Dexter Season 5 features a diverse cast reflective of a Miami police department, including Hispanic actors like Luna Lauren Vélez and David Zayas, and C.S. Lee as an Asian-American character, but this feels organic to the setting and established from prior seasons without evidence of forced DEI hiring or changes to source material. The central plot revolves around Dexter partnering with Lumen, a white female rape survivor played by Julia Stiles, to hunt down a group of wealthy white male serial rapists, which some retrospective analyses frame as 'killer feminism' or critiquing entitled masculinity; however, this is presented through vigilante violence rather than lectures on systemic patriarchy, identity politics, or social justice activism, aligning more with the show's thriller core than progressive messaging. No race-swapping, gender-swapping, or prominent LGBTQ+ representation drives the story. Creator interviews and contemporary reviews do not emphasize activist intent, inclusion mandates, or challenging norms. Audience reception focuses on plot weaknesses outside the Lumen arc, pacing issues, and character developments like LaGuerta's promotion (portrayed as ambitious but flawed), with zero notable backlash labeling the season 'woke,' DEI-pushed, or politically correct—unlike later Dexter projects.