Marvel shows are known to have some hidden Easter Eggs that connect it to past and future series and movies set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
And She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is no different.
In the first episode, Jennifer Walters / She-Hulk, goes to court against the law firm, GLK&H.
Related: She-Hulk boss on Abomination's unexpected new side
However, Dan Slott, who helped launch the She-Hulk comic book series in 2004, took to Twitter to reveal that this wasn't the first time we ever heard of that firm.
In fact, the GLK&H was first mentioned in the second episode of the Marvel show, Agent Carter.
What to Read Next
"Bit of She-Hulk trivia," he wrote alongside a snapshot of the episode where Carter talks about the firm. "She-Hulk: Attorney at Law was not the first MCU appearance of the GLK&H law firm.
"Seems that in the 40's they were based in NYC, and Lieber hadn't been made a partner yet. And that *had* to be Holden Holliway's father or grandfather at the firm, right?"
Related: She-Hulk's Jameela Jamil shares NSFW Titania clip
GLK&H stands for Goodman, Lieber, Kurtzberg and Holliway, and those names were certainly not picked randomly.
Goodman refers to the original Marvel publisher Martin Goodman; Lieber to Stan Lee's last name, Stanley Martin Lieber; and Kurtzberg to DC and Marvel comic book legend, Jack Kirby, aka Jacob Kurtzberg.
The firm is set to play a big role in the nine-episode series that follows Jennifer Walters – a 30-something attorney who also happens to have a certain similarity to Hulk, namely that she also has a tendency to turn into a green 6-foot-7-inch powerful giant.
The show has also seen a number of MCU veterans making an appearance, including Mark Ruffalo as Hulk, Tim Roth as Abomination, Charlie Cox as Daredevil, and Benedict Wong as Wong.
She-Hulk: Attorney At Law is streaming on Disney+, with new episodes premiering on Thursdays.
















