The Simpsons Season 9, airing in 1997-1998, exemplifies classic era storytelling focused on absurd humor, family antics, and broad satire without any intrusion of modern progressive ideology. Episodes like 'The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson,' 'Trash of the Titans,' and 'The Joy of Sect' prioritize entertainment through cult parodies, political incompetence, and comedic mishaps, with incidental liberal-leaning moments such as Lisa's pro-science stance in 'Lisa the Skeptic' or balanced gun debate in 'The Cartridge Family' that mock extremes on both sides rather than preaching systemic critiques or identity politics. Casting remains entirely original with voice actors like Hank Azaria voicing Apu in an organic cultural storyline about arranged marriage that introduces his wife Manjula without forced DEI changes or clashes with source material. No creator interviews indicate activist intent for this season, and reception controversies center on narrative choices like the Skinner impostor twist in 'The Principal and the Pauper,' criticized for poor writing rather than wokeness. Audience reactions affirm its status as peak entertainment, free from the ideological overlays that plague later seasons, allowing pure, uncompromised enjoyment of the show's timeless wit.