Formerly called Keep On Truckin' Coop Industry Distributor Founded 1970 | Fate bankruptcy Defunct 1980 | |
Key people Jim Kennedy (1947–2008) (President), Suzie Kwant, Jerry Fireman, Doug Larkins, Pat Larkins |
Big rapids distribution company friends
Big Rapids Distribution was a Detroit-based distributor focusing on underground newspapers, radical literature, and underground comix. They were responsible for the unusually good coverage that underground comix and underground papers got in the Michigan area in the early 1970s, when they could be found in most full-service newsstands there. At its height, shortly before it went bankrupt in 1980, Big Rapids was functioning as an alternative independent distributor in the central and southern Michigan areas, selling a full line of magazines and paperbacks, as well as comics.
Contents
- Big rapids distribution company friends
- Services
- Origins
- Rise to prominence
- Acquisitions
- Bankruptcy and dissolution
- References
Services
Among the periodicals distributed by Big Rapids were the Berkeley Barb, Fifth Estate, Creem, Rolling Stone, and High Times, in addition to a plethora of underground comix.
Origins
Big Rapids was founded as a Detroit-area cooperative circa 1970 as the Keep On Truckin' Coop. They eventually changed their name when they moved their headquarters to Big Rapids, Michigan, but retained their co-op structure. Jim Kennedy, Big Rapids' "first-among-equals," described the company as an "alternative Independent Distributor."
Rise to prominence
Big Rapids' entry into mainstream comics distribution came in early 1975, when Donahoe Brothers Inc. of Ann Arbor went under and Big Rapids purchased its assets. (Up to that point, Big Rapids had bought its mainstream comics from Donohoe Brothers.)
Moving their headquarters back to Detroit, Big Rapids was aggressive, often taking over the businesses of customers who ran up large debts (ironic, given that their delivery vehicles carried pictures of Karl Marx on the inside doors). At its height, Big Rapids was actually functioning as an alternative independent distributor in the Detroit and central and southern Michigan areas, selling a full line of magazines and paperbacks, as well as comics.
Acquisitions
Bankruptcy and dissolution
In 1980, despite being the largest of many distributors in the direct market, Big Rapids went bankrupt and their assets were liquidated.
There was a scramble to fill the void; a couple of new companies that grew briefly from the wreckage lasted only briefly — Comic Kingdom (Bob Hellems' company in Detroit) and Common Ground Distributors (Robert Beerbohm's in the San Francisco Bay Area). Most of the pieces were picked up by the brand-new Capital City Distribution or by New Media Distribution.