The Simpsons Season 28 features virtually no overt progressive ideological influence dominating its storytelling, casting, or themes. The season maintains the show's traditional satirical style, focusing on family antics, absurd humor, and light social commentary without prioritizing identity politics, DEI mandates, or systemic critiques. Casting remains consistent with long-standing voice actors like Dan Castellaneta and Hank Azaria, with no race-swapping, gender changes, or diversity-driven recasts evident—such controversies arose in later seasons. Episodes like 'The Caper Chase' explicitly satirize social justice warriors and for-profit universities through Mr. Burns navigating 'red tape' and 'microaggressions,' poking fun at progressive excesses rather than endorsing them. Other mild elements, such as interfaith tensions in 'The Nightmare After Krustmas' or children's push for self-expression in 'The Last Traction Hero,' feel organic to the show's established character dynamics and do not drive plots or deliver lectures. Reception was average with no notable backlash labeling it 'woke'; critics noted solid family-focused episodes without ideological complaints. This season exemplifies entertaining, neutral satire free from contemporary activist intrusions, preserving the series' classic appeal.