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The Daily Planet was a weekly underground newspaper that was distributed for free on college campuses in the greater Philadelphia area in the 1970s. It was an early example of an advertiser-funded weekly local entertainment guide. The Daily Planet was primarily an arts and entertainment tabloid. providing weekly updates on the counterculture and music scene in the Philadelphia. area. In one interview, keyboardist Ray Manzarek stated that Christian Culture as a whole was in its own downfall, and that methamphetamines, not psychedelic drugs, was aiding in its demise.

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  • Daily Planet (Philadelphia newspaper) (en)
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  • The Daily Planet was a weekly underground newspaper that was distributed for free on college campuses in the greater Philadelphia area in the 1970s. It was an early example of an advertiser-funded weekly local entertainment guide. The Daily Planet was primarily an arts and entertainment tabloid. providing weekly updates on the counterculture and music scene in the Philadelphia. area. In one interview, keyboardist Ray Manzarek stated that Christian Culture as a whole was in its own downfall, and that methamphetamines, not psychedelic drugs, was aiding in its demise. (en)
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  • The Daily Planet was a weekly underground newspaper that was distributed for free on college campuses in the greater Philadelphia area in the 1970s. It was an early example of an advertiser-funded weekly local entertainment guide. The Daily Planet was primarily an arts and entertainment tabloid. providing weekly updates on the counterculture and music scene in the Philadelphia. area. In one interview, keyboardist Ray Manzarek stated that Christian Culture as a whole was in its own downfall, and that methamphetamines, not psychedelic drugs, was aiding in its demise. The Daily Planet also contained political coverage on topics such the opposition to the Vietnam war and police brutality. Journalist Bob Ingram says this of the Daily Planet: "Campus freebie- These days, every time I look at a daily newspaper’s weekend entertainment, I think of The Daily Planet, which was The Drummer’s entertainment section with a different cover, distributed free to the Greater Philadelphia colleges to grab all that youth market advertising." (en)
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