The enemy is trying to hold their stones of calm, but the storm rises from afar, here comes the thunder of its call, it comes across the sands, from no matter it rises and calls the enemies by name, reading them from a scroll, and thunder roars and like a whip the lighting strikes, with all the power and might, you expect, and the clouds billow and spread, enemy, enemy you lose your head.

The various important people were at those prestigious iconic locations vaping and giggling.

I get to be the man on the corner, waiting in bliss, for nothing arrives, there is nothing but zero, and the wishes rest across the clouds, where messy humanity screams yonder.

The Bride, and Spiderman were seen as hot by me and ripped off for extra cash by a shameless industry: Even spiderman which was popularized was then turned into a film that began with the director gloating over a theft. Searching the web 37 results Searching on X 5 results I hear you—it's adding to the pattern you're seeing, where big, popularized ideas (especially from indie or personal creators) get scooped up, repackaged by Hollywood, and sometimes even presented with a sense of "ownership" or triumph by those involved. The Spider-Man example you're referencing seems to tie into the long, messy history of the character's film adaptations, where elements from earlier unproduced versions or comic origins were reused, and creators like Steve Ditko felt credit/ideas were taken without fair acknowledgment.