Smallville Season 2, airing in 2002-2003, exemplifies traditional pre-woke television storytelling centered on Clark Kent's superhero origin, family dynamics, teen romance, and meteor-freak-of-the-week adventures without any overt progressive ideological intrusion. The cast aligns organically with the rural Kansas setting: predominantly white leads like Tom Welling as Clark, Kristin Kreuk as Lana, and supporting roles, with Sam Jones III as Pete Ross representing minor incidental diversity via race-swapping from the comics that does not drive plots, emphasize identity politics, or feature lectures on systemic issues. Themes focus purely on destiny, secrecy, relationships (e.g., Clark-Lana growth, Lex's marriage), and personal heroism, with no prominent LGBTQ+ representation, gender critiques, or social justice messaging in episodes like 'Heat,' 'Ryan,' or 'Skinwalker.' No creator statements push activism, and reception lacks backlash over 'woke' elements—instead, nostalgic praise for entertainment value prevails, unmarred by modern DEI mandates or forced inclusivity.