NCIS: Los Angeles Season 5 is a classic procedural action drama centered on counter-terrorism operations, undercover missions, nuclear threats, moles within agencies, and personal recovery arcs for characters like Deeks and Sam after prior torture, with no significant progressive ideological influence driving the storytelling. The diverse cast—including white leads Chris O'Donnell and Eric Christian Olsen, Black actor LL Cool J as Sam Hanna, Latina Daniela Ruah as the tough agent Kensi, Latino Miguel Ferrer as Granger, and others—feels entirely organic to an NCIS team operating in multicultural Los Angeles, with no evidence of forced DEI casting, race/gender swaps, or identity-based changes from source material or prior seasons. Episodes focus on high-stakes plots like hunting war criminals, recovering stolen nukes, submarine threats involving mafia and white supremacists (portrayed as villains without deeper systemic critique), and Kensi's temporary Afghanistan assignment (due to actress pregnancy), alongside light romantic development between Kensi and Deeks. There are no lectures on patriarchy, racism, identity politics, or social justice; themes emphasize teamwork, patriotism, and individual resilience. No creator statements emphasize activism, and reception was overwhelmingly positive with episodes drawing 12-19 million viewers, free of any 'woke' backlash or controversies tied to politics—unlike later seasons. This season delivers pure entertainment without ideological intrusions, prioritizing engaging plots and character chemistry.