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What hero, who made his debut in 1969, had a room which was shown to include not only Captain America-themed items, but also copies of Stan Lee’s Origins of Marvel Comics and Son of Origins?
Ah, "Sons Of Origins". My first big book of Marvel comics. I wish it hadn't been tossed out with the garbage by my mother. That, and my collection of Captain Marvel's Fawcett era comics. And a lot of comics I hadn't even read. Big boxes full. All out in the trash.
Correct you are! All of the aforementioned elements were shown to be part of the Major's quarters aboard the Captain America.
He had a lot of them in his childhood room, too, as seen in Giant-Size Defenders #5; but that pre-dated the Origins collections, I think.
In a similar vein: who once referred to Spider-Man as "Spidey-Man", prompting the web-slinger to regret allowing the Electric Company to call him "Spidey"?
In a similar vein: who once referred to Spider-Man as "Spidey-Man", prompting the web-slinger to regret allowing the Electric Company to call him "Spidey"?
Good guess, DiZo, and right on the mark! Franklin Richards, Marvel's walking plot device and exit strategy for bad storylines (see Heroes Reborn), said that in Fantastic Four #250!
Good guess, DiZo, and right on the mark! Franklin Richards, Marvel's walking plot device and exit strategy for bad storylines (see Heroes Reborn), said that in Fantastic Four #250!
All yours.
Don't forget the time Marvel had killed off Galactus. Sometime later, it was Franklin who caused him to be reborn.
I spent yesterday with my 2-year old grandson watching some old 1990's Spider-Man episodes.
I don't think it is comic book canon, but in the series a retelling of the Kingpin's origin revealed that Fisk was a name he adopted to disassociate himself from his father, whom he despised. What was the Kingpin's "real" last name in the 1990's Spidey cartoon series?
I spent yesterday with my 2-year old grandson watching some old 1990's Spider-Man episodes.
I don't think it is comic book canon, but in the series a retelling of the Kingpin's origin revealed that Fisk was a name he adopted to disassociate himself from his father, whom he despised. What was the Kingpin's "real" last name in the 1990's Spidey cartoon series?
I remember that. It was a tribute to the Sherlock Holmes character of Professor Moriarty.
They kept the "Wilson" in the Fisk name when he changed it and so his name was originally "Wilson Moriarty".