Hawaii Five-0 - Season 1
From Hawaii Five-0

Hawaii Five-0 - Season 1

tvTV-14Season 1
September 20, 2010
Available on:
Paramount+
2Based
Analysis Score2/10
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TL;DR Verdict

Hawaii Five-0 S1 delivers pure, escapist action with buddy-cop thrills, organic Hawaiian diversity, and zero woke preaching—just family loyalty and high-stakes crime-solving. Woke score: 2/10—safe, fun TV untainted by politics.

Detailed Analysis

Hawaii Five-0 Season 1 is a straightforward action-packed procedural reboot focused on high-octane crime-solving, buddy-cop dynamics between two white male leads (Steve McGarrett and Danny Williams), and entertaining plots involving terrorism, human trafficking, and gang violence, all set against Hawaii's stunning backdrop. The diversity in the cast, including Asian-American actors Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park as Hawaiian characters Chin Ho Kelly and Kono Kalakaua, feels organic to the Hawaiian setting and does not overshadow the entertainment. The sole notable progressive element is the gender swap of the minor original character Kono from male to female to add a woman to the task force, but this is incidental and lacks any narrative push for social justice messaging—no lectures on systemic issues, identity politics, or critiques of traditional norms. Themes revolve around family loyalty ('Ohana'), revenge, and law enforcement triumphs without ideological overlay. Creators emphasized modernization through updated action and crimes like cyberterrorism, not activism or inclusion mandates. Reception was overwhelmingly positive for its fun, escapist thrills, with no significant backlash over 'woke' elements; contemporary reviews praise its testosterone-fueled bromance and gunplay. This season exemplifies traditional television entertainment unburdened by progressive intrusions, allowing pure enjoyment of plot and performances.

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