They didn't need the mythos and history, just his powers. And there just so happens to be a member of the Secret Warriors with powers almost identical to Ghost Rider's. James is hardly the only character to be re-imagined as an Inhuman.
They didn't need the mythos and history, just his powers. And there just so happens to be a member of the Secret Warriors with powers almost identical to Ghost Rider's. James is hardly the only character to be re-imagined as an Inhuman.
But will still fuck up her arms if she uses them too much.
They shake her bones because her powers are vibrations.
…only one of whom got powers that shake the bones in her arms.
Lincoln, Gordon and Daisy all have very different powers.
Maybe they would have taught her to not use her powers so often. I have to assume two years of doing this has fucked up her arms.
Yes. James Taylor "J.T." James is a member of the Secret Warriors and a descendant of the Phantom Rider Carter Slade (since the comics Secret Warriors were all the children of superheroes and supervillains, not Inhumans). He goes by the name "Hellfire," which is one of the many potential aliases James threw out when…
If I had to make a guess, whatever's making Robbie the Ghost Rider is some entity that wants the Darkhold. They're clearly not following Robbie's origins (given what's going on with uncle Eli), and I don't know how much I can believe "the Devil" Robbie says he sold his soul to is actually "the Devil."
* Ever since Marvel announced Ghost Rider was joining AoS this season, I wondered how the character would play off James, who in the comics is very closely tied to the Ghost Rider. Making them fight was a good choice, even if it was short. I can barely describe my doofy grin I got when Robbie caught the chain, except…
It was probably a dry run for Ghost Rider to begin with. Something the show's producers could show the higher-ups at Marvel to prove they could pull off having Ghost Rider.
That was definitely Kerr Smith. Apparently he's been on The Fosters, whatever that is.
James is almost literally a knock-off Ghost Rider in the comics, though. He has his powers because he's descended from Carter Slade, the Phantom Rider.
"I make mistakes, and then I wanna make up for mistakes, and I make more mistakes and next thing I know I have a daughter" - Wells
You see him with Evan Rachel Wood in the first episode.
For that footnote; that the Republican Party's official nominee is so unappealing that a Democrat stands a chance at winning one of the most reliably Red states.
You should check out Westworld…
No, Norman Osborn was the one The Amazing Spider-Man 2 unceremoniously killed off.
He's polling at 6.1 percent national, surprising for a candidate who couldn't even identify what Aleppo was when asked about it.
McMullin's candidacy seems like it would be a footnote to John's piece about third-party candidates. The only thing to really say about him is how his popularity in Utah as an alternative to Trump has almost made the state - which gave Romney his largest margin over Obama in 2012, if I remember right - a swing state.
Felicity Jones played a member of OsCorp's executive board who Harry Osborn essentially gave complete control over the company when his father died. This character was, for some reason, Felicia Hardy.