NCIS Season 16 features a standard procedural crime-solving format centered on military investigations, with no dominant progressive ideological elements in storytelling, themes, or messaging. Casting includes longstanding diverse characters like black director Leon Vance (since 2008) and Hispanic agent Nick Torres (joined season 14), plus the introduction of black forensic scientist Kasie Hines as a new graduate assistant who assumes Abby Sciuto's role after the character's departure; this change adds racial diversity but is presented organically without narrative emphasis on identity or DEI mandates, and lacks any race-swapping controversy. New white female psychologist Jack Sloane (Maria Bello) provides no progressive angles. Episode plots focus on vigilante killers, submarine mysteries, Afghanistan-linked murders, and a single light environmental conspiracy involving a Banksy-like activist's mural and ocean mammal safety, but these are incidental procedural elements without lectures on systemic issues, patriarchy critiques, or identity politics. No creator interviews highlight activist intent or inclusion pushes. Audience reception shows no notable backlash labeling the season 'woke'; criticisms focus on general cast turnover and formula fatigue, not progressive overreach, allowing the show to maintain traditional entertainment appeal.