What shared vision? Modern fabrics? Modern speech patterns or wisecracks? A notion of respect toward individual rights?
It's weird.
Like, it's quite possible to critique a lot of these shows for bad character development, poor understanding of the purpose of scenes, talky exposition, and middling choreography, all things which have nothing to do with the creators' political views.
And indeed, we have shows like Andor (and games like God of War) which clearly do take a very political stance and yet are frikkin phenomenal.
But nevertheless, a lot of people apparently want to complain about . . . well, Jahydin hasn't explicitly said it, but I've seen these same sorts of comments elsewhere from people who have a bug up their butts that shows have diverse casts.
The flaws of something like Witcher Blood Origin aren't because the lead actress is black. It's because the writing is at about the level of most media throughout my life. Heck, the ending of Game of Thrones sucked not because the show runners (who amusingly are called D&D) were political, but because they rushed it.
But some people want to push this idea that the existence of nonwhite-man leads is 'political.'
What's political in my view is the excellent perspective in Andor on the nature of tyranny, the motivation to resist, and the moral compromises that are necessary but perhaps justifiable in the pursuit of broader freedom
Or if you've played God of War Ragnarok, there's a ton of political themes involving colonialism, manipulation, and how people can be drawn into working for villains who give them a sense of purpose. That stuff is great. We want more of that. But people got their gnards in a twist because a Norse mythology character was black.
Maybe that's not what these people mean when they're talking about politics, but I don't know what they are talking about then. Because some of the things that are political, are great because of it.