Shocker
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Shocker
Summary
Shocker is a fictional human[1]. He worked as a thief[2] and contract killer[3]. He draws 54 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_human category, ranking #636 of 5,308).[4]
Key Facts
- Shocker held citizenship in United States[5].
- Shocker worked as a thief[2].
- Shocker worked as a contract killer[3].
- Shocker is the creator of Stan Lee[6].
- Shocker is the creator of John Romita Sr.[7].
- Shocker was a member of Masters of Evil[8].
- Shocker was a member of Sinister Syndicate[9].
- Shocker was a member of Sinister Six[10].
- Shocker was a member of Thunderbolts[11].
- Shocker is recorded as male[12].
- Shocker's instance of is recorded as fictional human[13].
- Shocker's instance of is recorded as comics character[14].
- Shocker's Commons category is recorded as Shocker (character)[15].
- Shocker's given name is recorded as Herman[16].
- Shocker's from narrative universe is recorded as Earth-616[17].
- Shocker's present in work is recorded as The Amazing Spider-Man[18].
- Shocker's birth name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Herman Schultz'}[19].
- Shocker's name in native language is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Shocker'}[20].
- Shocker's different from is recorded as Herman Schultz[21].
- Shocker's different from is recorded as Shocker[22].
- Shocker's first appearance is recorded as The Amazing Spider-Man #46[23].
- Shocker's enemy is recorded as Spider-Man[24].
- Shocker's character type is recorded as supervillain[25].
Body
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include thief[2] and contract killer[3].
Works and Contributions
Created works include Stan Lee[6], a publisher[26], 1922–2018[27], of United States[28], awarded the National Medal of Arts[29], specialised in publishing house[30] and John Romita Sr.[7], a comics artist[31], 1930–2023[32], of United States[33], awarded the Inkpot Award[34], specialised in comics[35].
Why It Matters
Shocker draws 54 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_human category, ranking #636 of 5,308).[4] He has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36] He is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[37]