FROM Season 2 features a diverse cast including Black, Latina, Asian, and Middle Eastern actors in prominent roles, such as Harold Perrineau as the lead Boyd and Catalina Sandino Moreno as his wife, which aligns organically with a modern American small-town setting without clashing against any source material since it's an original series. There is incidental LGBTQ+ representation in Season 2, including queer relationships and moments woven into the ensemble without making identity a central focus or 'huge deal,' allowing the horror-mystery plot of a trapped town, nocturnal monsters, and mysterious newcomers to dominate. No explicit social justice lectures, systemic critiques, identity politics, or DEI-driven changes are evident; creator interviews emphasize post-9/11 inspirations for isolation themes and puzzle-box storytelling rather than activism. Audience reception praises the 'healthy' diversity and focuses criticism on pacing or plot drags, with zero notable backlash labeling it 'woke' or citing forced messaging. This results in a purely entertaining survival horror experience unburdened by heavy-handed progressive ideology, prioritizing thrills and suspense over contemporary activism.