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The Spider: Introducing The Origin Of The Master Of Men
Adding to the wide range of spooky cult heroes, here is THE SPIDER who fits the title of the 'hero of the night'. First making its appearance in a comic book The Spider Strikes in 1933 it gained its popularity under the name RICHARD WENTWORTH. The creator HARRY STEEGER established the savior of dusk at POPULAR PUBLICATIONS which marked THE SHADOW as its competitor, who was also a mysterious figure that ruled in the dark by fighting and diminishing crime from 1931-1949. Covering his entire journey from an early millionaire philanthropist of New York City who mainly served as Major during World War I to the undercover-night agent, Spider ruled its timeline with an audience ranging from kids to adults. The Spider set the benchmark for the beginning of the Superhero's era, swinging in the nigh...
published: 25 Oct 2021
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SPICY PULPS: Trick or Treat?
When Popular Publications' Harry Steeger revamped Dime Mystery Magazine in late 1933, he created the first weird menace or shudder pulp. Others soon followed, including Culture Publications' Spicy Mystery Stories in 1935.
Spicy Mystery featured a mix of weird menace and supernatural fiction, with any number of sexual teases thrown in to add some spice. The stories were profusely illustrated, with some of the drawings depicting naked women. And the cover art by H. J. Ward, Harry Parkhurst, Norman Saunders, and others added to the tease.
During the early 1940s, do-gooders forced the pulps to tone things down. Spicy Mystery became Speed Mystery. A shell of its former self, the magazine shuddered one last time with its March 1946 issue.
We’ll be saluting the Spicy pulps and more at our 2024...
published: 27 Oct 2023
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The Great Pulp Heroes: Operator #5
We're featuring occasional short videos about the great pulp heroes from time-to-time. OPERATOR #5 debuted during the spring of 1934. Published by Harry Steeger's Popular Publications, the series ran until the end of 1939, lasting for 48 issues. It was written by Frederick C. Davis, Emile C. Tepperman, and Wayne Rogers, all hiding behind the house name of Curtis Steele. The premise of the series — according to Fred Davis — was that "Operator 5 must save the United States from total destruction in every story, every month." To learn more about OPERATOR #5, please visit pulpfest.com.
published: 20 Jan 2024
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DIME DETECTIVE MAGAZINE
DIME DETECTIVE, DIME DETECTIVE MAGAZINE, PULP FICTION, PULP, Dime Mystery Magazine was an American pulp magazine that was published from 1932 to 1950. It was the first terror fiction pulp magazine, and was the instigator of a trend in pulp fiction that came to be called weird menace fiction, in which the protagonist struggles against something that appears to be supernatural, but ultimately can be explained in everyday terms. Initially Dime Mystery contained ordinary mystery stories, but with the October 1933 issue it began publishing terror fiction. The publisher, Harry Steeger, later said he was inspired to create the new genre by the Grand Guignol theater in Paris. In 1938 it returned to detective stories once again. The stories occasionally included science fiction elements, such as ro...
published: 27 May 2022
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Pecos Hank "Fallen Angel" 1930's Pulp Art Slideshow
Spicy Mystery pulp magazine slideshow with "Fallen Angel" by Pecos Hank from the album "El Reno Blues." Available on iTunes, Amazon and CD Baby.
The Great Depression of the 1930's was a golden age of the popular magazines. Manufactured from cheap pulp paper, they cost only two cents to make, sold wholesale to the newsstand for a nickel, and retailed for one dime. A bargain? Not during a time when a nickel could buy you a thick hot dog with sauerkraut, a Hershey bar, a cup of coffee at the Automat, a large scoop ice cream at Coney Island, or, if you were homeless and unemployed, an all-night ride in a heated subway car in the winter. But if you had that extra dime and bought a pulp, you got a lot. The cover caught your eye first. The formula for the cover was "V.V.V" A typical scene mig...
published: 15 Nov 2015
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The SPIDER Episodio 1
En las calles de New York, un vengador acecha. De día, es un millonario e investigador amateur. De noche, un ser noctambulo y misterioso que caza malhechores. Su nombre es.... ¡THE SPIDER!
Creado en 1933 por Harry Steeger, The Spider protagonizó 119 historias editadas por Popular Publications, y dos seriales cinematográficos estrenados entre los 30 y los 40. En esta ocasión, deberá evitar que uno de sus más peligrosos enemigos, El Maestro, logre destruir millones de vidas inocentes.
Con las actuaciones de BERNARDO ALCOVER, ADRIÁN LLUCH, P. FURNIELES y MARTA PÉREZ.
published: 13 Jul 2012
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Hardy Krüger - Seine Ehefrau im durchsichtigen Oberteil! Hier sieht man ihren Busen …
Eigentlich ist Alice Krüger ein Vollprofi auf dem roten Teppich. Mit ihrem jüngsten Auftritt bei der Eröffnung von Jimi Blue Ochsenknechts Bar in Berlin sorgt Alice allerdings für jede Menge Aufsehen.
Foto: ddp images; action press
published: 26 Aug 2019
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The Spider (2019 pulp-based movie) by Ian Adames
A movie based on The Spider, a pulp hero that appeared in Popular Publications written by Harry Steeger in 1933.
Recorded with the help of Albert Marshall, Alejandro Quevedo and Gary Scarboro, and made for the Oviedo High TV Production Class of 2020.
Richard Wentworth is a high-school student who listens to the radio every day. However, one day, the radio reporter announces the robbery of accounting books in the tech-city. Wentworth doesn't know what to do... Until he's bitten by a spider, and becomes a dark-caped vigilante who starts restoring order in the tech-city by stopping its most feared gang.
Music composed by Kevin MacLeod.
published: 06 Apr 2020
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Unglaubliche Aufnahmen Von Überwachungskameras!
Unglaubliche Aufnahmen Von Überwachungskameras!
Seltsame Dinge mit versteckten Kameras gefilmt!
Oft braucht man eine Überwachungskamera - sonst würden man das oder das einfach nicht glauben. Jetzt wirst du einige dieser seltsamen Momente erleben, aber bevor wir anfangen, vergiss nicht, unseren Kanal zu abonnieren.
► Hier ABONNIEREN: https://goo.gl/FDFpDo
published: 10 Dec 2021
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Ingrid Steeger verlässt Talkshow, nachdem Dieter Wedel als Schwein bezeichnet wurde
Ingrid Steeger verteidigt Dieter Wedel
published: 26 Jan 2018
13:24
The Spider: Introducing The Origin Of The Master Of Men
Adding to the wide range of spooky cult heroes, here is THE SPIDER who fits the title of the 'hero of the night'. First making its appearance in a comic book Th...
Adding to the wide range of spooky cult heroes, here is THE SPIDER who fits the title of the 'hero of the night'. First making its appearance in a comic book The Spider Strikes in 1933 it gained its popularity under the name RICHARD WENTWORTH. The creator HARRY STEEGER established the savior of dusk at POPULAR PUBLICATIONS which marked THE SHADOW as its competitor, who was also a mysterious figure that ruled in the dark by fighting and diminishing crime from 1931-1949. Covering his entire journey from an early millionaire philanthropist of New York City who mainly served as Major during World War I to the undercover-night agent, Spider ruled its timeline with an audience ranging from kids to adults. The Spider set the benchmark for the beginning of the Superhero's era, swinging in the night in his all-black heroic costume it became much more difficult for the antagonists to unmask him. Some of his famous evils included The Fly, The Living Pharaoh and Judge Torture. In 1938, Spider made it to Hollywood under the name SPIDER’S WEB, a 15-chapter movie with Warren Hull playing the main lead who fought against the Octopus and his gang, ultimately making it the 1st pulp magazine character to appear on the silver screen. The movie was an epic mix of western and comedy directors, namely Ray Taylor and James W. Horn. In 1941 Columbia Pictures brought back the spider on-screen as Spider Returns with the same artist but it faded away within no time. The dystopic world of the Spider makes him explode into action while he continues to transform his life between the high society norms and unpleasant reality!
Let’s get started over the huge empire built by The Spider starting as a one-man army and spreading onto an uneasy and heavily loaded franchise!
For more awesome content, visit ► https://marvelousvideos.com/
Buy this from here - https://amzn.to/3Ci3ZPs
0:00 Intro
2:19 ORIGIN OF ‘THE NIGHT VIGILANTE’
4:50 ‘THE WINGS OF KALI’: THE SPIDER’S FIRST APPEARANCE
6:32 ‘BLOOD BOND’: A CHAPTER TO UNKNOWN TRIUMPHS
8:04 THE SPIDER’S WEB
8:55 THE SPIDER RETURNS
9:27 THE RETURN OF SPIDER’S COMIC ERA
10:36 DYNAMITE EXPLORING NEW HORIZONS
11:48 WHAT FUTURE HOLDS FOR ‘THE SPIDER’?
https://wn.com/The_Spider_Introducing_The_Origin_Of_The_Master_Of_Men
Adding to the wide range of spooky cult heroes, here is THE SPIDER who fits the title of the 'hero of the night'. First making its appearance in a comic book The Spider Strikes in 1933 it gained its popularity under the name RICHARD WENTWORTH. The creator HARRY STEEGER established the savior of dusk at POPULAR PUBLICATIONS which marked THE SHADOW as its competitor, who was also a mysterious figure that ruled in the dark by fighting and diminishing crime from 1931-1949. Covering his entire journey from an early millionaire philanthropist of New York City who mainly served as Major during World War I to the undercover-night agent, Spider ruled its timeline with an audience ranging from kids to adults. The Spider set the benchmark for the beginning of the Superhero's era, swinging in the night in his all-black heroic costume it became much more difficult for the antagonists to unmask him. Some of his famous evils included The Fly, The Living Pharaoh and Judge Torture. In 1938, Spider made it to Hollywood under the name SPIDER’S WEB, a 15-chapter movie with Warren Hull playing the main lead who fought against the Octopus and his gang, ultimately making it the 1st pulp magazine character to appear on the silver screen. The movie was an epic mix of western and comedy directors, namely Ray Taylor and James W. Horn. In 1941 Columbia Pictures brought back the spider on-screen as Spider Returns with the same artist but it faded away within no time. The dystopic world of the Spider makes him explode into action while he continues to transform his life between the high society norms and unpleasant reality!
Let’s get started over the huge empire built by The Spider starting as a one-man army and spreading onto an uneasy and heavily loaded franchise!
For more awesome content, visit ► https://marvelousvideos.com/
Buy this from here - https://amzn.to/3Ci3ZPs
0:00 Intro
2:19 ORIGIN OF ‘THE NIGHT VIGILANTE’
4:50 ‘THE WINGS OF KALI’: THE SPIDER’S FIRST APPEARANCE
6:32 ‘BLOOD BOND’: A CHAPTER TO UNKNOWN TRIUMPHS
8:04 THE SPIDER’S WEB
8:55 THE SPIDER RETURNS
9:27 THE RETURN OF SPIDER’S COMIC ERA
10:36 DYNAMITE EXPLORING NEW HORIZONS
11:48 WHAT FUTURE HOLDS FOR ‘THE SPIDER’?
- published: 25 Oct 2021
- views: 12286
1:59
SPICY PULPS: Trick or Treat?
When Popular Publications' Harry Steeger revamped Dime Mystery Magazine in late 1933, he created the first weird menace or shudder pulp. Others soon followed, i...
When Popular Publications' Harry Steeger revamped Dime Mystery Magazine in late 1933, he created the first weird menace or shudder pulp. Others soon followed, including Culture Publications' Spicy Mystery Stories in 1935.
Spicy Mystery featured a mix of weird menace and supernatural fiction, with any number of sexual teases thrown in to add some spice. The stories were profusely illustrated, with some of the drawings depicting naked women. And the cover art by H. J. Ward, Harry Parkhurst, Norman Saunders, and others added to the tease.
During the early 1940s, do-gooders forced the pulps to tone things down. Spicy Mystery became Speed Mystery. A shell of its former self, the magazine shuddered one last time with its March 1946 issue.
We’ll be saluting the Spicy pulps and more at our 2024 PulpFest. We hope you’ll join us from August 1 – 4 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Pittsburgh – Cranberry in Mars, Pennsylvania for “Spice, Spies, Shaw,” and more at PulpFest 2024.
https://wn.com/Spicy_Pulps_Trick_Or_Treat
When Popular Publications' Harry Steeger revamped Dime Mystery Magazine in late 1933, he created the first weird menace or shudder pulp. Others soon followed, including Culture Publications' Spicy Mystery Stories in 1935.
Spicy Mystery featured a mix of weird menace and supernatural fiction, with any number of sexual teases thrown in to add some spice. The stories were profusely illustrated, with some of the drawings depicting naked women. And the cover art by H. J. Ward, Harry Parkhurst, Norman Saunders, and others added to the tease.
During the early 1940s, do-gooders forced the pulps to tone things down. Spicy Mystery became Speed Mystery. A shell of its former self, the magazine shuddered one last time with its March 1946 issue.
We’ll be saluting the Spicy pulps and more at our 2024 PulpFest. We hope you’ll join us from August 1 – 4 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Pittsburgh – Cranberry in Mars, Pennsylvania for “Spice, Spies, Shaw,” and more at PulpFest 2024.
- published: 27 Oct 2023
- views: 179
2:26
The Great Pulp Heroes: Operator #5
We're featuring occasional short videos about the great pulp heroes from time-to-time. OPERATOR #5 debuted during the spring of 1934. Published by Harry Steeger...
We're featuring occasional short videos about the great pulp heroes from time-to-time. OPERATOR #5 debuted during the spring of 1934. Published by Harry Steeger's Popular Publications, the series ran until the end of 1939, lasting for 48 issues. It was written by Frederick C. Davis, Emile C. Tepperman, and Wayne Rogers, all hiding behind the house name of Curtis Steele. The premise of the series — according to Fred Davis — was that "Operator 5 must save the United States from total destruction in every story, every month." To learn more about OPERATOR #5, please visit pulpfest.com.
https://wn.com/The_Great_Pulp_Heroes_Operator_5
We're featuring occasional short videos about the great pulp heroes from time-to-time. OPERATOR #5 debuted during the spring of 1934. Published by Harry Steeger's Popular Publications, the series ran until the end of 1939, lasting for 48 issues. It was written by Frederick C. Davis, Emile C. Tepperman, and Wayne Rogers, all hiding behind the house name of Curtis Steele. The premise of the series — according to Fred Davis — was that "Operator 5 must save the United States from total destruction in every story, every month." To learn more about OPERATOR #5, please visit pulpfest.com.
- published: 20 Jan 2024
- views: 15
4:17
DIME DETECTIVE MAGAZINE
DIME DETECTIVE, DIME DETECTIVE MAGAZINE, PULP FICTION, PULP, Dime Mystery Magazine was an American pulp magazine that was published from 1932 to 1950. It was th...
DIME DETECTIVE, DIME DETECTIVE MAGAZINE, PULP FICTION, PULP, Dime Mystery Magazine was an American pulp magazine that was published from 1932 to 1950. It was the first terror fiction pulp magazine, and was the instigator of a trend in pulp fiction that came to be called weird menace fiction, in which the protagonist struggles against something that appears to be supernatural, but ultimately can be explained in everyday terms. Initially Dime Mystery contained ordinary mystery stories, but with the October 1933 issue it began publishing terror fiction. The publisher, Harry Steeger, later said he was inspired to create the new genre by the Grand Guignol theater in Paris. In 1938 it returned to detective stories once again. The stories occasionally included science fiction elements, such as robots, and drugs that can alter the flow of time. In 1950 it briefly changed its title to 15 Mystery, but ceased publication at the end of that year.
https://wn.com/Dime_Detective_Magazine
DIME DETECTIVE, DIME DETECTIVE MAGAZINE, PULP FICTION, PULP, Dime Mystery Magazine was an American pulp magazine that was published from 1932 to 1950. It was the first terror fiction pulp magazine, and was the instigator of a trend in pulp fiction that came to be called weird menace fiction, in which the protagonist struggles against something that appears to be supernatural, but ultimately can be explained in everyday terms. Initially Dime Mystery contained ordinary mystery stories, but with the October 1933 issue it began publishing terror fiction. The publisher, Harry Steeger, later said he was inspired to create the new genre by the Grand Guignol theater in Paris. In 1938 it returned to detective stories once again. The stories occasionally included science fiction elements, such as robots, and drugs that can alter the flow of time. In 1950 it briefly changed its title to 15 Mystery, but ceased publication at the end of that year.
- published: 27 May 2022
- views: 199
3:04
Pecos Hank "Fallen Angel" 1930's Pulp Art Slideshow
Spicy Mystery pulp magazine slideshow with "Fallen Angel" by Pecos Hank from the album "El Reno Blues." Available on iTunes, Amazon and CD Baby.
The Great De...
Spicy Mystery pulp magazine slideshow with "Fallen Angel" by Pecos Hank from the album "El Reno Blues." Available on iTunes, Amazon and CD Baby.
The Great Depression of the 1930's was a golden age of the popular magazines. Manufactured from cheap pulp paper, they cost only two cents to make, sold wholesale to the newsstand for a nickel, and retailed for one dime. A bargain? Not during a time when a nickel could buy you a thick hot dog with sauerkraut, a Hershey bar, a cup of coffee at the Automat, a large scoop ice cream at Coney Island, or, if you were homeless and unemployed, an all-night ride in a heated subway car in the winter. But if you had that extra dime and bought a pulp, you got a lot. The cover caught your eye first. The formula for the cover was "V.V.V" A typical scene might include the victim, a beautiful young blonde with her dress ripped, shown terrified by the violent acts of a lusty villain. Enter the handsome victor, with gun or knife or just fists to rescue her. Who would win? It would cost you a dime to find out.
It was the covers that sold the magazines. Once inside and reading, each page was a thrill, all fast action, a ten cent escape from all your troubles. Suddenly the printed page became a magic mirror. in which you saw yourself as a rugged hero, catching the criminal and saving the beautiful girl... Her sexual gratitude implied. The identity of The Shadow or The Spider or The Secret Agent X. The pulp magazine was a three hour escape, a new life of adventure all over the world.
Glamorous adventure was the fiction side. the non-fiction side was the business. Who bankrolled the pulps and why? For the new York printers, keeping their presses rolling during the depression was costly and at two cents a magazine, their cost, they made the deals. The dominant publishers were the old Street and Smith and the new thrilling and Popular Publications.
Popular Publications' Harry Steeger, fresh from Dartmouth. borrowed five thousand dollars in start-up cash. from his father-in-law. Writers were paid a quarter of a cent per word, four dollars for an interior black-and-white illustration and an oil-on-canvas full-color version. It was all freelance work with no steady employment and if your cover or story didn't help sell last months magazine, the publisher didn't answer the phone the next time you called. Tough times.
Remember the power of the dime? When Steeger put that in front and titled the magazines "Dime Detective" and "Dime Mysteries" they had sudden success. A million pulp magazines a month were being sold at the nations newsstands, and during the worst year of the depression Steeger wrote a six-figure check to the IRS. Harry Steeger became a millionaire and pulp circulation soared to a total of ten million. "Pulp People" got rich while everyone else stayed poor. and that got some jealous. Herbert Hoover, still president in the early years, formed a commission to determine if the pulps should be banned, but Franklin D. Roosevelt was a subscriber and an avid reader.
Power of the dime? Fuggetaboutit! In came the power of the quarter! Spicy Magazine, Spicy Adventure, Spicy Western, Vice Squad, Spicy Movie Tales all started publication in the early '30s and flourished, selling at the then exorbitant price of one whole quarter. The stories and covers took sex as far as it could be be taken without being taken to jail. Understand the environment... It was a very different time. Drinking a glass of beer on a hot summer day was a crime. A teenage boy wondering what a girl had under her clothes might peep through the keyhole while his buddy's sister was taking a shower to find out. Gambling was illegal coast to coast except at the tracks. Horse racing was a rich persons sport and therefore immune. The law was for the lower classes.
What killed the pulps? World War 2. The writers and the artists were drafted to war. Paper for the magazines was hard to get and the depression dimes and quarters lost their pulling power. The pulps were a marvelous invention but really locked into the 1930s. They couldn't change with the times. In 1953, the pulps lost their newsstand privilege but morphed into paperback form, often using the same artists and writers.
The pulps were a uniquely American contributor to popular culture. No other country dared. They were a gift of reading pleasure to what has been called the Greatest Generation. - Robert Lesser
https://wn.com/Pecos_Hank_Fallen_Angel_1930's_Pulp_Art_Slideshow
Spicy Mystery pulp magazine slideshow with "Fallen Angel" by Pecos Hank from the album "El Reno Blues." Available on iTunes, Amazon and CD Baby.
The Great Depression of the 1930's was a golden age of the popular magazines. Manufactured from cheap pulp paper, they cost only two cents to make, sold wholesale to the newsstand for a nickel, and retailed for one dime. A bargain? Not during a time when a nickel could buy you a thick hot dog with sauerkraut, a Hershey bar, a cup of coffee at the Automat, a large scoop ice cream at Coney Island, or, if you were homeless and unemployed, an all-night ride in a heated subway car in the winter. But if you had that extra dime and bought a pulp, you got a lot. The cover caught your eye first. The formula for the cover was "V.V.V" A typical scene might include the victim, a beautiful young blonde with her dress ripped, shown terrified by the violent acts of a lusty villain. Enter the handsome victor, with gun or knife or just fists to rescue her. Who would win? It would cost you a dime to find out.
It was the covers that sold the magazines. Once inside and reading, each page was a thrill, all fast action, a ten cent escape from all your troubles. Suddenly the printed page became a magic mirror. in which you saw yourself as a rugged hero, catching the criminal and saving the beautiful girl... Her sexual gratitude implied. The identity of The Shadow or The Spider or The Secret Agent X. The pulp magazine was a three hour escape, a new life of adventure all over the world.
Glamorous adventure was the fiction side. the non-fiction side was the business. Who bankrolled the pulps and why? For the new York printers, keeping their presses rolling during the depression was costly and at two cents a magazine, their cost, they made the deals. The dominant publishers were the old Street and Smith and the new thrilling and Popular Publications.
Popular Publications' Harry Steeger, fresh from Dartmouth. borrowed five thousand dollars in start-up cash. from his father-in-law. Writers were paid a quarter of a cent per word, four dollars for an interior black-and-white illustration and an oil-on-canvas full-color version. It was all freelance work with no steady employment and if your cover or story didn't help sell last months magazine, the publisher didn't answer the phone the next time you called. Tough times.
Remember the power of the dime? When Steeger put that in front and titled the magazines "Dime Detective" and "Dime Mysteries" they had sudden success. A million pulp magazines a month were being sold at the nations newsstands, and during the worst year of the depression Steeger wrote a six-figure check to the IRS. Harry Steeger became a millionaire and pulp circulation soared to a total of ten million. "Pulp People" got rich while everyone else stayed poor. and that got some jealous. Herbert Hoover, still president in the early years, formed a commission to determine if the pulps should be banned, but Franklin D. Roosevelt was a subscriber and an avid reader.
Power of the dime? Fuggetaboutit! In came the power of the quarter! Spicy Magazine, Spicy Adventure, Spicy Western, Vice Squad, Spicy Movie Tales all started publication in the early '30s and flourished, selling at the then exorbitant price of one whole quarter. The stories and covers took sex as far as it could be be taken without being taken to jail. Understand the environment... It was a very different time. Drinking a glass of beer on a hot summer day was a crime. A teenage boy wondering what a girl had under her clothes might peep through the keyhole while his buddy's sister was taking a shower to find out. Gambling was illegal coast to coast except at the tracks. Horse racing was a rich persons sport and therefore immune. The law was for the lower classes.
What killed the pulps? World War 2. The writers and the artists were drafted to war. Paper for the magazines was hard to get and the depression dimes and quarters lost their pulling power. The pulps were a marvelous invention but really locked into the 1930s. They couldn't change with the times. In 1953, the pulps lost their newsstand privilege but morphed into paperback form, often using the same artists and writers.
The pulps were a uniquely American contributor to popular culture. No other country dared. They were a gift of reading pleasure to what has been called the Greatest Generation. - Robert Lesser
- published: 15 Nov 2015
- views: 13856
7:47
The SPIDER Episodio 1
En las calles de New York, un vengador acecha. De día, es un millonario e investigador amateur. De noche, un ser noctambulo y misterioso que caza malhechores. S...
En las calles de New York, un vengador acecha. De día, es un millonario e investigador amateur. De noche, un ser noctambulo y misterioso que caza malhechores. Su nombre es.... ¡THE SPIDER!
Creado en 1933 por Harry Steeger, The Spider protagonizó 119 historias editadas por Popular Publications, y dos seriales cinematográficos estrenados entre los 30 y los 40. En esta ocasión, deberá evitar que uno de sus más peligrosos enemigos, El Maestro, logre destruir millones de vidas inocentes.
Con las actuaciones de BERNARDO ALCOVER, ADRIÁN LLUCH, P. FURNIELES y MARTA PÉREZ.
https://wn.com/The_Spider_Episodio_1
En las calles de New York, un vengador acecha. De día, es un millonario e investigador amateur. De noche, un ser noctambulo y misterioso que caza malhechores. Su nombre es.... ¡THE SPIDER!
Creado en 1933 por Harry Steeger, The Spider protagonizó 119 historias editadas por Popular Publications, y dos seriales cinematográficos estrenados entre los 30 y los 40. En esta ocasión, deberá evitar que uno de sus más peligrosos enemigos, El Maestro, logre destruir millones de vidas inocentes.
Con las actuaciones de BERNARDO ALCOVER, ADRIÁN LLUCH, P. FURNIELES y MARTA PÉREZ.
- published: 13 Jul 2012
- views: 261
1:26
Hardy Krüger - Seine Ehefrau im durchsichtigen Oberteil! Hier sieht man ihren Busen …
Eigentlich ist Alice Krüger ein Vollprofi auf dem roten Teppich. Mit ihrem jüngsten Auftritt bei der Eröffnung von Jimi Blue Ochsenknechts Bar in Berlin sorgt A...
Eigentlich ist Alice Krüger ein Vollprofi auf dem roten Teppich. Mit ihrem jüngsten Auftritt bei der Eröffnung von Jimi Blue Ochsenknechts Bar in Berlin sorgt Alice allerdings für jede Menge Aufsehen.
Foto: ddp images; action press
https://wn.com/Hardy_Krüger_Seine_Ehefrau_Im_Durchsichtigen_Oberteil_Hier_Sieht_Man_Ihren_Busen_…
Eigentlich ist Alice Krüger ein Vollprofi auf dem roten Teppich. Mit ihrem jüngsten Auftritt bei der Eröffnung von Jimi Blue Ochsenknechts Bar in Berlin sorgt Alice allerdings für jede Menge Aufsehen.
Foto: ddp images; action press
- published: 26 Aug 2019
- views: 29229
2:40
The Spider (2019 pulp-based movie) by Ian Adames
A movie based on The Spider, a pulp hero that appeared in Popular Publications written by Harry Steeger in 1933.
Recorded with the help of Albert Marshall, Ale...
A movie based on The Spider, a pulp hero that appeared in Popular Publications written by Harry Steeger in 1933.
Recorded with the help of Albert Marshall, Alejandro Quevedo and Gary Scarboro, and made for the Oviedo High TV Production Class of 2020.
Richard Wentworth is a high-school student who listens to the radio every day. However, one day, the radio reporter announces the robbery of accounting books in the tech-city. Wentworth doesn't know what to do... Until he's bitten by a spider, and becomes a dark-caped vigilante who starts restoring order in the tech-city by stopping its most feared gang.
Music composed by Kevin MacLeod.
https://wn.com/The_Spider_(2019_Pulp_Based_Movie)_By_Ian_Adames
A movie based on The Spider, a pulp hero that appeared in Popular Publications written by Harry Steeger in 1933.
Recorded with the help of Albert Marshall, Alejandro Quevedo and Gary Scarboro, and made for the Oviedo High TV Production Class of 2020.
Richard Wentworth is a high-school student who listens to the radio every day. However, one day, the radio reporter announces the robbery of accounting books in the tech-city. Wentworth doesn't know what to do... Until he's bitten by a spider, and becomes a dark-caped vigilante who starts restoring order in the tech-city by stopping its most feared gang.
Music composed by Kevin MacLeod.
- published: 06 Apr 2020
- views: 101
8:59
Unglaubliche Aufnahmen Von Überwachungskameras!
Unglaubliche Aufnahmen Von Überwachungskameras!
Seltsame Dinge mit versteckten Kameras gefilmt!
Oft braucht man eine Überwachungskamera - sonst würden man das ...
Unglaubliche Aufnahmen Von Überwachungskameras!
Seltsame Dinge mit versteckten Kameras gefilmt!
Oft braucht man eine Überwachungskamera - sonst würden man das oder das einfach nicht glauben. Jetzt wirst du einige dieser seltsamen Momente erleben, aber bevor wir anfangen, vergiss nicht, unseren Kanal zu abonnieren.
► Hier ABONNIEREN: https://goo.gl/FDFpDo
https://wn.com/Unglaubliche_Aufnahmen_Von_Überwachungskameras
Unglaubliche Aufnahmen Von Überwachungskameras!
Seltsame Dinge mit versteckten Kameras gefilmt!
Oft braucht man eine Überwachungskamera - sonst würden man das oder das einfach nicht glauben. Jetzt wirst du einige dieser seltsamen Momente erleben, aber bevor wir anfangen, vergiss nicht, unseren Kanal zu abonnieren.
► Hier ABONNIEREN: https://goo.gl/FDFpDo
- published: 10 Dec 2021
- views: 3116027