Spider-Man’s Entire Personality Is Deconstructed by One Perfect Insult
It’s very telling that Norman Osborn of all people is the one to tell his grandson this. As the Green Goblin, Norman hasn’t just battled Peter on numerous occasions, he’s also watched Peter grow up from being a boy. On some occasions, Norman was even a mentor, and in the depths of his madness, he tried to claim Peter as a son. Even without the Goblin whispering in Norman’s ear, to see such a brilliant young mind fall short of its potential is frustrating. Despite this, Norman is aware of how much Peter could do and how much he owes him, creating an opportunity for him to get back on his feet – Norman knows Peter will wait too long deciding on his own next step and so making the call for him.
While Spider-Man is a literal genius, he rarely taps his potential beyond finding ways to defeat supervillains. His insight and guilt force him to work to fix every problem he encounters, which means he doesn’t have the time or energy to give his all. Norman is totally right to assert that Peter is “so smart it makes you dumb,” as it’s specifically his potential to help so many people that keeps him constantly off-kilter, always reacting and rarely planning ahead. Peter is a hero who constantly lets down the people in his life and destroys any professional or romantic security he might find, but these qualities don’t exist in opposition – they feed off each other, and it takes his former nemesis to see it.
A humongous example of this is not just Peter’s friendships but his work life as well. While many heroes in the Marvel Universe have tended to keep down the same job since their first appearance, Spider-Man probably has one of the longest resumes of them all. He’s bounced around from photographer, to scientist, to school teacher, and more. The fact that he’s unable to string together a single career shows that he may just be too smart for his own good. And that a mere boy was able to sum up his entire personality in one sentence shows that maybe Spider-Man should get his act together.
The Amazing Spider-Man #2 is available now from Marvel Comics.
More information
Spider-Man’s Entire Personality Is Deconstructed by One Perfect Insult
It’s very telling that Norman Osborn of all people is the one to tell his grandson this. As the Green Goblin, Norman hasn’t just battled Peter on numerous occasions, he’s also watched Peter grow up from being a boy. On some occasions, Norman was even a mentor, and in the depths of his madness, he tried to claim Peter as a son. Even without the Goblin whispering in Norman’s ear, to see such a brilliant young mind fall short of its potential is frustrating. Despite this, Norman is aware of how much Peter could do and how much he owes him, creating an opportunity for him to get back on his feet – Norman knows Peter will wait too long deciding on his own next step and so making the call for him.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr3’); });
While Spider-Man is a literal genius, he rarely taps his potential beyond finding ways to defeat supervillains. His insight and guilt force him to work to fix every problem he encounters, which means he doesn’t have the time or energy to give his all. Norman is totally right to assert that Peter is “so smart it makes you dumb,” as it’s specifically his potential to help so many people that keeps him constantly off-kilter, always reacting and rarely planning ahead. Peter is a hero who constantly lets down the people in his life and destroys any professional or romantic security he might find, but these qualities don’t exist in opposition – they feed off each other, and it takes his former nemesis to see it.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr4’); });
A humongous example of this is not just Peter’s friendships but his work life as well. While many heroes in the Marvel Universe have tended to keep down the same job since their first appearance, Spider-Man probably has one of the longest resumes of them all. He’s bounced around from photographer, to scientist, to school teacher, and more. The fact that he’s unable to string together a single career shows that he may just be too smart for his own good. And that a mere boy was able to sum up his entire personality in one sentence shows that maybe Spider-Man should get his act together.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr5’); });
The Amazing Spider-Man #2 is available now from Marvel Comics.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1550597677810-0’); });
#SpiderMans #Entire #Personality #Deconstructed #Perfect #Insult
Spider-Man’s Entire Personality Is Deconstructed by One Perfect Insult
It’s very telling that Norman Osborn of all people is the one to tell his grandson this. As the Green Goblin, Norman hasn’t just battled Peter on numerous occasions, he’s also watched Peter grow up from being a boy. On some occasions, Norman was even a mentor, and in the depths of his madness, he tried to claim Peter as a son. Even without the Goblin whispering in Norman’s ear, to see such a brilliant young mind fall short of its potential is frustrating. Despite this, Norman is aware of how much Peter could do and how much he owes him, creating an opportunity for him to get back on his feet – Norman knows Peter will wait too long deciding on his own next step and so making the call for him.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr3’); });
While Spider-Man is a literal genius, he rarely taps his potential beyond finding ways to defeat supervillains. His insight and guilt force him to work to fix every problem he encounters, which means he doesn’t have the time or energy to give his all. Norman is totally right to assert that Peter is “so smart it makes you dumb,” as it’s specifically his potential to help so many people that keeps him constantly off-kilter, always reacting and rarely planning ahead. Peter is a hero who constantly lets down the people in his life and destroys any professional or romantic security he might find, but these qualities don’t exist in opposition – they feed off each other, and it takes his former nemesis to see it.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr4’); });
A humongous example of this is not just Peter’s friendships but his work life as well. While many heroes in the Marvel Universe have tended to keep down the same job since their first appearance, Spider-Man probably has one of the longest resumes of them all. He’s bounced around from photographer, to scientist, to school teacher, and more. The fact that he’s unable to string together a single career shows that he may just be too smart for his own good. And that a mere boy was able to sum up his entire personality in one sentence shows that maybe Spider-Man should get his act together.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr5’); });
The Amazing Spider-Man #2 is available now from Marvel Comics.
googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1550597677810-0’); });
#SpiderMans #Entire #Personality #Deconstructed #Perfect #Insult
Synthetic: Vik News