RADIO PACKAGE ON WHY I LOVE SPIDERMAN

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Description

I love Spiderman because he embodies resilience, wit, and selflessness. His relatable struggles, iconic powers, and commitment to justice inspire me. Spiderman's story teaches us the power of using our abilities responsibly and standing up for what's right.

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Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Young Adult (18-35)

Accents

Indian (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
Hello, everyone. Welcome to my radio feature. This is Vishnu and today I'm gonna talk about why I love Spiderman. I still remember watching the Sam Ray Spiderman trilogy as a kid in the theaters full of awe and excitement, laughing and crying in tears. That kid in me desiring to don the bright red and blue suit swinging through the tall skyscrapers with my web climbing walls and fighting crime. So let's talk about him and you'll see what makes him so amazing, so spectacular. What makes him the Spider Man? The first thing that we notice about Spider Man is that he's no billionaire philanthropist playboy like Iron Man and Batman. He is Peter Parker, a random school kid with some spider powers. He has teenagers who is just like us trying not to drop out of school, maybe fix a relationship with his girlfriend, worry about bills and trying not to get fired from a job just like us. Spider Man has a price to pay because he can't defeat a Parker and Spider Man all at once. If you must save the city from robbers, he's also taking a chance on missing school and missing work he must worry about his family. He must choose between being evicted from his apartment for not paying the rent or fighting some crazy maniac in a goblin suit. He has to suffer the loss of his loved ones but still be Spiderman because friends with great power comes great responsibility. Spiderman wears a bright red and blue suit with web designs all over it. He's covered from head to toe. That reminds me of what Stan Lee, the creator of Spiderman once said you could be any kid, you could be black, you could be Asian, you could be Indian, you could be anything and imagine you were in that platform. So I think that made it relevant to everybody everywhere and that was accidental. I mean, I I don't think we planned it that way, but it was very fortuitous in that way. Spiderman ended racism. Anyone could be a hero. Anyone could be amazing. Anyone could be Spiderman. Do you know in 1998 Marvel studios were facing the terror of bankruptcy? So they made a licensing deal of $7 million between Sony. So Sony had exclusive screening rights to Spider Man whilst Marvel retained the ownership of the character only. And this beautiful deal led to blockbusters like Sam Rainey Spiderman trilogy starring Hollywood stars like Toby Maguire, William, the Amazing Spider Man movies starring the likes of Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and Jamie Foxx, the animated movie Spiderman into the Spider verse which went on to be the first Marvel movie to ever receive an Oscar. In 2016, we were introduced to the Tom Hall and Spider Man, which went on to be a mesmerizing trilogy. Now Marvel has introduced us to this new standalone trilogy called Venom and that appears to be an exciting one. So that's all for today, folks. I hope you all enjoyed this feature. Regards from your friendly neighborhood radio. Perform here.