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#peter porker the spectacular spider ham
nunny-boi · 1 year
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nerds-yearbook · 1 year
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In Peter Porker, the Spectacular Spider-Ham 13# (cover date January, 1987) Quakula, Pinhead of Crime, the Living Moooooooomy, Doctor Chickenstein, Chickenstein's Monster, Ossie (created by Mike Carlin and Joe Albelo), Nick Furry (agent of S.H.E.E.P.), Dodo Dugan, and Deathsquawk (created by Mike Mellor) were introduced. ("Old McDonald's House of Horrors", "Nick Furry, Agent of S.H.E.E.P.", Peter Porker, the Spectacular Spider-Ham, Comic, Event)
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weapon13whitefang · 10 months
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My favorite Spiders going off of ITTSV/ATSV
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fox beats up little pig!
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browsethestacks · 11 months
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The Marvel(ous) Era Of Star Comics
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holy-shit-comics · 1 year
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numberonecomicbooks · 6 months
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Why did I buy this CGC Graded Spider-Man #1?
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kitchu-12 · 1 year
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tssm but make it animals
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watch-joey-collect · 6 months
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popculturebuffet · 4 months
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Into The Spider-Verse Retrospective
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An exaustive look at the comic origins of the Spider-Men and Women featured in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, and the film itself.
Peter Parker: The Amazing Spider-Man (Amazing Fantasy #15) Miles Morales: The Ultimate Spider-Man (Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #1-5) Gwen Stacy: The Radioactive Spider-Woman (Edge of Spider-Verse #2) Peni Parker: The Unstoppable SP//DR (Edge of Spider-Verse #4) Peter Parker: The Vengeful Spider-Man Noir (Spider-Man Noir #1-4) Peter Porker: The Spectacular Spider-Ham (Marvel Tails #1 and Peter Porker, The Spectacular Spider-Ham #15) Miles Morales: The One and Only Spider-Man (Spider-Man Into-The Spider Verse)
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racefortheironthrone · 10 months
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Finally saw the Spider-verse and, I don't think this is a spoiler, couldn't Miguel O'Hara be referred to as the cannonical (heh) 'first variant' Spider-man? Was that the first time someone other than the (or a) Peter Parker suited up as the wall crawler?
Sort of?
Ben Reilly predates Miguel by seventeen years, so it kind of depends on whether you consider Ben Reilly to be "a Peter Parker" since he is a clone of Peter Parker, or whether he's his own person. Be careful how you answer, because Madelyne Pryor has Views about that question and she's a known associate of Reilly.
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Spider-Ham predates Miguel by nine years, so it depends on whether you consider Peter Porker to be a Peter Parker. Especially since he technically started out as a spider who just went by Peter, and only took on the last name Porker when he was "adopted" by Aunt May after she bit him and transformed him into the spectacular spider-ham he is today.
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Likewise, we have to consider the question of gender, because Gwaaanda is not the first Spider-Woman in Marvel's history. When in 1977 Stan Lee got freaked out by the possibility that the TV networks might screw him Marvel over by creating distaff versions of Marvel characters and grabbing the copyrights and trademarks, he ordered the creation of She-Hulk (because The Incredible Hulk was a hit show on tv), Ms Marvel (because Stan wasn't about to get screwed over on that name again), and Spider-Woman (because of the cartoon).
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Jessica Drew predates Miguel by 15 years, and Julia Carpenter (who basically originated the black costume before the look got stolen by her male counterpart) predates Miguel by 8 years.
But if we narrowly confine ourselves to Spiders who are not Peters nor Parkers who are also men, I think you might be right.
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nunny-boi · 1 year
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nerds-yearbook · 10 months
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In Peter Porker the Spectacular Spider-Ham 2#, cover date July, 1985, the Buzzard, Bulfrog, Richard Bird-Dog, Elizabeth Tabby, Mikzy Byline, and Rupert Hedgehog were introduced. They were created by Steve Skeates and Mark Armstrong. The issue also introduced the Uncanny X-Bugs (Professor X-Bug, Colosso-Bug, Ororo-Bug, Wolverine-Bug, Bug-Eye, Night-Crawly), Micro-Newts, and Magsquito. They were created by Steve Mellor. ("Buzzards and Bullfrogs", "The Uncanny X-Bugs", Peter Porker the Spectacular Spider-Ham 2#, Marvel/Star Comic Event)
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cutepastelstarsalior · 10 months
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Most of the spider people in the Across the Spiderverse
Miles Morals
Gwen Stacy
Peni Parker
Peter B. Parker
Mayday “May” Parker aka Spider-girl
Spider Noir
Miguel O’Hara aka Spider-Man 2099
Pavitr Prabhakar
Jessica Drew aka Spider-women
Hobie Brown aka Spider-Punk
Ben Reilly, aka the Scarlet Spider (he’s a clone)
PlayStation Spider-Man
Spider-Man Unlimited
Spider from The Spectacular Spider-Man
Takuya Yamashiro Spider-Man from the live action 1978 japan show
Tobey Maguire's Spider-Man
Andrew Garfield's Spider-Man
Insomniac PlayStation Spider-Man video games. (There 3 different version of re-color skins)
Spider-Armor MK 1, MK II. And MK III
Mary Jane Watson-Parker aka Spinnerette
Annie May Parker aka Spiderling
Maybelle Reilly aka Steampunk Lady Spider
Werewolf Spider-Man
Spider cop
Mangaverse Spider-Man
Superior Spider-Man, (who is actually Doctor Octopus possessing Peter)
Anya Corazon aka Spider-Girl aka spider bitch
Julia Carpenter aka Madam Web
Armored Spider-Man.
Kaine Parker aka Tarantula aka Scarlet Spider (he’s also a clone like Ben)
Earth-X Spider-Man (??? Not 100% sure)
Spider monkey
Spider cat
Spider t-Rex
Bombastic Bag-Man (it’s Peter Parker who in a different outfit because an issue with the venom suit left him without a outfit)
Cyborg Spider-Woman
Doppelganger (another mother freaking clone)
Iron Spider (outfit made by Tony Stark)
Margo Kess aka Spider-Byte
Captain Spider aka Flash Thompson
Spidercide (you freaking guess it; another clone)
Spider-Man 2211, aka Dr. Max Borne
Spider-Therapist
Patrick O’Hara aka Web-Slinger and Spider-Horse
LEGO Spidey
Malala Windsor aka Spider UK
Peter Parkedcar
1967 Spider-Man (aka that one Spider-Man point meme is from)
Charlotte Webber aka Sun-Spider
The Last Stand spider-man from Earth-616 (alternate universe were he’s bad)
Web-Man (mirrored duplicate of Spider-Man created by Doctor Doom)
Peter Porker aka Spider-Ham
Peter Parker From Earth-199999
A Spider-Man in the Tron costume
Metro Spider-Man ( Metro Boomin’s sona. He is the production of the Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse soundtrack)
Future Foundation Spider-Man
Bullet Points Bruce Banner (from a what if comic were Bruce and Peter swap roles)
Ultimate Tarantula (clone)
Spyder-Knight
Spider-Mechanic
Dormammu-Verse Spider-Man
Prince of Arachne
That’s all the one I could find! I mostly likely miss a lot…
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ogradyfilm · 11 months
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Recently Viewed - Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
[The following review contains MAJOR SPOILERS; YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!]
Five year ago, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse argued that anybody is capable of (figuratively) being Spider-Man—a seemingly simple thesis that nevertheless resonated with audiences due to the implicit call to action that accompanied it: “Everybody should aspire to be as heroic as Spider-Man.” Now, the film’s sequel—Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse—elaborates on that theme, exploring what it actually means to “be Spider-Man.”
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For Miguel O’Hara (alias Spider-Man 2099), who commands an alliance of Spider-People recruited from across the Spider-Verse (hence the movie's title), heroism is defined entirely by suffering. Indeed, he does not merely believe that trauma “builds character”; his own experiences have convinced him that certain tragedies (the death of the father figure, the failure to save the mentor, the loss of the first true love) are not only inevitable, but essential—and as the interconnected web of the multiverse becomes increasingly convoluted, he fears that interfering with such formative events could have disastrous consequences. Thus, in order to prevent the fabric of reality itself from unraveling, The Canon must be upheld—and if accomplishing this goal costs a handful of innocent lives… well, don't the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few?
While Miguel’s fatalistic philosophy is obviously flawed (several alternate earths remain totally intact despite deviating from the established formula, contradicting the theory that “Anomalies” are inherently catastrophic), it’s just persuasive enough to be embraced by his more vulnerable counterparts. Gwen Stacy, for example, joins the the cause after her secret identity is exposed in her native dimension, leaving her effectively homeless; hunted as a fugitive and disowned by her police captain father, she tolerates her superiors' dogmatic zealotry only because she has literally no other option. Her newfound teammates are equally disillusioned with the vigilante lifestyle; the patented “Parker Luck” has diminished their fortitude to such an extent that the idea of their shared misfortune being preordained and immutable—the promise that it serves some concrete (albeit grim) purpose—provides a measure of comfort.
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Miles Morales, on the other hand, refuses to resign himself to “destiny,” rejecting Miguel’s ruthlessly pragmatic methods outright; from his point-of-view, a leader with a vast network of allies and resources at his disposal shouldn’t demand such steep personal sacrifices from his subordinates—especially when the evidence supporting the necessity of this self-imposed martyrdom is flimsy at best. This conflict gradually evolves into a compellingly nuanced meditation on the nature of power and responsibility. The crux of Across the Spider-Verse’s central premise is that inaction, even for the sake of the so-called “greater good,” is utterly antithetical to the values that Spider-Man represents—a blatant betrayal of the vow that he made on the night of Uncle Ben’s murder.
It is, of course, impossible to save everybody (to paraphrase Peter Porker, the Spectacular Spider-Ham), but a true hero never stops trying anyway. And that, ultimately, is what it means to be Spider-Man.
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browsethestacks · 1 year
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Vintage Poster - Star Comics Promotional Poster (1985)
Art by Warren Kremer
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