tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7082013101102660802.post3734442016945395106..comments2023-05-28T13:48:55.734+01:00Comments on Your Friends and Neighbors: --and sometimes in the middle of the day - for no reason at all - I like to make myself a big pitcher of margheritas and take a nap out on the sundeckBrigonoshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05284882511370405132noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7082013101102660802.post-90041045449989846502011-11-25T21:01:11.807+00:002011-11-25T21:01:11.807+00:00I liked that about Spider-Man, but as time went on...I liked that about Spider-Man, but as time went on and his troubles became more about which supermodel to have sex with my empathy subsided. As for poor superheroes, I'm tempted to say Runaways seeing as they're technically homeless and without jobs, but every time we see them they're living in mansions or beach houses, playing the latest videogames, or referencing the latest music, television, movies or internet memes.<br />The old 1980s Power Pack was about a middle class family who found themselves suddenly poor and living in project housing, but the updated series removed that element of it for a safer suburban setting.Brigonoshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05284882511370405132noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7082013101102660802.post-24601915175124746272011-11-25T09:53:18.464+00:002011-11-25T09:53:18.464+00:00In the Spiderman comics I read as a kid, Peter Par...In the Spiderman comics I read as a kid, Peter Parker always seemed to be struggling with money; dodging the rent and begging Jameson for any job he could get. It made him more human, and it gives the writers something to work with. I've been trying to think of some other poor superheroes, but none spring to mind at the moment. There must be some.Stevehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03005855332730927089noreply@blogger.com