TV Database Wiki
"The Deadly Dust (Part 2)"
Series Amazing Spider-Man
Season 1, Episode 2
Air date April 5th, 1978
Writers Robert Janes
Director Ron Satlof
Producers Charles Fries; Daniel R. Goodman; Robert Janes; Ron Satlof
Starring Nicholas Hammond; Robert F. Simon; Chip Fields; Michael Pataki
Episode guide
Previous
"Pilot"
Next
"The Deadly Dust (Part 2)"

"The Deadly Dust (Part 1)" is the second episode of season one of the superhero action series The Amazing Spider-Man. It was directed by Ron Satlof with a script written by Robert Janes. It first aired on CBS on April 5th, 1978. In this episode, a group of college students steal a supply of plutonium as a form of protest. An L.A. reporter named Gale Hoffman attaches herself to Peter Parker hoping to get an interview with Spider-Man.

Synopsis[]

Cast[]

Principal Cast[]

Guest Stars[]

Co-Stars[]

Notes & Trivia[]

  • "Spider-Man" was create by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko.

Allusions[]

  • There are no allusions available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. An allusion is an incidental reference made to a character, person, event or other miscellaneous piece of media that can be found somewhere in the episode itself. In most cases, this refers to characters or events from previous episodes.

Bloopers[]

  • There are no bloopers available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. A blooper is any revealing mistake that can be found within the episode that the production crew may have missed during editing. This can range from inconsistent lines of dialogue to visible production equipment in the shot to mis-spoken lines of dialogue, or... dare we say it? A wardrobe malfunction.

Quotes[]

  • There are no quotes available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. The preferred format for quotes is an asterisk, followed by the character's name (bold and hyper-linked), semi-colon then the quote itself (without quotation marks. Quotes should be separated by four elipses (....) unless multiple quotes are used between characters as part of a conversation.

See also[]

External Links[]