House Season 2, airing in 2005-2006, features a predominantly white main cast with one Black actor (Omar Epps as Foreman), which appears organic for a modern hospital setting without any evidence of forced DEI casting, race-swapping, or gender changes clashing with source material. Episode themes center on medical mysteries, personal ethics, and House's cynicism, with only incidental progressive elements: a gay AIDS patient in 'Hunting' (stereotypical portrayal criticized today for negativity), a female patient with a girlfriend in 'Sleeping Dogs Lie,' a brief Hurricane Katrina victim storyline in 'Who's Your Daddy?,' and a race-based medicine debate in S2E3 where a Black patient distrusts targeted treatment, leading to House lying rather than lecturing on systemic racism. No explicit social justice messaging, identity politics lectures, critiques of patriarchy or capitalism, or prominent non-traditional representation drives plots or character arcs. Creator David Shore shows no activist intent in interviews. Modern reception views the show as anti-PC due to House's bigoted remarks, ableism, and problematic episodes like 'Skin Deep' (intersex supermodel), with no backlash labeling it 'woke'—rather, it's hailed as a counter to contemporary wokeness.