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History Series / SheHulkAttorneyAtLaw

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* StudentDebtPlot: Played with. Bruce encourages Jen to use her Hulk powers more often after she realizes she has them. She resists, saying she wants to go back to law and have a regular job so she can pay off her "mountain of student loans." This allows the plot to progress as it was as she keeps being a lawyer, but cuts off a potential plot line of Jen being She-Hulk more often.

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* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Played with, as Jennifer Walters gains Hulk powers and is promptly labelled "She-Hulk" by the media, but is disdainful towards the name--finding it sexist and reductive. The concept is referenced in episode 3 [[TakeThatCritic in a satirical nod to real-life backlash against the trend]], when several misogynists and chauvinists complain online about the recent proliferation of female superheroes, especially ones sharing hero codenames with male heroes.

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* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Played with, as Jennifer Walters gains Hulk powers and is promptly labelled "She-Hulk" by the media, but is disdainful towards the name--finding it sexist and reductive. The concept is referenced in episode 3 [[TakeThatCritic [[TakeThatCritics in a satirical nod to real-life backlash against the trend]], when several misogynists and chauvinists complain online about the recent proliferation of female superheroes, especially ones sharing hero codenames with male heroes.


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** A news reporter asks Jennifer if she got her powers as a result of a botched mob hit, a reference to the circumstances behind her blood transfusion in the comics.
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* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Referenced in episode 3 [[TakeThatCritic in a satirical nod to real-life backlash against the trend]], when several misogynists and chauvinists complain online about the recent proliferation of female superheroes, especially ones sharing hero codenames with male heroes.

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* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Referenced Played with, as Jennifer Walters gains Hulk powers and is promptly labelled "She-Hulk" by the media, but is disdainful towards the name--finding it sexist and reductive. The concept is referenced in episode 3 [[TakeThatCritic in a satirical nod to real-life backlash against the trend]], when several misogynists and chauvinists complain online about the recent proliferation of female superheroes, especially ones sharing hero codenames with male heroes.
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* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Emile Blonsky aka The Abomination has a devoted harem of female admirers whom he communicates with via the prison letter writing programme. They successfully campaign for his release and eventually fund his "Wellness retreat".

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* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Emile Blonsky Emil Blonsky, aka The Abomination Abomination, has a devoted harem of female admirers whom he communicates with via the prison letter writing programme. They successfully campaign for his release and eventually fund his "Wellness retreat".
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Added DiffLines:

* AffirmativeActionLegacy: Referenced in episode 3 [[TakeThatCritic in a satirical nod to real-life backlash against the trend]], when several misogynists and chauvinists complain online about the recent proliferation of female superheroes, especially ones sharing hero codenames with male heroes.
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* TakeThatCritics: Jen's in-universe detractors directly mirror the misogynistic internet backlash the show has gotten for its feminist leaning protagonist, as well as backlash levelled towards the MCU for including more female superheroes in general--with Jane Foster as the Mighty Thor being directly referenced.

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* TakeThatCritics: Jen's in-universe detractors directly mirror the misogynistic internet backlash the show has gotten for its feminist leaning protagonist, as well as backlash levelled towards the MCU (and by extension the comics) for including more female superheroes in general--with Jane Foster as the Mighty Thor being directly referenced.
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* TakeThatCritics: Jen's in-universe detractors directly mirror the misogynistic internet backlash the show has gotten for its feminist leaning protagonist.

to:

* TakeThatCritics: Jen's in-universe detractors directly mirror the misogynistic internet backlash the show has gotten for its feminist leaning protagonist.protagonist, as well as backlash levelled towards the MCU for including more female superheroes in general--with Jane Foster as the Mighty Thor being directly referenced.
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