Exclusive Italian Solo Scat Collection – Francesca Salvatore (20 Short Shitting Vids)
Exclusive Italian Solo Scat Collection – Francesca Salvatore There is no doubt that this opened minded Lady and Italy loves shit. See how she plays with it while dancing and never shows his face while remaining mysterious admirer excrements. Only
Marvel 75 Years From Pulp To Pop Instant
The Perelman bankruptcy, the toy-driven 90s collapse, and Ike Perlmutter’s turn-around are mentioned but not explained in any detail. For a story of survival, the financials are glossed over.
Disney+ (as part of Marvel Studios: Legends or standalone specials) or YouTube clips. Best paired with: Marvel: 616 (Disney+ docuseries) for deeper dives, or The Death of “Superman Lives”: What Happened? for the 90s collapse context. marvel 75 years from pulp to pop
No Jack Kirby or Steve Ditko (both living at the time but famously reclusive or estranged from Marvel). No mention of Jim Shooter’s controversial but impactful 1980s editor-in-chief run. Also, the role of women creators (Marie Severin, Ann Nocenti) is absent. The Perelman bankruptcy, the toy-driven 90s collapse, and
The documentary successfully argues that Marvel’s scrappy, street-level, “world outside your window” ethos came directly from its low-rent pulp magazine and monster-comic days—not from highbrow aspirations. The Critiques 1. Rushed Modern Era The last 10 minutes sprint through 2000–2014: Blade , X-Men , Spider-Man films, then the MCU launch. Iron Man (2008) gets a montage; The Avengers (2012) is a footnote. If you want deep dives into the MCU’s creation, look elsewhere. Best paired with: Marvel: 616 (Disney+ docuseries) for
Here’s a structured review of the documentary Marvel: 75 Years, From Pulp to Pop! (aired 2014 on ABC, later streaming on Disney+). Directed by: Zak Knutson Narrated by: Clark Gregg (Phil Coulson) Runtime: ~42 minutes What It Is Produced to celebrate Marvel’s 75th anniversary (just before the explosion of Age of Ultron and the full-blown MCU Phase 2), this documentary blends talking-head interviews, archival footage, and stylized recreations. It traces Marvel’s journey from its 1939 pulp origins as Timely Publications to its 2014 status as a pop culture juggernaut. The Good 1. Snappy, Fan-Friendly Tone Clark Gregg brings his trademark wry warmth, making the history feel like a fun classroom session with a cool teacher. The pacing is brisk—perfect for a one-hour special.
Interviews include Stan Lee (charming as ever), Joe Quesada, Brian Michael Bendis, Dan Didio (DC’s then-publisher, offering rival perspective), Jeph Loeb, and filmmakers like Kevin Smith. They provide genuine insight, not just hype.
