The T-Shirt Lawyer: Animated Series

Episode 1: Fighting Suits, Not Wearing Them

Watch The T-Shirt Lawyer come to life in this anime-style animated intro. In a city controlled by corporate villains in designer suits, one lawyer fights back — in jeans and a graphic tee.

T-Shirt Lawyer comic character — Phoenix personal injury attorney giving a thumbs up

Watch Episode 1

Episode 1: Fighting Suits, Not Wearing Them

About This Episode

Phoenix is under siege. Corporate lawyers and insurance villains treat injured people like case numbers on a spreadsheet. They slam briefcases and wrap victims in chains of paperwork. They sneer. They laugh. They think nobody will fight back.

They’re wrong.

Enter The T-Shirt Lawyer — no tie, no corner office, just grit, skill, and a burning drive for justice. Watch as he tears through chains of paperwork, dodges golden pens hurled like daggers, and delivers the line that says it all: “Justice doesn’t need a necktie.”

This 75-second anime-style intro sets the stage for a hero who fights the system in the most unexpected uniform imaginable: a graphic tee.

Episode Transcript

[Opening Scene — Epic Cityscape]
Phoenix skyline. A car accident erupts. Papers scatter. Insurance villains in dark suits with glowing red eyes tower over injured people.

Villain Lawyer (sneering): “Sign here… or you’ll get nothing!”
He slams a briefcase — chains of paperwork wrap around victims.

Narrator (dramatic): “In a world where the suits hold all the power…”

[Cut — Smug Lawyers Laughing]
Another suit adjusts his tie, smirking.

Villain Lawyer 2: “Your pain? Just numbers on a spreadsheet!”
They cackle. Victims shrink back.

Narrator: “…and people are treated like case files…”

[Hero Entrance]
Lightning crack. A shadowed figure steps forward — The T-Shirt Lawyer. Just jeans and a bold T-shirt. He tears through the chains with glowing blue energy.

T-Shirt Lawyer (confident, calm): “Funny thing about suits… they always underestimate the guy without one.”

Narrator (rising intensity): “…one lawyer fights back with grit, skill, and heart.”

[Action Montage]
T-Shirt Lawyer dodges golden pens hurled like daggers, flips over a crashing car, and slams a gavel that cracks the pavement, scattering villains.

Villain Lawyer (shaken): “Impossible! He’s not hardly even wearing a tie!”

T-Shirt Lawyer (smirking): “Justice doesn’t need a necktie.”

[Comedic Beat]
Billboard of a rival PI lawyer bragging: “We’ve recovered BAZILLIONS!” It flickers. T-Shirt Lawyer walks by, casually snaps his fingers. Billboard collapses.

T-Shirt Lawyer (deadpan): “It’s not about bazillions. It’s about people.”

[Final Hero Shot]
T-Shirt Lawyer stands tall on a smashed briefcase. Wind blows. Clients rise behind him, free of chains. His shirt glows with the logo.

Narrator (resolute): “He’s not here to wear a suit. He’s here to fight them.”

T-Shirt Lawyer (pointing at camera): “Fighting suits… not wearing them.”

The Comic Book Is Here Too

Get Issue #1

8 pages. Same hero. Different format.

The Universe

The animated series is part of The T-Shirt Lawyer universe — a world where justice doesn’t come from a corner office, it comes from grit, heart, and the guts to show up.

The T-Shirt Lawyer was created by Jared Pehrson, the founding attorney of Impact Legal — a personal injury law firm in Phoenix, Arizona. The animated series, the comic book, and everything in between share one mission: flip the script on what a lawyer looks like and spotlight the fight everyday people face against powerful corporations.

The characters are fiction. The mission is real. Impact Legal handles car accidents, truck wrecks, motorcycle crashes, wrongful death, and more — no suits required.

More Coming Soon

Episode 1 is just the beginning. The T-Shirt Lawyer universe is expanding — new episodes, new villains, and bigger fights ahead.

Follow tshirtlawyer.com for new episode drops, behind-the-scenes content, and updates on the animated series and comic book.

The fight for justice never stops. Neither does the show.

Want More?

Order the Comic Book

Issue #1 available now. Paperback.