shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,871
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Post by shaxper on Sept 4, 2015 16:41:51 GMT -5
I was just reminded by a post on facebook of my first ever comic book subscription -- Alf from Marvel in 1987. I bought the first issue, filled out a subscription form, and (frustratingly enough) my subscription began with issue #3. This was long before I'd gotten into comics otherwise. Completely forgot about this.
In '89 I also had subscriptions to all three Batman titles, as well as the New Titans. I think I renewed them all once.
After that, the direct market became more convenient for me. These days, I miss the convenience of subscriptions (folded copies and my dog's teeth marks aside) but I still buy at my LCS because I want to support them.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 5, 2015 9:11:10 GMT -5
The only time I had subscriptions was when I was 13-16 yrs old. Prior to 13 I lived near a news stand that sold comics. At 13 we moved to a small town that had no place to buy comics so I had to get subscriptions. I bought Superman, Batman, Spider-Man & the Hulk. I bought other titles whenever I could if we went back to our old town to visit. Then when I got my license at 16 yr old I was able to drive & buy comics off the newsstand again. By 17 a comic store had opened in my area (one that I eventually worked at in college).
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Post by Cei-U! on Sept 5, 2015 11:13:30 GMT -5
For a little over four years while a student at Yoo-Dub (1976-80), I subscribed to The Amazing Spider-Man, The Avengers, Conan the Barbarian, Daredevil, The Defenders, Doctor Strange, Epic Illustrated (I was a charter subscriber), Fantastic Four, Howard the Duck (comic and magazine), Iron Man, Machine Man, Marvel Premiere, Marvel Team-Up, Marvel Two-in-One, Micronauts, Moon Knight, Power Man & Iron Fist, The Spectacular Spider-Man, Spider-Woman, Super-Villain Team-Up, Thor, Tomb of Dracula (comic and mag), X-Men and FOOM. Although there were a handful of stores in Seattle where you could dependably find new issues, wheelchair-accessible public transportation was not yet a thing and I didn't like imposing on my friends so subs were a convenient alternative (even if the mail girl in our dorm thought I was getting porn because of the plain brown wrappers!). Once I got out of college and moved back home, I started a pull list at O'Leary's Books (long since relocated to Australia) and let my subscriptions lapse.
Cei-U! I summon the nostalgia!
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Post by Reptisaurus! on Sept 5, 2015 16:26:35 GMT -5
I subscribed to Transformers when I was little sprout, 1985 or so.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,871
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Post by shaxper on Sept 5, 2015 23:50:16 GMT -5
For a little over four years while a student at Yoo-Dub (1976-80), I subscribed to The Amazing Spider-Man, The Avengers, Conan the Barbarian, Daredevil, The Defenders, Doctor Strange, Epic Illustrated (I was a charter subscriber), Fantastic Four, Howard the Duck (comic and magazine), Iron Man, Machine Man, Marvel Premiere, Marvel Team-Up, Marvel Two-in-One, Micronauts, Moon Knight, Power Man & Iron Fist, The Spectacular Spider-Man, Spider-Woman, Super-Villain Team-Up, Thor, Tomb of Dracula (comic and mag), X-Men and FOOM. Although there were a handful of stores in Seattle where you could dependably find new issues, wheelchair-accessible public transportation was not yet a thing and I didn't like imposing on my friends so subs were a convenient alternative (even if the mail girl in our dorm thought I was getting porn because of the plain brown wrappers!). Once I got out of college and moved back home, I started a pull list at O'Leary's Books (long since relocated to Australia) and let my subscriptions lapse. Cei-U! I summon the nostalgia! I didn't realize you could subscribe to Epic Illustrated. I'm particularly envious of that experience.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2015 0:38:36 GMT -5
So I've mentioned before I had a hard time figuring out how monthly comics worked as a kid, as almost every time I got consecutive issues of a series, the Dreaded Deadline Doom struck and a supposedly continued story wasn't but instead got a reprint or a fill in issue the following issue instead. That confusion carried over the first time I had the opportunity to get a subscription too. In the 4th grade, I went to Catholic school fort he first time (this was circa '78 I believe) and the school had a magazine drive fora fund raiser, and one of the options to buy was Marvel Comics. So my folks asked me if I wanted to get 12 Marvel Comics as one of the things we bought in the magazine drive, and I thought cool, I can get 12 comics, thinking I would get 12 different comics and I looked over the list and checked the first box of the 12 I thought I could pick...it was Iron Man, and then found out I had to wait and get 1 issue of Iron Man a month for a year, not 12 new comics to read as soon as they mailed it to me. Had I known, I would have selected a different title (probably Avengers). So for the next year I got to read Iron Man starting with issue 108 or 109 (it was the final issue of the Midas saga) and running to 120 or so (just after the intro of James Rhodes as a character). It's what finally helped me to figure out how the whole continued story thing was supposed to work in comics, and I managed to start buying Avengers regularly off the stands too instead of just getting random issues here and there and filling in missing issues out of 3 bag sets and trades with my cousin. It was towards the end of that subscription that my mom decided I was reading too many comics and wouldn't let me buy any new ones or read any of my old comics for nearly a year (I suspect a good many of my comics got thrown away at that time too as when I was allowed to read them again, some of my old faves were missing). Needless to say I didn't renew my subscription and the following year's magazine drive yielded a subscription to Nat Geo's World magazine for kids, not a comic book and U.S. News for some reason. I didn't get another subscription until the 80s when the town I lived in had a summer work program for kids to earn money while school was out (cleaning parks, the little league fields, etc.) I worked all summer and put some of the money I made towards subscriptions to Avengers (starting with the Weathermen issue (#210) and going through much of Shooter's second run) and Amazing Spider-Man (the Roger Stern run starting with the Slyde issue (#223?) and including the Juggernaut issues). However, those ran out just as we were moving back to CT, and that was the reason I was given for not being allowed to renew them (when it was in reality my mom not being happy with me reading comics still). I didn't get another sub until I turned 16 and had a job, and subbed to a few titles when again my mother made rumblings about me spending too much on comics just in case she tried to stop me getting books again, at least my faves would keep coming in the mail-at the time I subscribed to Avengers (I think it was during the Mansion Siege storyline), West Coast Avengers (the Englehart era) and Uncanny X-Men (around the time of Mutant Massacre), but I was impatient and still often bought the new issues off the racks at the comic shop because they came out about 2 weeks before the issues arrived in my mailbox (I was able to later sell the extra copies of X-Men for decent money I didn't renew because of the time lag and because my mother had finally given up trying to get me to stop reading comics. I didn't do print subs for comics after that until last year, when at the end of the year I subscribed to Heavy Metal because it was such a good deal, and recently did a print sub for the new Doctor Strange series launching in November. Part of the reason for the Heavy Metal sub was to circumvent Diamond and have more $$ go to the publisher (also one of the reasons I decided to drop my pull list), but I was disappointed to find that Marvel's subs are now handled by Midtown Comics and not directly from Marvel taking Diamond out of the equation, so I will not do any other Marvel subs. ( I also now buy my trades form Amazon and other retailers who do not order from Diamond). -M
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Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2015 18:34:33 GMT -5
I currently subscribe to DC Comics for the following titles: Batman 66, Sensation Comics, and Wonder Woman 77. I used to subscribe to DC Comics when they had All-Star Squadron and the Original Teen Titans. I also used to subscribe to Marvel's Captain Marvel for the entire run also too. And, I also get Dynamite Comics Green Hornet, Shadow & Green Hornet, and the Shadow too. I get those three by Dynamite Comics currently by subscription via the Comic Book Store that I go to.
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Post by DubipR on Sept 6, 2015 20:06:27 GMT -5
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Sept 6, 2015 20:20:30 GMT -5
I think the only two books I ever subscribed too were All-Star Squadron and Arak. I think it was only for a year. They just got destroyed in the mail.
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Post by berkley on Sept 6, 2015 21:39:20 GMT -5
The only thing I subscribed to was FOOM, briefly, the last 4 issues*. I was something that never occurred to me, probably because creative teams would change at the drop of a hat and what had been your favourite comic one issue could without warning become a dud the next. I only subscribed to FOOM because there was no other way to get it.
*WRONG! After checking to make sure, I see there were still three issues to go after my subscription ran out. Not sure why I didn't continue - I remember liking the 4 issues I did get.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Sept 8, 2015 15:10:09 GMT -5
Before subscription services became a big thing, and since few comics made their way to my neck of the woods, I took advantage of one of those ads saying "subscribe to three titles, get the fourth free!"
My first run of subscriptions was for Uncanny X-Men, Conan the barbarian, Man-Thing and Avengers. Man-Thing got cancelled and when renewal time came I dropped Avengers and added Micronauts, Fantastic Four and Savage sword to the list. That lasted two years or so.
It was always a thrill to find one of those brown envelopes waiting for me in the mailbox. Not as great as thrill as the big brown package from the subscription service, but still.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 8, 2015 15:41:05 GMT -5
I remember having several subscriptions to Archie Comics or maybe it was a form to order individual issues? I remember them coming in the mail folded and wrapped in brown paper. I subscribed to several of the digests as well.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on Sept 13, 2015 7:04:19 GMT -5
I've never had a subscription to any comic. The closest I ever came was having the local newsagents shop deliver each issue of Marvel UK's Star Wars comic to my house between 1981 and 1985. Sometimes it would be rolled or folded up inside my parents' daily newspaper, causing it to have fold lines down its length, which really annoyed me at the time.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,871
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Post by shaxper on Sept 13, 2015 17:48:32 GMT -5
I've never had a subscription to any comic. The closest I ever came was having the local newsagents shop deliver each issue of Marvel UK's Star Wars comic to my house between 1981 and 1985. Even with the folds, that's a pretty awesome service. Is that common in the UK?
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,202
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Post by Confessor on Sept 13, 2015 19:42:39 GMT -5
I've never had a subscription to any comic. The closest I ever came was having the local newsagents shop deliver each issue of Marvel UK's Star Wars comic to my house between 1981 and 1985. Even with the folds, that's a pretty awesome service. Is that common in the UK? Yeah, it is. As a young paper boy, I delivered many magazines, comics or other periodicals along with the daily newspaper on a monthly or weekly basis. As far as I know, it still happens now, although obviously newspaper sales have gone down a lot since the advent of the internet.
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