Shout Outs Allusions and other references to the character Wonder Woman, and the many titles she has headed over the years.
See also Wonder Woman Wannabe.
Anime & Manga
- Project A-Ko: The main character is heavily implied to be the daughter of Wonder Woman and Superman (who appear in a Lawyer-Friendly Cameo scene). Even sporting bracelets in a nod to Diana.
- The cover for issue 11 of All-New Wolverine is a nod to the cover of Wonder Woman: The Hiketeia.
- Astro City: Winged Victory is a Wonder Woman expy that does far more to explore her given mission of improving "man's world" than Wondy ever does in her mainstream books.
- Big Bang Comics: Most characters are thinly disguised versions of golden and silver age DC Comics characters, with Venus as a Captain Ersatz of Wonder Woman.
- Cowboys & Aliens: Verity has a name meaning "truth", a rope-like weapon and is even called "wonderous" at one point, which all combined bring Wonder Woman to mind.
- Flare: On this page Sparkplug is dressed as Wonder Woman.
- Marshal Law: Miss Victory, of the Jesus Society of America, is a pastiche of the Golden Age Wonder Woman.
- The Oracle Code: Yeong wears a denim jacket with Superman and Wonder Woman badges and one of the center's basketball teams is called the Wonders.
- The Simpsons Futurama Crossover Crisis: Wonder Woman makes a Lawyer-Friendly Cameo alongside other superheroes from DC and Marvel in the final issue.
- Squadron Supreme: Power Princess was explicitly created as Marvel's Alternate Company Equivalent of Wondy.
- Adam Hughes' cover for Wonder Woman 600 is a blatant Internal Homage to the first cover to feature Diana front and center decades prior for Sensation Comics.
- Boldores And Boomsticks: Yang channel surfs and watches a little bit of the Pokémon world's version of the 2017 film, where Diana is accompanied by a Latias.
- Seven of Nine says "Suffering Sapphic!" while playing a holodeck heroine in the Star Trek: Voyager Slash Fic Attack of the 50-Ft Half-Klingon.
- The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part: The appearance of three Wonder Women (targeting three different age groups) is a specific reference to the Impossible Tales in Wonder Woman Volume 1 where three differently aged Wonder Women appeared side by side (Wonder Woman, the original Wonder Girl, and Wonder Tot).
- Zipper from Electra Glide in Blue leers at Wonder Woman as he reads comic books while slacking off.
- The Nice Guys: The ending of the film, set in the late-70s, has the two main characters take up case investigating on behalf of an old lady who thinks her husband is having an affair with Lynda Carter, called "Wonder Woman" by one of the characters.
- Sky High (2005): After scolding the captured villains in the ending, Principal Powers laments that she isn't Wonder Woman. She's played by Lynda Carter.
- In Sara Paretsky's VI Warshawski novels, one of Intrepid Reporter Murray Ryerson's nicknames for Warshawski is Wonder Woman (along with Nancy Drew and She-who-must-be-obeyed).
- Planet Earth Is Blue: In a flashback, Bridget and Nova go to a Halloween party where one of the guests is dressed as Wonder Woman.
- Sarah from Lily and Dunkin has a Wonder Woman T-shirt.
- Batwoman (2019). In "The Rabbit Hole", Sophie Moore demands to know if Kate Kane was the mysterious Batwoman who saved her life in the previous episode. Kate denies it, saying if she was going to do something like that, she'd have dressed up like Wonder Woman instead.
- The Big Bang Theory: Penny's outfit for the costume party she ends up not wanting to go to with the guys as the Justice League of America is to be Wonder Woman. Her reluctance to put on the dark-haired wig that causes some friction with the group, unwilling to accept a blonde Wonder Woman (conveniently forgetting about the Lynda Carter TV series).
- Frasier: Roz feels that Wonder Woman is her superhero.Roz: Actually, I didn't misunderstand anything. You made so much fun of my costume, I got so embarrassed, so I lied. Wonder Woman really is my hero. I mean, she's smart and beautiful, moral, and totally independent.
- Gilmore Girls: In the first season episode "Love and War and Snow", when Emily asks if Lorelai's coming over for Friday dinner despite the snowstorm, Lorelai jokes she'll just put on her costume, grab her lasso, and hop on her invisible plane.
- Harry's Law: Guest character Annie Bilson (played by Erica Durance who also famously played Lois Lane below) is a vigilante who dresses as the Themysciran princess in her crusade.
- Smallville: Lois Lane cosplayed with the character's costume in a Season 9 episode. This is an obvious Mythology Gag since Diana doesn't seem to exist (yet) in this universe. Although a Freeze-Frame Bonus from a previous episode implies her island nation home does exist and is in contact with the Vactican.
- Lovecraft Country: The characters Hippolyta and her daughter, Diana, are a nod to Wonder Woman and her own mother.
- Malcolm in the Middle: Craig, the show's resident comic book geek, is seen watching the Lynda Carter show in one episode.
- 'That '70s Show:
- In a fantasy sequence parodying the Superfriends, Donna is dressed as Wonder Woman.
- When Eric sneaks off to partake in Roller Disco, his dance partner is dressed as Wonder Woman.
- While getting high, Jackie wonders how cool it'd be if she had Wonder Woman's bullet-blocking bracelets.
- The Now Playing Podcast reviewed the Cathy Lee Crosby T.V. movie and the pilot movie of the 70's Lynda Carter show in anticipation of the release of Wonder Woman (2017). A review of Wonder Woman 1984 was followed with in 2021.
- "Wonder Woman Of Wrestling" has unofficially been bestowed on several people in the National Wrestling Alliance throughout the decades, most prominently on half of the NWA World Women's Tag Team Champions Sabrina, where positive parallels were drawn to the physical characteristics of the "Golden Age" comic book character. Others include Cheerleader Melissa, who is similar in appearance to Sabrina and even used Tricky's Number One Da Woman as entrance music, Mercedes Martinez, and Santana Garrett, though it was usually used derisively in Garrett's case by rivals like Thunder Rosa.
- One set of Princesa Sugehit's ring gear, as a tecnica, is based on Wonder Woman's costume, only with various insects in place of the birds, stars and letters.
- Trish Stratus would sometimes slip in subtle references to the comic book character as baby face, or not so subtly dress as Wonder Woman during the Halloween Episode costume contests she partook in.
- Mickie James, after a program with Stratus forever connected them in public consciousness, took it a step further and wrestled matches dressed as Wonder Woman, including a series of TNA house shows.
- Beth Phoenix's headband brings Diana's tiara to mind, something she has embraced as part of her "Glamazonian" shtick.
- While working heel, Camron Star would dress as Wonder Woman, particularly after a Halloween costume contest in the Indiana based New Era Wrestling. She especially liked to while feuding with Thunderkitty, a redheaded baby face who commonly wore leopard print singlets, to invert Wonder Woman's usual dynamic with Cheetah/Giganta. She also did so while managing Damian Cole, a heel who would dress as Captain America, referencing a common crossover ship.
- Mandy Leon has dressed as Wonder Woman for some publicity posts.
- Sasha Banks dressed as the Themysciran princess during the first ever women's Royal Rumble.
- Heroes of the Storm: One of the extra colorings of Cassia's base skin is an homage to Wonder Woman, who's also an Amazon. It's also titled 'Wondrous'.
- Infinite Craft: "Wonder Woman" is a possible crafting recipe.
- League of Legends: Sivir's spectacular skin is a Wonder Woman shout out.
- Mortal Kombat: In MK vs DC, Kitana becomes Mortal Kombat's version of Wonder Woman when the gods grant her Shang Tsung's island to form the Edenian resistance, which is also seemingly made up of only women.
- Assassin's Creed: Odyssey: Cassandra's Amazon Armor is a dead-ringer for Wonder Woman's outfit with its sleeveless cuirass, short leather skirt, high plated boots, braces, and tiara.
- Girl Genius: One scene shows a sign for both an X-ray and a Purple Ray, the second of which is associated with the technology of Themyscira in Wonder Woman where it is a healing ray.
- Grrl Power: Sydney has a white shirt with Wondy's emblem across the chest.
- Hark! A Vagrant: Kate Beaton's interpretation of Wonder Woman is somewhat unconventional, though quite amusing. Fitting for a humor comic.
- The Non-Adventures of Wonderella: Is primarily a parody comic of Wonder Woman, Wonderella even has her own invisible blimp.
- Paranatural: When the bullies spot the spectrals in a ghost train the spectrals just appear to be sitting in an invisible flying machine, which causes one of the bullies to tear up with regret and want at the thought that they are in an or several invisible planes like Wondy.
- Questionable Content: In the comic titled "Wonder Woman" Hanners arrives at the party in an invisible experimental aircraft equipped with AI capable of piloting itself, just like Wondy's robot plane in the original comics.
- Epic Rap Battles of History: Wonder Woman battles Stevie Wonder in Season 5.
- Super Eyepatch Wolf's video Why Cuphead Looks So God Damn Good includes Wonder Woman (1942) among the visual stylistic inspirations for the style of the game.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: Episode six of season 4, "Power Ponies," features a spoof of The Avengers and Justice League and Applejack (Mistress Mare-velous) gets a lasso like Wonder Woman.
- The Simpsons:
- In the season 2 episode "Three Men and a Comic Book", Bart and Lisa ponder whether Richie Rich and Casper the Friendly Ghost are one and the same. Homer then mentions Wonder Woman.
- In "Homer the Whopper", Homer is cast as the title character in a movie titled Everyman, about a superhero who gains the powers of other superheroes by touching their comic books. One scene has a cop thanking Everyman for saving the day:Homer [as Everyman]: Don't thank me! [holds up a Captain America comic] Thank Captain America, for giving me the patriotism to want to save the President's life, [holds up a Wonder Woman comic] and thank Wonder Woman, for giving me the boobs to distract the guards.