Spidey has been on Valentines Day cards dating back as far as the 1970s.
Brad created the Crawlspace back in 1998 while attending college at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He’s the webmaster and writes front page news items, and also produces, hosts and edits the podcast. He’s been collecting Spider-Man comics since the age of three and is a life-long fan of the webhead. His website has been featured in USA Today, Entertainment Weekly and on Marvel.com and inside the comics themselves. The Crawlspace is one of the first Spider-Man fan sites to ever hit the internet. Millions of people visit the site every year.
Brad has interviewed several “Spider-Celebrities” over the years including co-creator Stan Lee. He’s also interviewed actors who have portrayed Spider-Man like Paul Soles (Voice Actor from the 67 Spider-Man Cartoon), Dan Gilvezan (Spidey Voice Actor from Spider-Man & His Amazing Friends) ,Yuri Lownthal (Voice Actor from the Spider-Man PlayStation game) and Nicholas Hammond (Spider-Man 1977 Actor).
Back in the 1970s, us kids didn’t have the fancy silly string web shooters. We had water shooters. I’d but this for $3.75, would you?
When you web swing, you need to protect yourself. I once gave this to Zach on a Christmas episode of the podcast.
These are worth more in mint condition and not used.
Was that written by Micheline? If it wasn’t Micheline then I can’t remember the writer off the top of my head, but there’s a podcast where Brad interviews him and they talk about that story, about the bomb threat and how Marvel reacted to it and how subsequent chapters in that story were rewritten.
different day related but given its st patricks day did any one ever here the the story where spidy went up against the IRA in london and belfast. possibly a lot of british consolate in new york influence on the story or marvels own ignorance who knows but a load of irish americans went mental at historical inacuricies and misrepresentations, some bomb warnings where made, not saying it was right or wrong but bit of a mad irish story for the day thats in it. Beannachtaí na Féile Pádraig http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2011/05/06/comic-book-legends-revealed-312/
What is the deal with the non-mailable envelopes? Would the post office bring them back to your house if you tried to use them to send something through the mail?