

Season - Episode
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3 - 1The Beastly Banana Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 1The Birthday Bandit Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 2Spidey Meets the Prankster Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 3Spidey Meets the Blowhard Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 4Who Stole the Show? Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 5Spidey Meets the Yeti Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 6Spidey Meets the Mouse Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 7Spidey Meets the Sitter Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 8Spidey Fixes the Hum Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 9Spidey Nabs the Sandman Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 10Spidey Meets the Tickler Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 11Spidey Gets the Old One-Two Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 12Spidey Meets Eye Patch Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 13Spidey Meets Silly Willy Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 14The Uninvited Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 15Spidey After the Fox Jan 01, 1970
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2 - 16Spidey Meets the Sack Jan 01, 1970
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1 - 1Spidey Meets the Spoiler Oct 21, 1974
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1 - 2A Night at the Movies Oct 22, 1974
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1 - 3Spider-Man Meets the Evil Dr. Fly Oct 23, 1974
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1 - 4Spidey Up Against the Wall Oct 24, 1974
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1 - 5Spider-Man Meets the Can Crusher Oct 28, 1974
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1 - 6Spidey Meets the Funny Bunny Oct 29, 1974
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1 - 7Meet Dr. Fright Oct 30, 1974
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1 - 8Meet Mr. Measles Oct 31, 1974
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1 - 9Spidey Jumps the Thumper Nov 04, 1974
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1 - 10Spidey and the Queen Bee Nov 05, 1974
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1 - 11Little Miss Muffett Nov 06, 1974
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1 - 12The Bookworm Nov 07, 1974
Overview
A live-action, recurring skit on the PBS children's television series The Electric Company. Episodes featured the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man, provided to the Children's Television Workshop free of charge, and was played by puppeteer and dancer Danny Seagren. Stories involved the masked superhero foiling mischievous characters who were involved in petty criminal activities. The cast of The Electric Company played the roles of the various characters in each story, with another serving as narrator. In many of these sketches, viewers were addressed as "true believers." Unlike other live-action and cartoon productions of Spider-Man, this version of the web-slinging hero did not speak out loud, instead communicating only with word balloons, in order to encourage young viewers to practice their reading skills because he was drawn without a mouth. He also never appeared out of his costume as Peter Parker and, given the series' budget limitations, used his web-shooters sparingly.