Heroes are made. And they don't necessarily need to be white or perhaps as dashing as Thor's Chris Hemsworth, as filthy rich as Iron Man's Tony Stark or as powerful as Superman. Heroes can come from any nook in the neighborhood and yes, from any colour or race, such as "black" Charles Ramsey, the accidental hero in the escape of decade-long kidnapped Amanda Berry.

It is now a global fact that Mr Ramsey was the one instrumental to have facilitated the escape of Ms Berry, along with two other women, who have been missing for 10 years after being kidnapped as teens.

The way he presented his story was indeed hilarious, from eating McDonalds, to then kicking open a door, and then becoming utterly disgusted with himself when he realized he actually spent bonding moments with the suspected kidnapper Ariel Castro over ribs and salsa music.

Mr Ramsey, a restaurant dishwasher, was even disappointed with himself why hadn't he noticed anything about his neighbor.

"Up until yesterday the only thing that kept me from losing sleep was the lack of money," he said on 'Anderson Cooper 360.'

"I could have done this last year, not this hero stuff...Just do the right thing."

He believed he only did what should be rightfully be done by anyone in his place. He told CNN he is no hero.

"You've got to put that being a coward and 'I don't want to get in nobody's business,'" he said. "You got to put that away for a minute."

So he was a perfect, normal human being after all.

In fact so normal that he didn't let his humane nature get in the way of saving white women. ""I knew something was wrong when a little, pretty white girl ran into a black man's arms. Something is wrong here. Dead giveaway."

But netizens and video watchers still fail to see beyond his looks. Hey in case we forgot, X-Men too has an uncanny hero - The Beast.