Everwood Season 4 is a heartfelt family drama centered on relationships, personal growth, grief, addiction recovery, and pursuing passions in a small-town setting, with virtually no overt progressive ideological intrusion. While it includes incidental progressive elements like a subplot involving a teen character (Kyle) coming out as gay under Ephram's supportive guidance and revelations about another character's (Reid) sexuality, these are handled as organic parts of character development rather than focal points or lectures on identity politics. Discussions around premarital sex in Bright and Hannah's arc feel like realistic teen drama, not activism. An adoption consideration from Africa is minor and fails without emphasis on DEI messaging. The cast reflects a naturally diverse small-town ensemble (e.g., Black character Ira as a family friend), with no race- or gender-swapping, forced inclusions clashing with the source or setting, or creator-stated intent to challenge norms beyond mature storytelling. Creator Greg Berlanti's later activism is absent here, and there's zero audience backlash decrying 'wokeness'—reception praises its emotional depth. This season excels as pure entertainment, unburdened by contemporary social justice agendas, allowing timeless themes of forgiveness and family to shine.