Mile High Comics - Chuck Rozanski & Jim Shooter Interview Part 1

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • Mile High Comics Owner and President Chuck Rozanski sits down with Legendary Comic Book Icon Jim Shooter. Chuck and Jim look back on the early days of their friendship and share stories of Jim's early days as the Editor in Chief at Marvel Comics.
    www.milehighcomics.com
    #chuckrozanski #jimshooter #milehighcomics #marvelcomics

Komentáře • 37

  • @betabo
    @betabo Před rokem +2

    thanks so much for sharing this interview! I worked for Chuck back in 2001 and still regret leaving, I learned much in the short time I was there!

  • @mrdorf2784
    @mrdorf2784 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for this. Shooter is one of the best in the in the business.

  • @KJ-tz7vc
    @KJ-tz7vc Před 2 lety +8

    This inside baseball for the comics industry is fascinating. Thanks to Chuck and Jim for sharing!

  • @aftacomics5865
    @aftacomics5865 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm in my 60's and have been collecting since 1970. Great to see two pros "Who were there" unlike the kids(30's) who were not and know everything!

  • @pogobee
    @pogobee Před 2 lety +5

    Chuck has some of the industry’s best BTS stories. Can’t wait to hear the rest of he and Shooter’s talk.

  • @quigley6643
    @quigley6643 Před 2 lety +1

    My favorite era of comics.. Thanks for everything, Jim! You are a legend.

  • @irishtexan899
    @irishtexan899 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow. I still have the personal reply letter Shooter sent me when as a child I wrote him being upset that Marvel joined DC in raising cover prices to a whole dollar. I still remember the excitement of getting the official Marvel envelope with Spiderman on it in the mail. I also remember being amazed that Shooter took the time to write me a reply letter.

  • @norcalvirg
    @norcalvirg Před 2 lety +3

    I love hearing the Jim Shooter parts.

  • @jasonthomasroyallepage
    @jasonthomasroyallepage Před 2 lety +7

    Ended on a cliffhanger lol. This is excellent to watch and is important that it is being documented for historical reasons. Two knowledgeable people that (as they mentioned) were viewing the early direct market days from completely different perspectives is very interesting.

  • @daviclar867
    @daviclar867 Před 2 lety +3

    Googled this guy while watching this. Wow, what a career!!!

  • @oxfordrockcity
    @oxfordrockcity Před 2 lety +3

    I can't wait for the rest of this. This is FASCINATING.

  • @bbhollick
    @bbhollick Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome conversation. This needs to be a regular thing, Chuck talking with comic industry legends.

  • @michaelbell6894
    @michaelbell6894 Před 2 lety +1

    Old men talking about comics. Love it!

  • @LairofSkulls
    @LairofSkulls Před 2 lety +2

    We need more history lessons from Chuck! And Jim too!

  • @giorgoskabamaru5856
    @giorgoskabamaru5856 Před 2 lety +2

    I would love more videos like this. We, the younger generation, should learn the history of our hobby. Thank you very much!

  • @zever4ever
    @zever4ever Před 2 lety +1

    Super fascinating behind the scenes info!

  • @stampscapes
    @stampscapes Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing to hear what bad shape the industry was in but also how it got turned around. I started collecting comics around '79 and had no idea. By '82 there were more conventions popping up around the larger cities in the US that seemed fairly well attended as they kept doing them with more special guests every year. Nothing like today but for then the shows were pretty big. Usually, some news channel would be at them shooting a segment.

  • @radpuppy71
    @radpuppy71 Před 2 lety +1

    I fell in love with comics in the 70s as a small child but that love was solidified in the 80s with Secret Wars and Crisis on Infinite Earths. Marvel in the 1980s was nothing short of awesome and Jim Shooter had a big hand in that. Also, with the introduction of the Valiant Universe in the 90s, Jim Shooter hepled in the creation of even more great characters.

  • @wheeljack0
    @wheeljack0 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for doing this interview.

  • @SgtKnievel
    @SgtKnievel Před rokem +2

    The Beyonder is Jim Shooters avatar. 😇

  • @abzcomics1020
    @abzcomics1020 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Chuck/Jim, Finished the first Part and it is fascinating to listen to both of your stories, I really chuckled at the comic collector loyalty. I remember travelling to Forbidden Planet in Glasgow for the Launch of The Killing Joke in 1986 and the queues were large before opening time, just for that one book. If I remember right due to freight times back then, there was a first printing done by Titan Distributers for the UK market and a lot of the others were printed in Canada. Looking forward to the rest of the parts and thank-you both :) Greetings from Scotland :)

  • @user-zo7mr3op8i
    @user-zo7mr3op8i Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hi Jim. Hi Chuck.
    I was born in 1951.
    Loved the Silver Age.
    But tell me, truthfully, what did you think of John Forte's art.
    He was more than fine on the Tales of the Bizzaro World series...
    But otherwise?

  • @danbitgood429
    @danbitgood429 Před 2 lety +2

    Great stuff!

  • @theactualmarvelexpert5272

    Amazing how much Roy Thomas and others at Marvel trashed Kirby's FOURTH WORLD and then cite how STAR WARS saved Marvel. Star Wars directly copies New Gods to such a degree it's amazing! Mark Moonrider, The Source, Darkseid, the hero being conflicted because his Dad is the villain and he's raised by a white bearded mentor figure in a robe.. it goes on and on!

    • @saintsataniko2116
      @saintsataniko2116 Před 2 lety +1

      And amazing how much Kirby trashed Roy Thomas and Stan, but then kept having to come back to them begging to work for Marvel again after DC pulled the rug out from under his entire Fourth World. I've only seen Roy praise Kirby even in the wake of Kirby's nasty "HouseRoy" jabs.

    • @FourColorSinners
      @FourColorSinners Před rokem

      @@saintsataniko2116 Then you need glasses. Roy mocked Kirby in the Sixties in PRINT. He wrote "lousy dialogue" on Kirby's original art for Captain America and had it sent back to Jack so he'd see it. "Nasty"- wow. It's warranted.

    • @yalbad5160
      @yalbad5160 Před rokem

      ​@@FourColorSinnersTo be fair, dialogue wasn't Kirby's strength.

    • @yalbad5160
      @yalbad5160 Před rokem

      I'm pretty sure Star Wars owes more to fantasy and pulp adventures than to any comic book.

    • @FourColorSinners
      @FourColorSinners Před rokem

      You being pretty sure because of subjective opinions is irrelevant. @@yalbad5160

  • @DanielleA2023
    @DanielleA2023 Před rokem +1

    ❤❤

  • @arthurtripp6922
    @arthurtripp6922 Před 8 měsíci

    Many of the Dealers were comicbook collectors best example was the first Comicon in New York in 1964. Fat Phil had a dark side keeping comics out of some dealers to control his power. This is why Long Island had problems opening shops.

  • @T.R.R.Jolkien
    @T.R.R.Jolkien Před rokem +1

    Two older gentlemen discussing comic history, from an insider point of view…

  • @gabrielduarte4965
    @gabrielduarte4965 Před rokem +1

    What if he were to write a one shot doom patrol or a silver surfer?

  • @jumpingjohnflash
    @jumpingjohnflash Před 2 lety +2

    When Chuck talks about Star Wars and million-selling, he also mentions another comic too, but I can't really hear it clearly... was it "John-Paul"?

    • @keiljones2902
      @keiljones2902 Před 2 lety +2

      They put out a Pope John Paul comic - I guess it was a huge seller.

    • @saintsataniko2116
      @saintsataniko2116 Před 2 lety +1

      @@keiljones2902 It was a Star Wars/Battle Pope Crossover. The Pope was leader of the Rebellion.

    • @T.R.R.Jolkien
      @T.R.R.Jolkien Před rokem +1

      @@keiljones2902 you are correct. It was thicker than a normal comic.