She-Hulk Writer Dan Slott Confirms He Didn’t Cameo in This Week’s Episode

She-Hulk Writer Dan Slott Confirms He Didn’t Cameo in This Week’s Episode

She-Hulk Writer Dan Slott Confirms He Didn't Cameo in This Week's Episode

The fourth episode of She-Hulk: Lawyer at Regulation is here, and it’s proceeding to take Jennifer Walters/She-Hulk (Tatiana Maslany) MCU venture into a few intriguing headings. The current week’s episode saw Jen taking on an odd and comical godlike legitimate case — and it seems as though one supporting person in those procedures left fans doing a twofold take. Dan Slott, who composed a years-in length She-Hulk performance run during the 2000s, as of late took to Twitter to flippantly affirm that Donny Burst’s legal counselor was not played by him, and was played by entertainer Mike Benitez. Slott then, at that point, proposed to show up in an additional job on a future time of She-Hulk, kidding that “I think I’d make an extraordinary Hearer #5 or Surprised Man on the Lift.”

For those asking, that was NOT me on today’s episode of She-Hulk: Attorney At Law.

That was actor, @MikeBenitezacts.

But since he’s half a decade younger than me, I’ll take that as a compliment.😘

Mike Benitez. Me. pic.twitter.com/qGlCtSAMJO

— Dan Slott (@DanSlott) September 8, 2022

(The trick to doing a double spit take is you have to train yourself to only spit out a 3rd of the water on the initial reaction shot. This is so you’ll have a reserve of two 3rds of the water in your cheeks. Because the double spit take is the “topper” and needs twice the spit.)

— Dan Slott (@DanSlott) September 8, 2022

Slott’s run of She-Hulk has previously demonstrated to impact the Disney+ series, with components like the GLK&H law office, and characters like Augustus “Pug” Pugliese (Josh Segarra), Mallory Book (Renee Elise Goldsberry) and Holden Holliway (Steve Coulter) beginning in his comics. As head essayist Jessica Gao as of late told ComicBook.com, that was only one of a few She-Mass comics that filled in as a standard for the series.

“As far as I might be concerned, it was John Byrne’s run that a) made me go gaga for the person in any case,” Gao told ComicBook.com recently. “Yet, b) I think about that — and a great many people do, this is the same old thing — it’s the notable She-Hulk run. He was the person who presented the fourth-wall breaking and sort of the meta idea of this person, and how she was mindful and realized she was in comics. So as far as I might be concerned, that is quintessential Jen. That is quintessential She-Hulk, really, I ought to say. There’s been such countless emphasess of Jen in the comics, and she truly began somewhat more hesitant, somewhat mousier, and as she somewhat came — more in the Dan Slott and Charles Soule runs, you began to truly see this profession driven working lady, who had an extremely impressive feeling of good and bad. We’ve truly brought a great deal of those characteristics into Jen.”