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Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets is an open-air outlet store shopping mall located in Michigan City, Indiana. The mall is one of Michigan City's major tourist attractions. [ 1 ] It is one of Northwest Indiana's most popular shopping centers, receiving an estimated one million visitors annually as of 2017. [ 1 ]
In 2007's Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe—Spider-Man: Back in Black one-shot, the villain Videoman is given a brief biography from his "retcon" appearance in the Spider-Man Family one-shot. There is also an annotation describing an "Earth 8107", where an alternate reality Videoman was created by Electro to battle that world's Spider-Man.
The Octopus and the Kitty Cat: Gwen and Miles are playing a dancing video game at the arcade when Doc Ock and CAL use a new invention, the Octo-Portal, to rob the mall, stealing a jeweled octopus from a jewelry store. Though Gwen and Miles subdue CAL and stop Black Cat from stealing the jeweled octopus, they must stop her and Doc Ock after she ...
Michigan City is the home of the Old Michigan City Light; and the newer currently functioning one which is Indiana's only lighthouse. The Pullman-Standard rail car plant was located in Michigan City. Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets mall, opened in 1987 on the city's North end, is an outdoor mall. [8]
Spidey and His Amazing Friends (also known as Marvel's Spidey and His Amazing Friends) is an animated television series produced by Marvel Studios Animation (formerly Marvel Animation) and animated by Atomic Cartoons (who also produced Marvel Super Hero Adventures) which premiered on Disney Jr. on August 6, 2021.
A small reference is made to Spider-Man in the X-Men: Evolution episode "On Angel's Wings", when the Angel is seen reading the Daily Bugle, the place Spider-Man/Peter Parker usually works. Spider-Man is referenced several times in the animated series The Super Hero Squad Show.
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.
Spider-Man is set up numerous times by Electro's robberies. Electro first robs J. Jonah Jameson's house and escapes before the police see him, though they see Spider-Man. Peter shows Jameson the photo, but he throws it away. Spider-Man finally tracks Electro to an abandoned amusement park and catches him using a new web.