
Age: 62
male
Gregory David Weisman grew up in Woodland Hills, California with his parents, younger sister and younger brother, Jon Weisman. After graduating from college, Greg moved to New York City to work for DC Comics, where he worked on Captain Atom, among other titles. He soon moved back to L.A. to go to graduate school. In 1989, he became a creative executive at Disney, working on such shows as DuckTales (1987), Raw Toonage (1992) and Bonkers (1993). Greg's big break came in 1994, when his brand new show, Gargoyles (1994), debuted. After working on 66 of Gargoyles (1994)' episodes, he left the show and Disney when his contract was not renewed in 1996. He has since worked on such shows as Max Steel (2000) and Roughnecks: The Starship Troopers Chronicles (1999). You can probably catch him answering questions on Station Eight's Ask Greg Forum.

Greg Weisman

Writer
for Writer in Spider-Man : Dark Days
Suggested by leonardopachecoesparza

After the events of "Spider-Man : A Brand New Day" Peter's life is turned more upside down. Even though he's back to being the same guy he was before and he doesn't try to avoid socializing anymore. The appearance of old faces like Liz Allan turns Peter's life upside down. At the same time, Spider-Man does his job as a teenage hero in the neighborhood while trying to stop "The Big Man" with the help of Black Cat, who is now a kind of anti-heroine, and his new black suit that Peter won in his final battle with Kraven, which reminds him of his old Stark-sponsored suits, however on his journey he will realize that nothing is what it seems and that this suit has a dark secret that will make him release his inner demons. And the fact that he has to fight olds and news villain who wants to kill him doesn't help either.