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#stanlee

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"She can't understand how she got here — how her father's wealth and fame and creative energy have eluded her."

For Business Insider, Jason Guerrasio writes about the life of Stan Lee's only child: businessinsider.com/inside-lif

Business Insider · JC Lee, Marvel legend Stan Lee's child, tries to defend his legacyBy Jason Guerrasio

so the guy who's making the documentary exposing years of abuse to Stan Lee is basically saying:
"I have incriminating evidence of the abuse of a beloved elderly man, but you have to pay me for me to release it."

you're as bad as all the "bad people" in your documentary, you freak.

Replied in thread

@bazkie Ok, just for you, (and so that I don't forget it)...

First, I was somehow invited to a banquet at some fancy hotel somewhere.

The banquet hall was a large ballroom type place, with a stage. Kind of art-deco, lots of curves, all white. Tall ceiling.

The tables were long and rectangular, with white tablecloths and flower centerpieces and so forth. Attire was formal, some men in tuxedos. Women in ball gowns.

I had gotten my food and was headed to my assigned table. I sat down in my place, which happened to be the "head" of that particular table.

To my left and right were two attractive young women. Both brunettes, I believe.

But as I'm happily married, and figured I didn't have anything in common with them anyway, I minded my own business as usual, and began eating while they had their discussion in front of me.

The woman on the left was explaining her comic book collection to the other. This intrigued me, because I'm a nerd. So then I began paying attention.

All of a sudden, a bookcase with her entire collection appeared to my left, and she pulled out her "prized" possession... a first edition X-Men #1, signed by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.

She pulled it out gently with careful fingers, showed it to us with both hands, while looking suspiciously around the room, and then gingerly put it back onto the shelf.

I had a vague idea in my head of it being worth something around $150,000,000. (In reality, it's only worth around $15,000).

In any case, we begin talking about comic book collecting. The conversation continues and I tell them about my wife and family and my comic book collection, etc. It's a nice little conversation. Pleasant. Friendly.

I mention off-hand, that it seems to me that it's rare that young attractive women are interested in vintage comic book collecting.

--Record-scratch--- Everything stops.

All of a sudden, at the next table over, Dana White, of the UFC, stands up and glares at me. Taken aback, I say, "What's up, Dana? What's the problem?"

Dana White, of the UFC, proceeds to stalk over to me in his tuxedo, completely fired up, angry as a bull, and begins lecturing me about how sexist I am and how women are allowed to collect comic books, and that it's not rare, and that I should be ashamed of myself for even suggesting that it's out of the ordinary. He starts screaming that I was a sexist pig. He really wanted to hit me, but his thugs pulled him back.

The two women attempt to defend me, telling Dana that there is no reason to get upset, and that they agreed with me, and that he's out of line and out of control and should go sit back down.

Everyone's cooler heads prevail, and they go back to their table, Dana still glaring at me the whole time, and we all sit back down.

At that point, I notice that my silver metal spy briefcase is sitting on the table in front of me. And I realize that I had better protect that case, otherwise Dana's thugs might take it and get what's inside.

What's inside the briefcase, you ask? Poker chips. Just a generic set of nice poker chips so that I could play poker with the guys later that week. I was just carrying it around with me, for safe keeping. Because they're special, nice poker chips. Of course.

At that point, I realized that I was late for the Mountain Bike race. (You know, as banquets often precede mountain bike races.)

So I jump up to leave. The briefcase is still on the table, and another man at the table says he'll watch it for me, but that it's risky because Dana's thugs are still mad at me. But he'll do his best.

Flash forward and I'm in the middle of a cross-country MTB race. I'm barrelling down a course with small hills and lots of blind turns. Essentially singletrack, but flanked on each side by tall, green opaque fencing. So it's a bit like riding through a hedge maze.

Nobody can pass anyone. I remember thinking that this was a stupid layout for a race, because it's too tight and nobody can overtake. It's just impossible. So I settle in and just continue the race at a normal pace, and just try to enjoy it for the nice bike ride that it is. Riders behind me are furious.

I get to the finish line and then ride straight back over to the banquet hall, ditching my bike on the floor as I run to the table to make sure my briefcase is still there.

It's not there.

I walk over and question Dana White's thugs. Dana is nowhere to be found.

This leads to shouting, and the shouting leads to a fistfight. A classic barroom-brawl style fistfight. Real Cowboy stuff. Like, dudes swinging, and ducking and letting the other dude behind them receive the punch to the face. People being thrown over tables, hitting each other with chairs that instantly break apart, etc.

I nope right out of there and high-tail it to my car. I open the hatchback and there, miraculously, is my briefcase. I don't know why or how, but I'm relieved and thankful.

I close the hatch, hop in the driver's seat, and peel out of the parking lot.

The end.

Weird, right?

#ufc #mtb #mountainbiking #dreams #comics #comicbooks #x-men #xmen #stanlee #jackkirby #sexism #weird #poker #pokerchips #spy #spythriller #spies #spybriefcase #cowboy #cowboys #fisfights #fight #fighting #brawl #hatchback #slapstick #cycling #bikes

#remembering #StanLee #writer #editor #Marvel #Spiderman #FantasticFour #Avengers #ironman #Thor #CaptainAmerica #scarletwitch #blackwidow #captainmarvel #hulk #shehulk #antman #thewasp #GuardiansoftheGalaxy #blackpanther #doctorstrange #Hawkeye #xmen #daredevil #laststand #theamazingspiderman #thedarkworld #wintersoldier #ageofultron #civilwar #deadpool #apocalypse #homecoming #thorragnarok #infinitywar #venom #morbius
xmen 2000
spiderman 2002
spiderman 2 2004
fantastic four 2005
laststand 2006
ff2 2007
spiderman 3 2007
ironman 2008
the incredible hulk 2008
ironman 2 2010
thor 2011
first avenger 2011
the avengers 2012
the amazing spiderman 2012
ironman 3 2013
dark world 2013
winter soldier 2014
guardians 2014
the amazing spiderman 2 2014
age of ultron 2015
antman 2015
civil war 2016
doctor strange 2016
deadpool 2016
apocalypse 2016
vol 2
homecoming 2017
ragnarok 2017
black panther 2018
deadpool 2 2018
infinity war 2018
antman the wasp 2018
venom 2018
captain marvel 2019
venom 2 2021
morbius 2022

This is an interesting read on the ever-present social justice themes of the X-Men. Both in the way the characters were written, but also in how readers perceived and related to them, especially those dealing with discrimination themselves.

It's also something that has grown and evolved throughout the decades, along with those characters and the way their stories are told. Different creators have tried different approaches, and obviously not every X-Men story has a real life parallel. Nevertheless, the themes of prejudice, tolerance and acceptance, and the struggles of those who are different have undeniably always been a core element when it comes to the history of the X-Men comics.

“There's kind of an undeniable set of allegories that are going on there,” says Sean Howe, author of Marvel Comics: The Untold Story. “The X-Men was probably the most explicitly political of the 1960s Marvel comics.”

history.com/news/stan-lee-x-me

HISTORY · How Stan Lee’s X-Men Were Inspired by Real-Life Civil Rights HeroesBy Dante A. Ciampaglia