Lucifer Season 2 features a diverse cast that feels organic to its Los Angeles setting, including Black actor D.B. Woodside as angel Amenadiel, Latino actors Kevin Alejandro as Dan and Aimee Garcia as new forensic expert Ella Lopez, and South African Lesley-Ann Brandt as demon Maze, alongside white leads Tom Ellis and Lauren German. This incidental diversity supports the police procedural and nightclub backdrop without clashing with source material or driving narratives. Light LGBTQ+ elements appear, such as Maze's pansexuality shown through relationships and Lucifer's bisexuality hinted at in one episode via past encounters, but these are background traits, not focal points or plot motivators. Episode-of-the-week crimes occasionally touch modern issues like cyberbullying, sex work exploitation, wrongful convictions, and gentrification, but they serve supernatural mysteries and character development rather than delivering social justice lectures. Family mythology with Lucifer's mother escaping Hell dominates, emphasizing redemption, free will, and emotions over identity politics. No creator interviews express activist intent; focus remains on entertainment and mythology. Reception praises the season as peak fun with no contemporary backlash labeling it 'woke'—criticisms target later Netflix eras. This traditional storytelling shines by prioritizing engaging supernatural drama and humor free from heavy ideological intrusions.