While the Marvel Universe is home to countless heroes and villains, not all them are capable of achieving household name status. Luckily, there are plenty of opportunities for such figures to step back into the spotlight thanks to their relationships with more well known characters, or in the most recent case, much more unconventional methods.During a Thanksgiving Day Parade in the heart of New York City, Bailey Briggs, aka Spider-Boy, joins his friend Christina and fellow hero Squirrel Girl for a view of the sights from one of Sixth Avenue’s many rooftops. Unfortunately, as seen in “Balloonacy!” (by Dan Slott, Ty Templeton, Dee Cunniffe, and VC’s Joe Caramagna, from Spider-Boy #1), Bailey’s unique Spider Sense alerts him to grave danger for everyone in attendance. As it turns out, one of the young hero’s classic rogues, Professor Emilio Helio, aka the Balloon Man, has rigged the parade route with numerous menacing machinations. When those don’t work as well as he had hoped, Helio sets his sights on the parade’s most massive attractions, and with that an army of giant balloons led by a cartoonish Forbush Man are unleashed.When the eponymous hero of 1967’s “The Origin of For-Bush Man” (by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, from Not Brand Echh #5) first appeared, he did so as Irving Forbush, the lowly office gofer of Marble Comics. After years of longing to be a hero, fate struck in the form of a cooking pot smashed onto his head by Forbush’s malicious Aunt Mayhem. This gave Irving the costume he had been looking for, although it didn’t imbue him with any of the powers he needed to be a real superhero. While Forbush Man was capable of attacking his enemies with potentially lethal visions upon revealing his true face, it was usually by sheer luck that he ever overcame any of his adversaries.25 Scariest Versions of Spider-ManMarvel’s Oldest Criminal Organization is Making a Violent Comeback
While the Marvel Universe is home to countless heroes and villains, not all them are capable of achieving household name status. Luckily, there are plenty of opportunities for such figures to step back into the spotlight thanks to their relationships with more well known characters, or in the most recent case, much more unconventional methods.
During a Thanksgiving Day Parade in the heart of New York City, Bailey Briggs, aka Spider-Boy, joins his friend Christina and fellow hero Squirrel Girl for a view of the sights from one of Sixth Avenue’s many rooftops. Unfortunately, as seen in “Balloonacy!” (by Dan Slott, Ty Templeton, Dee Cunniffe, and VC’s Joe Caramagna, from Spider-Boy #1), Bailey’s unique Spider Sense alerts him to grave danger for everyone in attendance. As it turns out, one of the young hero’s classic rogues, Professor Emilio Helio, aka the Balloon Man, has rigged the parade route with numerous menacing machinations. When those don’t work as well as he had hoped, Helio sets his sights on the parade’s most massive attractions, and with that an army of giant balloons led by a cartoonish Forbush Man are unleashed.
When the eponymous hero of 1967’s “The Origin of For-Bush Man” (by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, from Not Brand Echh #5) first appeared, he did so as Irving Forbush, the lowly office gofer of Marble Comics. After years of longing to be a hero, fate struck in the form of a cooking pot smashed onto his head by Forbush’s malicious Aunt Mayhem. This gave Irving the costume he had been looking for, although it didn’t imbue him with any of the powers he needed to be a real superhero. While Forbush Man was capable of attacking his enemies with potentially lethal visions upon revealing his true face, it was usually by sheer luck that he ever overcame any of his adversaries.
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