This period is when comics were at their height of popularity. I think Superman was churning out a million issues or something ridiculous. It was a lot - much more than today.
Captain Marvel
was actually the blue medal winner of the Golden Age—that title sometimes sold in excess of 2,000,000 copies during WWII. It held the record for single issue sales until the speculator frenzy of the 90s and that Todd McFarlane Spider-Man #1 with a bazillion cover variants. However, the character faded into obscurity during the Silver Age and was only returned to a certain level of prominence once DC acquired the rights.
Hec, what's your memory of when direct market sales really got to be the thing? I remember getting my mid-late 70s WW's at the drugstore or the supermarket, and my first real comics store experiences in the mid-80s. Somewhere in between, the racks in the drugstores disappeared, but I'm blanking on just when that happened.
(And curiously, this isn't the first think I've had today on mass market vs. direct market sales and changes in comics marketing.)
So comics right now are....? Modern Age? Copper? Admantium seems appropos.
Thanks for all the info, everyone.
first the black and white crash by Teenage Mutant Ninja imitators - there were fourteen at one point.
Which inspired the first few Boris the Bear comics, among other things.
So what would be Platinum Age? Would that be those original, from-the-era collections of newspaper comics, like Little Nemo, Krazy Kat and the like, that were the forerunner of comics?
Actually, one of the cool things about Watchmen that just occurred to me (it may have before, but I forgot it if I did), was that there was basically a Golden and a Silver age of heroes in the chronology.
However, the character faded into obscurity during the Silver Age and was only returned to a certain level of prominence once DC acquired the rights.
Actually, the story is weirder and sadder than that. Captain Marvel was driven out of business by its competitor DC in a very dubious court case that saw Capt. Marvel as infringing on Superman's copyright. Simply on the basis of CM being a super strong super hero.
Hec, what's your memory of when direct market sales really got to be the thing? I remember getting my mid-late 70s WW's at the drugstore or the supermarket, and my first real comics store experiences in the mid-80s. Somewhere in between, the racks in the drugstores disappeared, but I'm blanking on just when that happened.
The change started to happen in the late seventies when the number of comic stores nationwide hit a tipping point such that Cerebus and Elfquest could make money on just direct sales to comic stores. Previous to that, the main source for underground comics had been head shops. As those dried up, there was a gap for several years where independent comics didn't really have a place to be sold.
The number of comic stores steadily increased (and changed their focus from being places where primarily collectors went to get back issues, to being places where new comics were sold). By the time I got out of college in '83 and moved to Boston, Million Year Picnic and Newbury Comics were already well established institutions.
I don't have any numbers in front of me, but I'd bet you'd see a very steep increase in the number of comic shops going from the late seventies right up to the early 90s.
That was definitely one of my big epiphanies while working at Fantagraphics - simply that there were only a tiny handful of distribution networks for all the comics and magazines in the country. The steady movement towards direct sales was a HUGE change in the comics industry. It really created and reinforced a market driven by the quality of the work, rather than the LCD.
xpost with Tom, and again with the agreement