Anti Gravity Room Legends with Roz & Jack Kirby Stan Lee Burt Ward
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- Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
- An episode of the Anti-Gravity Room (Legends) Features Stan Lee, Jack and Roz Kirby, Stan Lee, Mike Carlin, Mark Gruenwald, Mark Evanier, Batton Lash, Janeane Garofalo, & Burt Ward with Phil, Nick and Shashi... Upladed for posterity.
Man, this takes me back. Thanks for posting!
man this is so cool. I wish things were still like this. All I ever hear nowadays about the internals of marvel and dc is the bullshit, but I'd want dumb stuff like this
i lived these times.....Wish things were so much more like this.
I remember watching this show on SciFi long ago back when the channel was spelled correctly.
I don’t think I got all the DC vs Marvel comics yet when this episode aired.
im interviewing Nick from Antigravity room tomorrow Live at 7pm est / 4pm pst on my channel! can i PLEASE PLEASE use some of your clips are a reference!
I don't claim ownership. I just posted it for posterity... So have it it! ;)
Could this be any more 90s?
why crop them? It looks bad.
Stan sure did predict the age of MARVEL films.....to bad they're going woke and gonna go broke.
Marvel Comics has always been "woke", troll
@@christopherpdearing No not in the past
@@DSkehan2004 Yes, if you go back to Captain America, Sub-Mariner, Human Torch, the Whizzer, Miss America, and the Destroyer in WWII, they were fighting fascists. Not to mention that supervillains such as Baron Zemo, Red Skull, and Hate-Monger are white supremacist/white nationalist villains. Although, one could complain how the Japanese in the WWII days weren't distinguished between innocents and guilty, and how the marvel heroes tend to use fascistic tendencies as they were mostly white.
@@CosmoShidan Because only "white" people can be fascist? I guess it's a matter of semantics, but what might you call Pol Pot, Chairman Mao, Idi Amin, Augusto Pinochet, and their fascistic followers? As for portrayal of the Japanese, your logic is muddled at best. The Japanese "...weren't distinguished between innocent and guilty"? In almost every portrayal it was of Japanese soldiers (not civilians) who were in fact notoriously brutal and aggressive from the Rape of Nanjing to the horrors committed against Korea and The Philippines. This is not to mention Pearl Harbor. So in a time of war the comics were of course jingoistic. But how much Japanese propaganda have you seen from that era? How nuanced were the portrayals of Americans (the populace were told US G.I.'s were cannibals and it was better to commit suicide than to surrender to them). Or the portrayal of Chinese as an entire nation of ignorant and inferior peasants? When you attempt to blather on about "white fascists" when in fact those very same comics were devoted to kicking Hitler's and Mussolini's asses also, you're on a high horse that's really a tiny little rocking pony. Engage in facts, not your silly virtue signaling and ignorant generalizations.