Everwood Season 2, airing in 2003-2004, is a heartfelt family drama centered on grief over Colin's death, teen romances, personal growth, and small-town medical ethics, with virtually no overt progressive ideological intrusion. While it touches on mature topics like Amy's secret teen pregnancy (supported privately by her father without preachiness), Ephram losing his virginity to an older woman, a GHB party incident, depression and medication, Linda's HIV diagnosis from aiding Africans, and Nina divorcing her outed gay husband to gain custody, these elements feel organic to character-driven storytelling rather than forced messaging or identity politics. There are no race or gender swaps, no DEI casting clashes (diverse supporting roles like John Beasley's Irv integrate naturally into the Colorado town setting), no lectures on systemic oppression, patriarchy, or capitalism, and no creator-stated activist intent beyond general family themes. Conservative backlash from the PTC focused on 'irresponsible' teen sex portrayals, but reception was positive overall with strong ratings and no 'woke' complaints. This season excels as pure entertainment, prioritizing emotional family bonds, forgiveness, and maturity over any social justice agenda, making it a refreshing escape from modern ideological overreach.