NCIS Season 2, airing in 2004-2005, exemplifies traditional procedural storytelling centered on military investigations with a team of competent investigators solving Navy-related crimes. The main cast is entirely white—Mark Harmon, Michael Weatherly, Sean Murray, David McCallum, Pauley Perrette, and Sasha Alexander (until her character's death)—reflecting no efforts toward diversity casting, race-swapping, or inclusion mandates that clash with the era's norms. Female characters like Kate Todd (ex-Secret Service agent) and Abby Sciuto (forensic expert) are portrayed as strong and capable without feminist lectures or emphasis on overcoming patriarchy; their roles feel organic to the high-stakes action. Episode plots, such as protecting an Iraq war veteran, honoring WWII Marines, or addressing PTSD in a petty officer, reinforce pro-military patriotism and personal heroism post-9/11, with incidental elements like gender-integrated military service or historical reconciliation (e.g., American and Japanese veterans) that avoid contemporary social justice activism or systemic critiques. No LGBTQ+ representation, identity politics, or overt political messaging drives the narrative. There are zero controversies, creator interviews touting activism, or audience backlash labeling it 'woke'; instead, modern viewers nostalgically reference it as 'before they went woke' in contrast to later NCIS seasons and spin-offs. The season prioritizes entertainment, team banter, and plot twists over any ideological agenda.