Unfortunately for your argument, what really counts is how much something is watched.I however find it funny that a person who wrote one episode of a, to put it mildly, controversial show that most people don't hold up as some great classic or big hit is upset that he only got an extra $396 on top of his (as yet undisclosed) salary which when compared to other writers in other area actually is far more than their pay. Like I can't think of many people talking about She-Hulk (except in the context of their writers claims) for quite a while after the show finished. No-one really cares about it, it's being left to basically rot in the corner and be forgotten. It's like said writer lives in a different reality where She Hulk was some absolute classic show that everyone just wanted to watch again and again and was the next Game of Thrones or something.
There's a lot of comment from the usual keyboard warriors that you're very tapped into about how shit it was, how low its scores are on various review aggregators and how much of a failure it was. However, the viewership ratings for it are available, and it did fine. If you bothered to raise your head out of that cesspit of futile internet rage, you might get a broader perspective.