Tatiana Maslany and ‘She-Hulk’ Showrunner Jessica Gao Talk Trolling the Trolls

October 15, 2022

Jennifer Walters aka She-Hulk stands in Hulk form, waiting at secretary desk of a production office

The announcement of a Marvel ‘She-Hulk’ series set off a predictable yet still disappointing round of trolling from misogynists online. It’s unsurprising of course, as these neck-beards come out of the woodwork every time a woman-led superhero series or film comes out. There’s the relentless sexist posting online, the review-bombing, and the general manbaby tantrums from trolls who clearly have nothing better to do. The only thing more frustrating than this barrage of misogyny is the mundanity of it: women and other marginalized groups have been taught to not only expect vicious online abuse, but to ignore it and take the high road. Of course, there’s little satisfaction to trolling to trolls, as you’re giving them the attention they desperately crave. But the lack of accountability for online abuse (especially from social media giants who value “free speech” over violent threats online) is still disappointing and demoralizing.

‘She-Hulk: Attorney at Law’ faces this toxic misogyny head-on by making angry online men Jen’s primary villains. The show functions best as a critique of the daily stream of sexism women face, both super-powered and not. Throughout the first season, Jen takes on workplace sexism, dehumanizing dates, media criticism, and a steady stream of online hate via troll site Intelligencia. The series culminates in a massive slut-shaming attack on Jen and She-Hulk, with the leak of a sex tape. The meta-commentary of vicious sexism both in and outside the show is the work of showrunner Jessica Gao, who discussed the show’s message in an interview with Variety.

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