Wonder Man showrunner Andrew Guest reveals the 5 TV comedies that inspired the new Marvel TV show — and what he learned from them
Exclusive: 'That's what people come back to every week'
· TechRadarNews By Tom Power published 24 January 2026
Marvel's Wonder Man, which stars Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, is a metatextual tragicomedy (Image credit: Marvel Studios) Share Share by:
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- Wonder Man was shaped by its co-creator's work on three other comedy shows
- Andrew Guest says writing for those projects influenced how he wrote the Disney+ series' scripts
- The Marvel TV Original will be released in late January
Wonder Man's head writer has revealed how his work on three other comedy shows informed Marvel's latest TV project.
Ahead of the Disney+ show's launch on January 27/28, I sat down for an exclusive chat with Andrew Guest to dig into the making of the first Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) production of 2026. And, as part of our wide-ranging interview, Guest explained how his time writing for similar genre fare helped him shape Wonder Man's character-driven narrative.
Prior to working on Wonder Man and other MCU projects – Guest was a consulting producer on the 2021 TV series Hawkeye and an uncredited writer on last year's The Fantastic Four: First Steps – he penned scripts for some of the best TV comedies of the last 20 years.
Indeed, from writing the 'Succession' episode of classic comedy 30 Rock to recent sitcoms Community, Suburgatory, and Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Guest's CV reads like a who's who of critically acclaimed and popular laugh-a-minute projects.
Having dabbled in various TV comedies over the past two decades, Guest was well-placed to determine what Wonder Man's primary focus should be. Armed with two incredibly talented actors, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Ben Kingsley, Guest said it was clear from the outset that the Marvel Phase 6 TV show should favor a character-led story over a jokes- or plot-driven narrative.
"When it comes to writing comedy for TV, you're constantly sort of balancing three things: the jokes, the characters, and the story," he said.
"I've worked on shows with some incredible showrunners. In the 30 Rock writers' room, when it came to Tina Fey and Robert Carlock running a show, the jokes won. It didn't matter if it wasn't quite right for the character or didn't help the story. It made us laugh. It was going to go in the show, and you could tell in the show that that's the result of that.
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