Mile High Comics Withdraws From San Diego Comic-Con After 44 Years
Howdy!
To answer the numerous questions that we have been receiving of late, for the first time in 44 years, we will
not be exhibiting at this year's San Diego Comic-Con. I wish that this decision could have been otherwise,
but circumstances beyond our control made our further participation impossible. To explain, San Diego has
grown far beyond its original premise, morphing from what was originally a wonderful annual gathering of the
comics world, into a world-renown pop culture and media festival. As such, it has seen rapidly escalating costs,
and also a dramatic change in the demographics of its attendees. Neither of those changes worked to our advantage.
Finished Mile High con booth
To explain a bit more, my first little one-table booth in 1973 cost $40 to rent for the weekend. When we received
our booth renewal for last year, our costs for our 70' of space had been raised to over $18,000. While quite costly,
that one factor alone would not have precluded us from returning, as we had paid $16,500 in rent the previous year.
What made the situation nearly impossible, however, was that foot traffic in the exhibit hall declined dramatically
last year. Even at its peak on Saturday afternoon, our end of the building (which was primarily comics) was uncrowded.
The San Diego Fire Marshals were partially to blame, as they put much stricter controls on the number of badge holders
allowed in the building at any given time. That might not have been such a bad idea, except that it amplified the harm
already being caused by the incredible proliferation of off-site events that are now being set up for upwards of eight
blocks all around the convention center. When you can see GAME OF THRONES, POKEMON, and hundreds of other exhibits across
from the convention hall for free, why bother going in to the hall? Many fans did not.
Foot traffic on Saturday in the SDCC booth
To summarize, we experienced rising costs, while at the same time foot traffic in our booth plummeted. That is never a
good combination. That having been said, I truly loved the experience of exhibiting at San Diego Con, so I can assure
you that I would have ignored those two major obstacles, and still renewed my booth. The final straw, however, was the
utter indifference of the San Diego Comic-Con management to the fiasco that we endured at the beginning of last year's
show, when the freight handlers that they hired failed to deliver our comics to our booth.
Chuck in empty SDCC booth
So how could this awful thing happen? It beats the heck out of me. Our trucker was in line at the convention marshaling
yard at 6:30 AM on Tuesday morning. At 9 PM that evening, with almost all the other vendors around us unpacked and
completely set up, we still did not have our 40,000 lbs of freight. I had twelve workers scheduled to help us set up that
day (included Will, Lynne, and Norrie who flew in from Denver that morning...), but all we could do was to sit around all day in
our totally empty booth.
Will, Lynne, and Norrie infront of the finished Mile High con booth
Making matters much worse, at no time during this ordeal (or during the show) did anyone from the convention management
stop by with an apology, an explanation, or even just to commiserate. After 44 years of my supporting them through good
times and bad, that was just too much indifference to endure. When you are in a relationship out of love and passion, but
the other party could care less whether you live or die, you have to realize that it is time to move on. I will very much
miss San Diego, but I doubt if the convention management will even notice that I am gone. Such is life.
Moving on to news from our online business, our new 30% off codeword is VACATION! This discount codeword applies to all
ten million of our
back issue comics and magazines,
excluding only new issues, a few variants, and slabbed comics. Please note, however, that we currently are working down a
10-day shipping backlog due to the July 4th holiday and Denver Comic-Con falling on the same weekend. Your patience would
be very much appreciated.
Happy collecting!
Chuck Rozanski,
President - Mile High Comics, Inc.
July 5, 2017
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