Tatiana Maslany stars as Walters, alongside Josh Segarra, Jameela Jamil, Ginger Gonzaga, Jon Bass, Griffin Matthews, and Renée Elise Goldsberry.
Walters is annoyed to discover that Todd, one of her unsuccessful dates, is also a client at GLK&H, but this helps her to realize that she can use her dating-app history to establish a past record of her identifying as She-Hulk before Titania ever tried to gain the trademark.
Thanks to her past dates' all being subpoenaed and testifying on her behalf, Walters wins the case, and a humiliated Titania is ordered to discontinue sales of every one of her products bearing the name "She-Hulk".
[3][4] Executive producers include Marvel Studios' Kevin Feige, Louis D'Esposito, Victoria Alonso, and Brad Winderbaum, in addition to lead director Kat Coiro, and head writer Jessica Gao.
[11] The episode stars Tatiana Maslany as Jennifer Walters / She-Hulk, Josh Segarra as Augustus "Pug" Pugliese, Jameela Jamil as Titania, Ginger Gonzaga as Nikki Ramos,[5] Jon Bass as Todd, Griffin Matthews as Luke Jacobson,[12] and Renée Elise Goldsberry as Mallory Book.
[5] Also appearing are Steve Coulter as Holden Holliway, Nicholas Cirillo as Cousin Ched,[13]: 26:48 Brandon Stanley as Eugene Patilio,[14] David Otunga as Derek, Eddy Rioseco as Noah,[13]: 26:48 Michel Curiel as Arthur,[8] and Darin Toonder as Robert Wallis.
[17] Visual effects for the series were created by Digital Domain, Wētā FX, Wylie Co., Cantina Creative, FuseFX, SDFX Studios, Capital T, Keep Me Posted, WeFX, Soho VFX, and Lightstage.
[25] Whip Media, which tracks viewership data for the more than 21 million worldwide users of its TV Time app, calculated that She-Hulk: Attorney at Law was the second most-streamed original series in the U.S. for the week ending September 18, 2022.
The site's critical consensus reads, "Jennifer Walters finds herself in the hot seat in an installment that could have used more heat, although She-Hulk's side characters get to shine and there's a devilish hint of better things to come.
Additionally, the lack of cameo appearances in the episode helped She-Hulk present "a clear and purposeful identity of its own" and allowed the ensemble cast to shine, particularly Goldsberry, Gonzaga, and Matthews.
[28] Giving the episode an "A–", Arezou Amin of Collider also felt that the lack of cameo appearances allowed the cast to "shine wholly on their own, and [helped further] She-Hulk's procedural style".
Amin pointed out Gonzaga, who she called "a delightful comedic presence on the show", since she was able to help ground the series, and was glad Goldsberry began to have a more prominent role after her brief appearance in the third episode.