Sunday, March 28, 2021

Des Moines, Iowa, alternative magazine's article on a late 70s/early 80s alternative paper

This is an edited version of an article from the alternative magazine, CityView, on the late 70s/early 80s alternative newspaper, The Daily Planet/The Planet.

Des Moines Forgotten: The Daily Planet


On the morning of Wednesday, June 29, 1977, residents of Des Moines woke up and began to carry out their regular morning habits: They got out of bed, opened their living room curtains to observe the rising sun, and drank their pre-timed brewed Folgers.

Some of those who left their homes to search for the morning edition of The Des Moines Register were greeted by not one but two papers that morning: The familiar one had two headlines “President says more kids OK” and “Birds and the bees cause home trouble in W.D.M.” It was black and white and known as “the newspaper Iowa depends on.”


Left to right: Peter Lewis, Gary Gildner, Ron Briggs (sales manager), Rick Strode (art director), Rick Vint (business manager), Jon Bowermaster and Larry Vint (in front)

The other was different. It had big bright colors and a headline that read, “Chasing the ghosts of flight at Kitty Hawk” by Jon Bowermaster. The paper was called The Daily Planet, and not only did it grab the readers’ eyes with a little hippie magic, it was also… free.

The Daily Planet was started by Drake University students Jon Bowermaster and Larry Vint. Gary Gildner, who was a professor at Drake at the time, was instrumental in helping these ambitious young men get the independent paper off the ground.


“They were a group of independent-minded people, and I admired them. Some of them were students, and some of them were part of that vague underground side of Des Moines… the scruffy types. It was a fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants kind of operation when it got started,” said Gildner, who is now 81 and an accomplished author and winner of many awards including the Iowa Poetry Prize. He mentored these young men and passed story recommendations and new writers their way. He also contributed his own fiction in the early days of the publication...

The Daily Planet set up its offices above the building at 2304 University Ave. At the ground level was the famous Beggars Banquet sandwich joint, which also was a regular advertiser for the paper. Brad Harvey came into the fold a few years later.

“I was the Joe Biden of music reviewers,” Harvey said. “Mike Frisbie was the original music guy, and eventually when he decided he didn’t want to do it anymore, I took over.”


Frisbie, as some CITYVIEW readers might remember, was the floating host for Iowa Public Television’s Sci-Fi Friday Night (and later Sci-Fi Saturday Night) in the 1990s and early 2000s. He was also involved in the early days of KFMG and KBLE radio stations...

The April 22, 1982, edition of The Planet was the publication’s final issue. Life takes us into new directions, and everyone who was involved went on to new things.

Mark Walker (a staff member) went on to become a career journalist with publications including Rolling Stone magazine. Many people have asked where he is, but no one seems to know.

Drake University has made the entire run of The Daily Planet available for free through its digital archives, and I highly recommend taking the time to check them out: http://bit.ly/2HzHvyF.

Kristian Day is a filmmaker, musician and writer based in Des Moines. He hosts the syndicated Iowa Basement Tapes radio program on 98.9FM KFMG.

Read the complete article here.

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