Stranger Things Season 4 features a diverse main cast established since Season 1, including Black actors Caleb McLaughlin (Lucas) and Priah Ferguson (Erica), alongside white leads, which some viewers noted as somewhat anachronistic for a small 1980s Indiana town but feels organic to the show's modern production without race- or gender-swapping original characters or prioritizing identity over plot. A minor subplot in Lucas' basketball storyline touches on racism faced by a Black teen in a predominantly white school, providing light social commentary that aligns with progressive themes of systemic bias but does not drive the narrative or include lecture-like moments—the core story revolves around supernatural horror, friendship, government conspiracy, and monster battles. LGBTQ+ representation remains incidental with Robin's established lesbian identity in the background and subtle implications for Will Byers that do not culminate until later seasons. Creators Duffer Brothers show no overt activist intent in interviews specific to Season 4, focusing instead on 80s nostalgia and epic scale. Audience reception was overwhelmingly positive as one of Netflix's biggest hits, with no significant 'woke' backlash or 'go woke go broke' narrative at the time—criticisms of diversity were split, with some progressives faulting underutilization of Black characters like Lucas being sidelined for white arcs, while conservatives occasionally griped about demographic realism, but these were minor and did not impact the season's massive success or define discourse.