Some ideas are worth doing more than once... a statement that you may think you understand right now, but will take on a different meaning by the end of today's segment.
Grant Farrel was just your average rich guy, dating a blonde woman in a red dress named "Glenda"... or at least trying to. She immediately leaves him in issue 1 and he gets very very sad about it. Fortunately, Thor is watching Grant and decides to give him the powers of Thor himself so that he might save the world (or at the very least save Glenda, who, at the time, had accidentally gotten kidnapped by spies). Some of you may recognise similarities between this and the earliest version of Marvel's Thor.
Being a very noble hero, he uses his powers for a very noble cause: stalking his girlfriend. Indeed, in issue 2, Glenda tells him that she plans to go to France (this issue was released in May 1940, the same month the Nazis invaded France - think of that what you will). Like a normal person, Grant responds by quickly buying a ticket to be on the same boat as her and following her to France, and not ceasing to follow her until the end of the issue.
There is actually a surprising amount of character development in the few issues Thor had - while Grant stays the same, Glenda goes from dismissing Grant due to him being a boring little manboy to appreciating him more after she figures out his secret identity.
Unfortunately (or perhaps fortunately since the series was starting to get a bit racist around this time), this superhero's run ended at 5 issues... but their legacy lived on. In 2011, a small mockbuster studio made "Thunderstorm: The Return of Thor" - a superhero movie obviously banking off the success of Tho- wait, no, it's Iron Man? Their version of Thor is just a guy in a black Iron Man suit? Okay.
An even more confusing bit of legacy is what their creator (Wright Lincoln) got up to once Grant Farrel was retired. They were still attached to Thor it seems, and wanted to make yet another superhero based on them immediately (and I do mean immediately, this new character premiered in the issue directly after Grant's final issue). This character? DYNAMITE THOR! But they weren't alone... Dynamite Thor had a love interest you see. She was a blonde haired girl who tended to wear a red dress... and her name was Glenda.