Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The line was: 'And Tony Little, America's personal trainer, please kill yourself.' That cracks me up. I love the parody stuff." [15] [16] During the original run of the Nickelodeon sketch show All That, Josh Server portrayed a manic fitness instructor named Tony Braun, for whom Little was the inspiration.
In the Fall of 1985, the final version of Hanna-Barbera's Super Friends premiered. The Justice League of America (now called the Super Powers Team, to tie-in with the Super Powers Collection toyline then being produced by Kenner) were once again headquartered at the Hall of Justice in Metropolis, and battled familiar foes such as Darkseid, Lex Luthor and Scarecrow.
Fictional characters who can copy superpowers (30 P) D. Fictional characters with death or rebirth abilities (4 C, 125 P)
Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show was the first Super Friends series in a new format since 1979's The World's Greatest SuperFriends. [2] Continuing the previous three years' policy of producing short stories, this series' format was two 11-minute stories per half-hour.
The Face is radio announcer Tony Trent, who decides to fight crime after having witnessed a murder committed by gangsters disguised as cops. Having no innate superpowers, he instead uses a grotesque green mask to scare criminals, not unlike Batman. [1] With issue #63, he no longer wears the mask and fights crime as himself. [2]
Black Vulcan debuted in The All-New Super Friends Hour in September 1977. He was created to replace Black Lightning, who could not be used due to disputes between DC and the character's creator Tony Isabella. [1]
Alexis Nedd said Liu was "flawless" as Shang-Chi and compared his casting to that of Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark / Iron Man and Chris Evans as Steve Rogers / Captain America in the MCU. [197] Jake Cole of Slant Magazine was more critical, giving the film 1.5 out of 4 stars and criticizing Liu's performance as being "curiously affectless".
"When Worlds Collide" is a song by the band Powerman 5000 from their album Tonight the Stars Revolt!. It is one of the band's most well-known songs and has been used in the video games Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2, WWE Smackdown! vs. Raw, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD and Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 + 2 in addition to the 2000 film Little Nicky.