NCIS Season 10 features a standard procedural crime-solving format centered on military investigations with no overt progressive ideological messaging, race/gender swaps, or social justice lectures driving the narrative. The cast includes incidental diversity that feels organic for a federal agency team: Rocky Carroll as black Director Leon Vance (introduced seasons earlier), Cote de Pablo as strong Israeli operative Ziva David, Pauley Perrette as quirky female forensic expert Abby Sciuto, alongside mostly white male leads like Mark Harmon's Gibbs. Episodes focus on traditional themes like revenge, terrorism, PTSD in Marines, kidnappings, and personal team drama (e.g., Ziva's father arc involving Mossad and Iran tensions, Vance's family tragedy), emphasizing duty, loyalty, and pro-military patriotism without critiquing systemic issues, patriarchy, or identity politics. No prominent LGBTQ+ representation or activist creator statements found. Reception lacks any significant backlash labeling it 'woke'; instead, fans retrospectively praise early seasons like this as non-woke compared to later spin-offs.