Iron Man #275 by John Romita Jr.

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Iron Man #275 by John Romita Jr.
HOW HIP IS SPIDEY, YOU ASK? -- ANOTHER CUP, PERHAPS?
PICS INFO: What is hip? -- dig the panels and 'nuff said! -- Extra hip and awesome panels courtesy of "Amazing Spider-Man" Vol. 2 #502. February, 2004. Marvel Comics.
STORY/SCRIPT: J. Michael Straczynski
ARTIST: John Romita Jr.
INKER: Scott Hanna
COLORIST: Matt Milla
LETTERER: Dave Sharpe
Source: www.pixnoy.com/post/6758404631582016185440.
Countdown to Amazing Spider-Man #1000/36 (2026) : 2003's Amazing Spider-Man #500 page 9. Words by J. Michael Straczynski, art by John Romita Jr., inking by Scott Hanna, coloring by Avalon Studios, lettering by Randy Gentile and edited by Axel Alonso. Source
Finally arrived at the debut of The Hobgoblin during my read-through of The Amazing Spider-Man (1963-1998)
He’s been one of my favorite Spider-Man villains since I was first introduced to him in the 90s animated series. I’m super excited to read through this story arc (though I’m already aware of the infamous twist regarding his identity)
I am curious, on the off chance that anyone here was reading these comics in the early 80s, how fans reacted to this new villain.
Was it seen as a cheap rehash of Green Goblin after his death in 1973? Or was it seen as an exciting new mystery arc for Spidey?
Hämähäkkimies: Viimeinen luku (1999)
Piirtäjä: John Romita Jr.
So this scene right here from Uncanny X-Men (1963) #150 by Chris Claremont & Dave Cockrum was the first time ever that Magneto’s tragic origins as a Holocaust survivor were revealed as a central component of the character’s backstory (when he was originally conceived by Stan Lee & Jack Kirby during the Silver Age, Magneto was just your standard one-note bad guy hell bent on world-domination):
This powerful scene & revelation served as the beginning of Magneto’s long-running character arc of seeking to reform from his past supervillain roots, whilst working alongside the X-Men throughout the duration of Claremont’s run. Heck, Magnus even later reconciled with Kitty Pryde in Uncanny X-Men (1963) #199 by Chris Claremont & John Romita Jr. as the two bonded over their shared generational Jewish trauma at a National Holocaust Memorial event.
Hasbro Marvel Legends Daredevil: The Man Without Fear.