Doctor Who Season 13 (Flux) features the ongoing presence of Jodie Whittaker as the first female Doctor, a gender-swapped role that originated major controversy in prior seasons but remains a core progressive casting choice without narrative justification beyond regeneration randomness, prominently influencing the show's identity. Companions include Mandip Gill as Yasmin 'Yaz' Khan, a British-Indian woman with arcs emphasizing mental health, self-confidence, and empowerment as a police officer, alongside John Bishop's working-class Dan Lewis, contributing to a diverse ensemble with guests like Black actors Jacob Anderson (Vinder) and Sara Powell (Mary Seacole in the Crimean War episode). Showrunner Chris Chibnall's production emphasized diversity initiatives, such as writer bursaries and inclusive scripting, extending the era's focus on representation. Themes include resistance to authoritarian forces like the Grand Serpent's corrupt regime and institutional infiltration of UNIT, alongside historical reinterpretation featuring minority figure Mary Seacole, but these are incidental to the dominant cosmic horror Flux storyline involving monsters and multiverse threats, without overt lecture moments or identity politics driving the plot. Reception was mixed-to-poor, with declining ratings and criticism for convoluted writing over any specific woke complaints, though the season inherits broader Chibnall/Whittaker era backlash labeling it 'woke' due to casting and messaging, compromising entertainment with noticeable ideological undertones amid narrative chaos.