Related works with their own pages:
- Justice League (2001-2006 animated show)
Anime and Manga
- My Hero Academia: My Hero Academia: Vigilantes expands on this. Historically, the system of granting licenses for legalized heroism first originated in Rhode Island, with seven vigilantes being made licensed heroes. This mirrors the origins of the Justice League of America, which started with seven members and were based in Rhode Island.
Comic Books
- Astro City: The Honor Guard is the premeire superhero team, like the Justice League, and is lead by expys of Superman (Samaritan), Wonder Woman (Winged Victory), and Batman (Black Rapier).
Literature
- The Dresden Files:
- In Blood Rites Harry says he's going Justice League on Mavra's scourge, calling in friends to go in "Stoker-standard".
- In the short "Aftermath" Will jokes about them becoming the Justice League of Chicago, and Murph calls dibs on Batman.
Live Action TV
- Jonathan Creek: David Renwick (revealed in the Jonathan Creek Universe Compendium to be a Justice League fan) has a Shout-Out to the comics in the first Christmas Episode. Not only was retired magicienne Marella Carney formerly known by the stage name "the Black Canary," but a statue of the Leaguer by that name appears near the start of the episode.
- Leverage: In "The Ho Ho Ho Job" Chaos derisively refers to the heroes as "the Justice League".
- The Big Bang Theory: In the fourth season New Year's episode, the gang (plus Penny's current boyfriend, Zach) dressed up as members of the Justice League of America for a party at the comic book store.
- The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes: The Grand Finale, "Avengers Assemble!", seems like a Whole-Plot Reference to "Destroyer", the Grand Finale of Justice League Unlimited.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: Episode six, "Power Ponies," features a spoof of The Avengers and Justice League. The main villain, the Mane-iac, is a parody on Doctor Octopus, The Joker and Poison Ivy , Pinkie (Fili-Second) has super speed, akin to The Flash, Fluttershy (Saddle-Rager) loses her temper like the Hulk, Rainbow Dash (Zapp) controls the weather like Storm, Applejack (Mistress Mare-velous) has a lasso like Wonder Woman, Rarity (Radiance) has a gem that creates shiny things like Green Lantern, and Twilight (the Masked Matterhorn) has a freezing beam just like Iceman. Spike is merely put as [1], and although his character was just there for comic relief, and also as The Load and a Tagalong Kid, he ended up being The Chessmaster due to his insight on the comic books themselves.
- South Park: The Super Best Friends are an homage to the Justice League.
- SpongeBob SquarePants: The episode ""Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy V" introduces the International Justice League of Super Aquaintances. Just to hammer it home, each of the membersnote is a parody of a specific member of one of those groups: Captain Magma is based on Firestorm, The Quickster is based on The Flash, and the Elastic Waistband is based on Plastic Man and Elongated Man.
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003): The episode "Reality Check" takes place In a World… where the Turtles are super-powered heroes. The "Shell of Justice" is a shout-out to the Hall of Justice from Super Friends. An early episode has similar shout-outs, where Mikey's fantasies of the Turtles as superheroes get mocked as "the Ninja-stice League", "the Shelltastic Four", and "the Legion of Sewer-Heroes".
- Wakfu: Season 2 episode 8 is full of shout-outs to the American Superheroes Genre, notably with the "Justice Clique".