From Entertainment Weekly:
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Let's start with Wonder Man. Not much has been released on this show yet, but I get the sense that this is gonna be a meta show. How meta are we talking about here?
BRAD WINDERBAUM: It's one of my favorite things I've ever been a part of at the studio. I'll start there. It's very different than anything the studio's produced. In terms of how meta it is, without getting into details, it is a show that takes place within the MCU, but it's a story about Hollywood. And it's a story about not just Hollywood, I would say it's a story about acting and the journey of an actor in Hollywood, of having to balance being an artist with making money and very grounded ideas that anyone who came up in Hollywood or in the arts in general can relate to. I certainly could on a very deep level.
So is this Marvel's version of The Studio, basically?
It's funny you should say that. We all, obviously, are obsessed with that show. Sometimes it cuts a little close to the bone, but it's so funny and so great. [Wonder Man] is very different than The Studio, actually. It's different tonally. It's very sincere and it's very focused on acting as a craft. The Studio is really more about the big Hollywood system and the machine and the craziness that ensues. This is really a very intimate portrait of one actor trying to live his dreams while the world and the need to make money intervenes.
.
.
.
I remember at the Fantastic Four: First Steps premiere, Yahya did this in-character bit for Marvel socials where he, as Simon, was saying he auditioned for this role of Wonder Man, loved the original Wonder Man when he was younger. Am on the right track in thinking the show is really about Simon auditioning for a Wonder Man reboot based on a property that he loved as a child?
Yeah, yeah. That's definitely a big part of the premise. It gives us a chance to step back at what we do and our influence on the culture and the superhero genre, which we grew up with as filmmakers. Almost everyone in this office can recite the 1978 Superman film or the 1989 Batman film. There's a legacy of these characters that move from generation to generation and what it means, for one sliver of time, to carry that character from one generation to the next.