Law & Order Season 15, airing in 2004-2005, maintains the series' traditional procedural format with ripped-from-the-headlines cases, featuring organic diversity in its New York City police cast including black actors Jesse L. Martin as Det. Ed Green and S. Epatha Merkerson as Lt. Anita Van Buren, alongside white male leads like Dennis Farina and Sam Waterston; this casting aligns with the show's long-standing representation of urban demographics without forced changes or source material alterations. One notable episode, 'Gov Love,' centers a plot around gay marriage as a legal tool to compel testimony in a governor's wife's death case, presenting it as a plot twist and constitutional issue rather than a lecture or focal activist message, predating widespread national legalization. Other episodes address standard crimes with occasional social angles like war veteran issues or cults but lack prominent identity politics, systemic critiques, or DEI-driven narratives. No creator interviews indicate activist intent for this season; Dick Wolf emphasized balanced storytelling. Zero evidence of audience backlash labeling it 'woke,' with modern complaints targeting recent reboots instead. Progressive elements are incidental, not dominating story, casting, or reception.