The Simpsons Season 13, airing in 2001-2002, maintains the show's classic satirical style focused on family antics, pop culture parodies, and absurd humor without any dominant progressive ideological influence. Casting remains with the original ensemble of voice actors like Dan Castellaneta and Hank Azaria, featuring no race-swapping, gender changes, or diversity mandates. Themes are light and incidental at best: Lisa's conversion to Buddhism in 'She of Little Faith' promotes religious tolerance but stems from personal disillusionment with commercialized Christianity rather than systemic critique; Marge's anti-sugar crusade in 'Sweets and Sour Marge' satirizes overregulation as it hilariously backfires; and Homer's positive experience with medical marijuana in 'Weekend at Burnsie's' is balanced by his decision to quit for family reasons. These elements feel organic to the characters' quirks and do not drive plots or preach social justice. No explicit lectures, identity politics, or LGBTQ+ focal points exist, and controversies like the Brazil ban for 'Blame It on Lisa' involve stereotyping, not wokeness. Reception praises sharp writing and humor, with no backlash over ideology—critics and fans note it as solid post-golden age entertainment, free from modern activist intrusions that plague later seasons.