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  2. Mile High Comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mile_High_Comics

    In 1999, Mile High Comics announced it planned to sell comics on the Internet, in a planned partnership with Amazon.com. [ 10 ] In 2012, Mile High Comics had four locations: a new 65,000-square-foot megastore east of 46th Avenue and Jason Street in northwest Denver (purchased for $1.6 million), [ 2 ] and retail locations in Glendale , Littleton ...

  3. Edgar Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Church

    From these magazines he would clip images which he would store in one of hundreds of labeled boxes. The collection of comic books that he amassed, later known as the "Edgar Church collection" or the "Mile High collection", is the most famous and valuable comic book collection known to surface in the history of comic book collecting.

  4. Chuck Rozanski - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Rozanski

    The following year, he attended his first national comics convention, Multicon in Oklahoma City, [4] where he sold $1,800 USD in comics in three days. It was at this point that he realized comics retailing could be a career. [citation needed] He opened the first Mile High Comics store in Boulder, Colorado, in 1974 [3] with $800 in cash and ...

  5. 1969 in comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969_in_comics

    Chuck Rozanski starts selling comics at age 13, from his parents' basement, which is the foundation of Mile High Comics, a comics store in Boulder, Colorado. He would open Mile High as a professional store at age 19. [1]

  6. Diamond Comic Distributors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_Comic_Distributors

    In what Mile High Comics' Chuck Rozanski describes as an "incredibly risky and gutsy move," Geppi took over New Media/Irjax's "office and warehouse space" and, recalled Rozanski, had to "sort out the good customers from the bad overnight" negotiating with creditors to continue Shuster's distribution business as Diamond Comic Distribution. [3]

  7. Steve Geppi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Geppi

    Steve Geppi was born on January 24, 1950, in Little Italy, Baltimore and completed the 8th grade before leaving school. [5] Geppi's "first job was handling the comics for a local store," where the nine-year-old avidly read comics including "his favorite Archie comics" and others.

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  9. Direct market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_market

    Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash comic book store in Red Bank, New Jersey.. The direct market is the dominant distribution and retail network for American comic books. [1] The concept of the direct market was created in the 1970s by Phil Seuling.

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