Doctor Who Season 5, the debut of Matt Smith as the Eleventh Doctor, exemplifies classic, entertaining sci-fi storytelling with no discernible progressive ideological influence. The casting is traditionally homogeneous: a young white male Doctor, white Scottish companion Amy Pond (a kissogram and model), and white supporting characters like Rory Williams, without any forced diversity, race/gender swaps, or DEI-driven choices that clash with the source material. Themes revolve around time-travel adventures, cosmic cracks erasing existence, and monster-of-the-week episodes, prioritizing fun, mystery, and character dynamics over social justice lectures, identity politics, or critiques of systemic issues. Amy Pond is portrayed as feisty and independent but draws criticism from feminists for embodying 'sexist tropes' like promiscuity and prioritizing romance, highlighting the season's lack of modern progressive empowerment messaging. Showrunner Steven Moffat's intent focused on whimsical revival, not activism, with no interviews emphasizing inclusion mandates. Reception was overwhelmingly positive with peak ratings, and zero backlash labeling it 'woke'; instead, it's nostalgically praised today against later 'woke' eras, confirming its neutral, entertainment-first purity.