User avatar
By DrMadKatz
#4996990
I am not sure there is such thing as an Officially formed franchise . That would mean that Sony , Columbia Pictures and later on , Ghost Corps had rented / leased / or 'given' some fan club the rights to use their Intellectual Property and trademarks / copyrights ....... to which as far as I know .... they haven't .


( Here is what I know , from my own personal experience . )

Back in the 80's , after GB - the movie came out , there was a 'fan club ' and magazine subscription that you could buy ..... it came with a 'certification' 'signed' by L. Tully .
Also in 84 , was a sticker book that also had a 'certification' in the back .

That was about it .

Years later , I read on the internet , that Sony , as a promote for another GB movie , made a 'franchise request' ...where people would contact them and get an 'official certification' . After an amount of time , Sony stopped the promo .

I am pretty sure that Sony and etc,etc,etc .... never thought that in the years and years to come , that GB would have it's own 'cult following' , similar to Rocky Horror Picture Show / Star Trek / StarWars ....... where it's fans would dressup and do community events , like fund raisers , cancer research , children hospitals etc .

I do hope that Sony never sues the crap out of us ( fans ) . That would be a sad day .

As for 'official' , i hear it tossed around by a few other fan-clubs once in awhile , along with ' Been around since 20whenever ' .
--- It is a sad tactic used , trying to establish dominance over other clubs .
I personally don't like trying to play the 'Who has the Bigger Walker Peck' game . Our first 'franchise' was the same year after the movie was released . I've got 20 to 40 years on some of these 'young whipper-snappers' . Second franchise was made because we wanted to go invade a local theater showing of Afterlife with other Ghostbusters fans ..... and could not find any actiove groups ...... so we made one .

Beyond that ....if anyone else has any GB history , we love to hear it .
User avatar
By DrMadKatz
#4996991
Google has found these ::

https://ghostbusterscities.com/franchis ... ters-club/

https://ghostbusters.fandom.com/wiki/Of ... lub_(1984)

The first Official Ghostbusters Fan Club was founded on July 3, 1984 by Mark Lister and Jim Garvey of Swissvale, Pennsylvania, who paid Columbia Pictures an estimated $10,000 for the right to operate an official fan club. The fan club operated domestically, as well as internationally. Applicants would send in their money and fill out a ghostbusting job application. There was no guaranteed acceptance, but no applicant was ever rejected - even Samantha, a dog who sent in her paw print as proof of her interest in Ghostbusters. For the $8.95 registration fee, members received the following

A personal membership card.
The official Ghostbusters metal badge.
A Certificate of Anti-Paranormal Proficiency, four "This Property Protected by Ghostbusters" color stickers.
An Ectomobile sticker.
A Ghostbusters logo patch.
One-year subscription to the quarterly newsletter entitled The Official Trade Journal of Certified Ghostbusters.
User avatar
By Christof
#5000210
There's the fan club stuff, sure, but I don't know that any of that really led to much in the way of Cosplayers embracing the fandom. Fan Franchises definitely existed before the modern popularity and coining of the term Cosplay, I remember being a 13-14 year old wishing I could own my own proton pack in the early days of the internet and browsing through the OLD fan franchise websites. Some digging around on the Internet Archive got me to the old Proton Charging Links page circa 2000, and you can see there's already nearly a dozen fan franchises linked to there. We know folks started cosplaying as Ghostbusters pretty much from Day 1, but as far as when they started grouping together and pooling their resources to build the groups we know and love today? Since the 90's, at least, most likely shortly after the initial release, but anything from pre-internet would be hard to track down without actually knowing someone directly involved.
User avatar
By Christof
#5000219
mrmichaelt wrote: September 29th, 2024, 6:43 pm Plus, there's the legendary Pete Mosen to consider. Idk if was solo or he started a club in the late 80s.
All the pictures I've seen Pete was completely solo, but I also wouldn't call myself an expert on the subject. I reached out to Chris Stewart via Twitter and asked if he knows, but Twitter is literally the worst, so who knows if he'll actually see it or respond. I'll definitely report back if I find anything down this particular rabbit hole though!
User avatar
By Kingpin
#5001136
It might've been the early 2000s when we first started to see organised fans who'd get together and go out and do community events under a shared banner of a franchise, as opposed to general gatherings for things like Halloween (though Sean Bishop and friends could definitely be considered one of the earliest "proto-franchise"). One of the first U.K.-based franchises (The GBUK Elite) were established by 2005/2006, and they attended an event where Ernie Hudson was signing autographs.

Certainly, by 2008/2009 there were plenty of groups who did events as organised franchises... Some of which even came together because of the release of Ghostbusters: The Video Game

Ghostbusters International used to be one of the first pages to really feature the idea of real-world teams (it used to also feature fanfic teams, but the site administration opted to take things in a different direction circa 2004).

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