San Diego Comic-Con: Looking Back at the Legendary Origins of Geekdom’s Biggest Event
With San Diego Comic-Con launching this week, it’s the perfect time to revisit how this pop culture juggernaut began and how it grew into the most influential convention in the world.
For me, SDCC is more than just a convention—it’s a yearly pilgrimage. I’ve been attending every year since 2006, and in 2008, the same year Marvel blew everyone away by debuting Iron Man in Hall H, we launched GeekTyrant. I was there when the Marvel Cinematic Universe was born, and it was a moment that changed fandom forever.
But like every epic saga, SDCC has its own origin story.
The Birth of a Convention
Back in 1969, Sheldon Dorf, a comics enthusiast who had worked on a Detroit convention, decided San Diego needed something similar. He pitched the idea to a group of teenage comic fans, but they weren’t sold… until Dorf picked up the phone and called Jack Kirby, the legendary co-creator of Captain America and countless Marvel icons. That call changed everything.
Dorf, along with Richard Alf, Ken Krueger, Mike Towry, Bob Sourk, Barry Alfonso, and Dan Steward, even drove to Kirby’s home in Irvine, California. It’s there that Kirby not only agreed to attend their first event but gave them one crucial piece of advice: Don’t just make it about comics—include all fandoms. That suggestion would become the foundation of Comic-Con’s success.
The First Steps: From a Basement Gathering to a Cultural Phenomenon
The very first Comic-Con wasn’t a massive spectacle, it was a modest gathering at the U.S. Grant Hotel in downtown San Diego in 1970. There were actually two events that year. The first, in March, was a one-day trial run called San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Minicon to test the waters. It was a hit.
Later that August, the team went bigger with San Diego Golden State Comic-Con, a three-day event featuring panels, film screenings, and dealers. About 300 fans packed into the hotel’s basement, joined by big names like Forrest J Ackerman, Ray Bradbury, Kirby himself, Bob Stevens, and A.E. van Vogt. That first full-scale event became the template for every comic convention that followed.
For the next few years, the event operated under the name San Diego West Coast Comic Convention, before officially adopting San Diego Comic-Con in 1973. Then in 1995, its nonprofit organization was renamed Comic-Con International: San Diego, cementing its global status.
How SDCC Became a Pop Culture Powerhouse
In its early days, SDCC focused on comics, sci-fi literature, and film screenings. But as fan culture grew, so did the convention. By the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, Hollywood realized the power of fandom. Studios began using SDCC as a stage to promote blockbuster films, TV shows, and later, video games.
The turning point came in 2008 when Marvel Studios took over Hall H with Iron Man and introduced the world to a little movie called Iron Man. That moment blew minds, and it rewrote the rulebook for marketing movies. From that point on, Hall H became legendary, the place where the biggest reveals with must attend panels.
Today, SDCC is where studios drop exclusive trailers, surprise appearances from A-list actors happen, and fan theories ignite global conversations. It’s no longer just about comics, it’s about everything in the entertainment ecosystem: movies, TV, gaming, collectibles, cosplay, and beyond.
Why San Diego Comic-Con Still Matters
In an age where trailers drop online instantly and fan events pop up everywhere, you might wonder: why is SDCC still the ultimate fan destination? The answer is simple: community and experience.
There’s something electric about being in San Diego during Comic-Con. The entire city transforms into a playground for geeks. From immersive offsite activations to once-in-a-lifetime panels, SDCC offers experiences you can’t replicate on a screen. It’s where fans, creators, and industry giants all converge in one space, united by passion.
For creators, it’s still the place to showcase their work. For fans, it’s the chance to be part of something bigger, to meet their heroes, make new friends, and to celebrate the stories that inspire them. Over the years I’ve become a part of a strong little Comic-Con family
From Humble Beginnings to Global Domination
What started in 1970 as a basement gathering of 300 fans has grown into a cultural event that draws over 130,000 attendees every year and influences the entire entertainment industry. San Diego Comic-Con didn’t just change how fandom works, it shaped modern pop culture.
As SDCC kicks off again this week, remember that it all began with a small group of passionate fans, a phone call to Jack Kirby, and a dream that keeps getting bigger every year.