The Blacklist - Season 5
From The Blacklist

The Blacklist - Season 5

tvTV-14Season 5
September 27, 2017
Available on:
NetflixNetflix Standard with Ads
3Based
Analysis Score3/10
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TL;DR Verdict

Blacklist S5: Minimal wokeness – crime thriller core intact, organic diversity, isolated social issues as busted crimes, no lectures or activism.

Detailed Analysis

The Blacklist Season 5 maintains its core identity as a procedural crime thriller centered on Raymond Reddington rebuilding his empire, Elizabeth Keen's family secrets involving a suitcase of bones (revealed as the real Reddington's), and task force hunts for blacklisters. Progressive elements are minor and incidental, appearing in isolated episodes rather than dominating storytelling, casting, or character arcs. The cast features established diversity with Black actors Harry Lennix (Harold Cooper) and Hisham Tawfiq (Dembe), Amir Arison (Aram Mojtabai), and Mozhan Marnò (Samar Navabi), integrated organically without race/gender swaps or clashes with source material. Some episodes touch on social issues: Episode 1 involves a neo-Nazi cartel, Episode 3 suspicious police shootings implying corruption, Episode 7 human smuggling killing immigrants (Dembe poses as Nigerian), Episode 13 corporate toxic waste dumping, and Episode 17 an assassin targeting child marriage perpetrators. These critique systemic problems like police abuse, immigration exploitation, environmental negligence, and gender-based violence, but frame them as criminal enterprises defeated by the protagonists, not overt lectures or activist messaging. A few viewer complaints note 'woke' moments, like a perceived BLM reference in Episode 6, and political statements by end of season, but no widespread backlash, creator activism, or identity politics focus. Main narrative prioritizes twists, revenge, and crime over social justice.

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