebration of Mexican Day of the Dead traditions, and the joy of music, with virtually no progressive ideological intrusion. The all-Latino cast aligns perfectly and organically with the Mexican setting and characters, avoiding any forced diversity, race-swapping, or DEI mandates that clash with the source material. Themes center on honoring ancestors, resolving family conflicts through love and remembrance, and pursuing dreams within familial respect—purely neutral and uplifting without critiques of systemic oppression, patriarchy, toxic masculinity, or identity politics. No LGBTQ+ representation, gender fluidity, pronouns, or social justice lectures appear in the narrative, character arcs, or dialogue. Creator intent, as expressed by director Lee Unkrich and cultural consultants, emphasized authentic cultural respect rather than activism or 'challenging norms.' Audience reception was overwhelmingly positive worldwide, including massive success in Mexico, with no significant backlash labeling it 'woke' or citing 'go woke go broke'—instead, it's hailed as a family classic free from political agendas.