Oh, I could have sworn CIsco said it.No, the phrase "guy in the chair" was coined by Ned in Spider-Man: Homecoming, although the trope existed before him, of course.
OK that's true, but I was still talking about this trope as it specifically appears in superhero stories.Yes, but most superhero tropes come from earlier fiction. The superhero genre is a distillation of every other genre.
Oh I forgot about Oracle, and I wasn't aware of Microchip.As I said, the original comics version of Oracle is one of the earliest iterations of the trope that I'm aware of in superhero comics, although David Lieberman/Microchip, the Punisher's hacker/tech support ally, might be an earlier example by a couple of years. I remember him playing a "guy in the chair" role in his guest appearance in the '90s Spider-Man animated series, though I don't know for certain if it worked the same way in the comics.
Yeah, that's true.Really, it's just a function of the modern age, when action heroes tend to need computer-savvy tech support to gather information and help them do their job, and when earbuds allow agents in the field to stay in regular touch with their support teams (although of course wired earplugs connecting to walkie-talkies have been a thing since decades earlier). You see it all the time these days in action TV and movies in general.
Cool, I didn't realize it was specifically be presented as an alternate version of the MCU Peter's story.Based on early reports people thought the show would be about Peter before meeting Tony Stark. Now it's in an alternate "What....if?" type multiverse story
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How Spider-Man: Freshman Year Fits Into MCU Revealed (Exclusive)
Spider-Man: Freshman Year had Marvel fans pretty fired up during the Marvel Studios Animation panel at San Diego Comic-Con last weekend. The series is being billed as taking place before Captain America: Civil War, following Peter Parker through New York City with characters like Doc Ock, Norman...comicbook.com