I never met Stan Lee. I never had a chance. He did come to Forbidden Planet in Glasgow but somehow I never knew. Stan Lee did have an impact on my life in many ways. I've spent a lot of time reading Marvel Comics in the last 40 or so years and Stan Lee was responsible for many of them.
The first american comic that I read/owned was issue number 3 of Super-villain Team Up featuring Namor, the Submariner and Dr Doom fighting some even more evil fish people. It was a bit crap. It came from a neighbours house and I read it from cover to cover many, many times. I still have it somewhere. I remember all the strange American adverts from the seventies and the slightly yellow paper. It wasn't brilliant but it was my first comic presented by Stan Lee.
I had probably seen some Spiderman reprints by then. I was certainly reading the Marvel UK weekly Star Wars comic as a very young child in the early 80s. The old sixties Marvel cartoons were broadcast as part of Glen Michaels Cartoon Cavalcade in Scotland with Captain america, Fantastic Four, Iron Man and Spider-Man. We also had the seventies Spiderman cartoon as well as Spiderman and his Amazing Friends and the Hulk.
Stan Lee infected every part of our culture. He reached Scotland from New York and taught us about heroes and trying to be good. His personality shone through in his Bullpen Bulletin. He had a heart and he tried to do the right thing. He was cheesy and a bit of a self-promoter. He didn't give his collaborators enough talent but he changed the dreams of lots of kids. Like me, those kids are often successful adults and we live in a world that has seen both the Black Panther and Guardians of the Galaxy on the big screen. Back in the early eighties this was unimaginable.
My fiancé's niece can name most of the marvel superheroes on a poster in our house and she is 3. Stan continues to shape young minds. His imagination lives on in all of us.
RIP
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