‘There Was a Mismatch Between the General Audience Response and the Fan Response’ — Marvel TV Boss Says She-Hulk Was ‘One of Our Best Performing Shows’
‘There Was a Mismatch Between the General Audience Response and the Fan Response’ — Marvel TV Boss Says She-Hulk Was ‘One of Our Best Performing Shows’
It was awesome for the same reason a lot of people hated it:
It was a massive tone shift.
So people who already had Marvel fatigue loved it. People that just wanted the same thing as every other Marvel show were disappointed, and they were used to being exclusively catered to by marvel, so they took it personally.
Like, if a teenage boy in jr high didn’t like She-Hulk, no one should be surprised. They weren’t the target audience.
A grown adult that wouldn’t stop bitching about, are just a loud minority
I saw all the hate and outrage as a bunch of basement dwellers upset all their pee bottles were full.
That’s a bingo!
the underlying antagonists of the show turned out to be basically woman hating incels
Very much so, but they definitely hung a massive lantern on it, with She-Hulk using her meta-powers (much like Deadpool, but different) to change the script, literally going into the writers room, and a bunch of self-deprecating jokes from the writers ensues. *(Spoilers, obviously)
She-Hulk was fantastic. It captured the ridiculousness of the comics, balancing satire with action and some fairly decent CGI. It wasn’t perfect, and I’m not going to defend the twerking except to say that it made me laugh the first time I saw it because it was unexpected. Tim Roth was great, Madisynn and Wong could be its own series, and the red-pill incel cult was topical.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinions, but you won’t convince me that a large percentage of the people stomping on the show are mad about being portrayed in the show. Some criticisms are valid, and I get why someone expecting an action adventure were disappointed to see a self-referential legal satire and dating drama that breaks the fourth wall. But there were too many people gleefully blaming the show’s shortcomings on “going woke” or “attacking conservative men.”
There are also a lot of critics who are simply tired of the oversaturated comic show markets, and torching the show was excellent for clicks and engagement (in large part due to the glee I just mentioned).
But there were too many people gleefully blaming the show’s shortcomings on “going woke” or “attacking conservative men.”
This is a shame because the world desperately needs conservative men to be mercilessly made fun of or we are doomed.
It happens constantly on Lemmy, and I think it might be because it’s less American centric.
Even if someone speaks fluent English, idioms dont translate well. And often get tossed in where they just don’t make any logical sense, because the speaker only learned from hearing/seeing it, but never had it explained.
Like any true American, I learned that from cartoons.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=mY9gVIcRkkI
Eventually tho, idioms will be a way to pick out chatbots, and I am fully ready for a global patois of idioms and memes to escape automated surveillance like old times Cockneys.

I thought it was okay.
My biggest beef was that they already had a really badass woman lawyer in the MCU, Carrie Moss as Jeri Hogarth. She would have been a thousand times better as the big boss.
Second, I didn’t like the CGI. They should have gone with a green actor playing the role. Jameela Jamil would have eaten that role alive.
In my head script, She Hulk gets beaten up by Jessica Jones, shown up by Jeri Hogarth, and schooled in super hero etiquette by Foggy Nelson.
By the time she faces off with the Abomination she’s truly ready to hulk out.
imho John Byrne did the best She Hulk run back in the day.
He’s still around, and should be the one writing this.
The problem with the character is that without a single book or main creator, she gets shoehorned in wherever. In the last run of Avengers I read they had made her a female Bruce Banner with lessened intelligence and more rage.
I never understood the appeal - it had some good jokes but they got tired fast, some great physical comedy until it was too predictable . Whatever they did to develop the character, I just felt no connection.
But that just meant I mostly ignored it
I liked She-Hulk, a lot.
I suspect if it had come out pre-Endgame that audiences would have eaten it up. It suffered from the post-Endgame slump that most of the MCU went through.
Granted there are definitely some stinkers in Phase 4 and Phase 5, but everything that came after Endgame just felt lacking because everyone, and I mean everyone got sensory overload from seeing Cap wield Mjolnir.
The superhero movie fatigue after Endgame has really put a stink on a lot of good content.
Based on the article and the comments the answer seems to be make the show animated.
The CG for She-Hulk was apparently too expensive? Make her and everyone else animated. A bunch of chuds hated it. For whatever reason Twitter chuds ignore all animated shows.
For whatever reason Twitter chuds ignore all animated shows.
I feel like the show was largely successful because it rage baited the audience that hated it, and let the people that liked that join in on the laughter.
She hulk aside, I do think there is a discussion to be had about appeasing new fans vs appeasing old fans of any given fiction.
I genuinely think they could have written it in a way that appealed to both audiences, but chose to the the low hanging fruit because that was the safer move profit wise.
Your cousin reveals that he, a brilliant scientist, and the only other person to ever be affected by the Hulk condition that you’ve just been inflicted with, has been studying and learning how to deal with it for the past 15 years on both a personal and scientific level, and he offers to share what he’s learned.
As She-Hulk, do you:
Respect the Hulk as a teacher in light of his scientific expertise and lived experience?
Realize that this Hulk stuff works differently for you, but that your cousin has been suffering alone for a decade and a half, and empathize with him and hang out for a bit to keep him company, understanding that society may one day fear you as a monster too?
Make fun of everything he tries to teach you, tell him you already know how to handle anger because you’re a woman, call him a dumb idiot loser, and immediately leave to go back to your job as a lawyer?
The show was entirely about cheap Twitter dunks and triggering chuds, rather than about interesting plots or believable characters. It’s really disappointing because some of her comics were incredible.