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John Jonah Jameson III (also known as Colonel Jupiter, the Man-Wolf and the Stargod) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is depicted as the son of J. Jonah Jameson , and a friend to Peter Parker .
John Jonah Jameson Jr. [1] [2] is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, most commonly in association with the superhero Spider-Man.The character was created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, and he first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man issue #1 (March 1963).
Joan Jameson is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She is the deceased wife of J. Jonah Jameson in Marvel Comics . The character, created by Zeb Wells and Dean Haspiel , first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #190 (March 1979).
"Man and Wolf" is a story arc that ran in Captain America, an American comic book series published by Marvel Comics, from July to October 1992. It was written by Mark Gruenwald and drawn by Rik Levins. The story follows Captain America as he is transformed into a werewolf while investigating the disappearance of John Jameson.
John Jameson (character), fictional Marvel character known as "the Man-Wolf" John Jameson (cricketer) (born 1941), English cricketer; Johnny Jameson (born 1948), Northern Irish footballer; John Gordon Jameson (1878–1955), British Member of Parliament for Edinburgh West, 1918–1922; John Eustace Jameson (1853–1919), Member of Parliament for ...
Spider-Man, in a new costume designed by Shannon Denton and Roy Burdine. Initially, the goal was to do a low-budget adaptation of the first 26 issues of The Amazing Spider-Man comic book, but Sony and Marvel had already engaged in a deal to produce the Spider-Man movie, and so Saban was cut from any source and could not use the traditional Spider-Man suit or adapt the early comics.
He coerced Jameson to alter the stories in the Daily Bugle or else he'd kill his wife and son John Jameson. Once Spider-Man caught on to Smythe's trail, he followed it back to the Bugle where Smythe assaulted him with recreated versions of every spider-slayer ever sent after Spider-Man in the past plus a pair of new creations—a miniature ...
When Jameson saw an article about inducing animal mutations into humans, he visited the scientist that established this experiment: Dr. Farley Stillwell. Jameson first thought Stillwell was a crackpot, but later saw him as an opportunity to take down Spider-Man. As such, he had Stillwell experiment on Gargan and give him a high-tech scorpion suit.