Comics and magazines 14:58 - Aug 27 with 482 views | BlacknGoldnBlue | Those of us that are a certain vintage would have been brought up on comics and magazines.. In an age before household internet it was often the only way to get in-depth news and entertainment and posters for bedroom walls or covering school books. Which comics or magazines did you read and why? |  |
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Comics and magazines on 15:01 - Aug 27 with 457 views | solemio | Eagle |  | |  |
Comics and magazines on 15:09 - Aug 27 with 434 views | J2BLUE | Match - could relieve an hour or two of boredom for relatively cheap. It was basically the tabloid of football mags compared to 442 etc in terms of how it was written. Various gaming magazines were occasional purchases. As was WWE magazine and music mags like Smash Hits then once I got older, Kerrang. |  |
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Comics and magazines on 15:10 - Aug 27 with 435 views | bsw72 | Speed, which evolved into Tiger and then into Eagle. Was also a big fan of the Commando Comic books in the early to mid 80s. After I got into home computing and moved from my ZX81 to ZX Spectrum 48K (yes the rubber key special) I got Crash Magazine for a number of years, until I moved to Atari 520STFM and then into PCs. Collected the whole series of Images of War as well, I think around 1988/89 (was reissued about 5 years later). |  | |  |
Comics and magazines on 15:12 - Aug 27 with 420 views | TheBlueGnu | Razzle - for ahem,"personal", purposes. |  |
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Comics and magazines on 15:30 - Aug 27 with 379 views | Illinoisblue | Was it Dandy or Beano that had the dog chasing a string of sausages down the road? |  |
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Comics and magazines on 15:30 - Aug 27 with 377 views | Cheltenham_Blue | 'Buster' from about 5 til I was 11 or so. Also the 'Commando' mini books. Then 'Shoot' or 'Match' from 12 onwards. |  |
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Comics and magazines on 15:40 - Aug 27 with 344 views | IndependentlyBlue | The Victor - Alf Tupper,the Tough of the Track. Not sure if this was in The Victor but remember a character called Wee Bandy, who was a football god scoring the most spectacular goals, usually to win the match against all the odds. Also Charles Buchan’s Football Weekly (maybe Monthly) |  |
| Better to stay silent and be thought a fool than open your mouth and remove all doubt |
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Comics and magazines on 15:58 - Aug 27 with 309 views | wischip | Lots of Marvel Comics. Plus Tiger, Whizzer & Chips, Action and 2000AD |  | |  | Login to get fewer ads
Comics and magazines on 16:03 - Aug 27 with 299 views | BasingstokeBlue | Eagle + Shoot. |  |
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Comics and magazines on 16:38 - Aug 27 with 251 views | The_Flashing_Smile | Victor. |  |
| Trust the process. Trust Phil. |
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Comics and magazines on 16:39 - Aug 27 with 246 views | The_Flashing_Smile |
Comics and magazines on 15:10 - Aug 27 by bsw72 | Speed, which evolved into Tiger and then into Eagle. Was also a big fan of the Commando Comic books in the early to mid 80s. After I got into home computing and moved from my ZX81 to ZX Spectrum 48K (yes the rubber key special) I got Crash Magazine for a number of years, until I moved to Atari 520STFM and then into PCs. Collected the whole series of Images of War as well, I think around 1988/89 (was reissued about 5 years later). |
I loved those Commando comic books too, still have loads of them. |  |
| Trust the process. Trust Phil. |
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Comics and magazines on 16:40 - Aug 27 with 243 views | Radlett_blue |
Comics and magazines on 15:40 - Aug 27 by IndependentlyBlue | The Victor - Alf Tupper,the Tough of the Track. Not sure if this was in The Victor but remember a character called Wee Bandy, who was a football god scoring the most spectacular goals, usually to win the match against all the odds. Also Charles Buchan’s Football Weekly (maybe Monthly) |
Alf Tupper would usually be locked in a shed miles from the track where an event was being held, run to the meeting, be a lap down in the mile race but still come first. Afterwards, his dinner would be fish & chips "wrapped up in the sports pages". |  |
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Comics and magazines on 16:46 - Aug 27 with 220 views | BlacknGoldnBlue | I read so many Marvel comics.... Spiderman, X-Men, Avengers, Fantastic Four, Secret Wars...to name a few. School Fun which became Buster. Smash Hits/Look in. 2000ad - still stands the test of time as started reading them again. |  |
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Comics and magazines on 16:52 - Aug 27 with 210 views | Meadowlark | Like many of a similar age "Eagle" and "Shoot," but we also got a magazine called "Knowledge" which wasn't really a comic, but was a marvellous source of information and included brilliant illustrations which I didn't quite appreciate at the time. Beano was always around somewhere, and as my childhood disappeared and my adolescence merged into adulthood I moved on to "The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers" and "Fat Freddy's Cat." Finally "Viz" and "Private Eye." Tells you all you need to know really. I also used to like "The Numbskulls" in "Beezer." I expect Mick McArthy was a fan too. |  | |  |
Comics and magazines on 18:37 - Aug 27 with 137 views | GlasgowBlue | Marvel Comics. My mum bought me this new comic called the Mighty World of Marvel in 1972. Came with a free iron on transfer of a green skinned monster. I was absolutely hooked. The editor was a bloke called Stan Lee who talked directly to us kids with his own page. Didn't realise at the time that they were reprints of America Marvel Comics from the 1960's. Now I'm the proud owner of a virtually unbroken run of Amazing Spider-Man from 1063 to the early 2000's. Also have a run of Avengers from issue 1 (1963) to 200+, ditto DareDevil and some b=very early 1960's X-Men comics. Just sent some of them to CGC to get them graded. Time to cash in on those childhood memories. [Post edited 27 Aug 18:38]
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Comics and magazines on 18:57 - Aug 27 with 110 views | GeoffSentence | warlord, beano, military modelling and whatever i found in the hedgerows |  |
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Comics and magazines on 19:07 - Aug 27 with 92 views | EdwardStone |
Comics and magazines on 16:52 - Aug 27 by Meadowlark | Like many of a similar age "Eagle" and "Shoot," but we also got a magazine called "Knowledge" which wasn't really a comic, but was a marvellous source of information and included brilliant illustrations which I didn't quite appreciate at the time. Beano was always around somewhere, and as my childhood disappeared and my adolescence merged into adulthood I moved on to "The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers" and "Fat Freddy's Cat." Finally "Viz" and "Private Eye." Tells you all you need to know really. I also used to like "The Numbskulls" in "Beezer." I expect Mick McArthy was a fan too. |
Have am uppie for name checking Fabulous Furry Freek Brothers And of course Fat Freddie's Cat |  | |  |
Comics and magazines on 19:12 - Aug 27 with 83 views | Whos_blue | Look in Eagle Smash Hits. |  |
| Distortion becomes somehow pure in its wildness. |
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Comics and magazines on 20:27 - Aug 27 with 33 views | iamatractorboy | Late 80s, early 90s - Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles Adventures (Loved the TV series. Wasn't aware there was a more grown up comic that started it all back in 1984) Early, mid 90s - Shoot. I swear they did a team competition for stuff like longest throw, furthest kick, fastest player etc and when they got to Town we took the lead in all categories (it didn't last). Early, mid 90s - Mean Machines Sega. Was a Sega kid growing up Late 90s - FHM. No further comment. |  | |  |
Comics and magazines on 20:37 - Aug 27 with 15 views | IndependentlyBlue |
Comics and magazines on 16:40 - Aug 27 by Radlett_blue | Alf Tupper would usually be locked in a shed miles from the track where an event was being held, run to the meeting, be a lap down in the mile race but still come first. Afterwards, his dinner would be fish & chips "wrapped up in the sports pages". |
IIRC Alf was a welder by trade and often had a ‘big job’ to get finished before the race. Can’t for the life of me remember his big rival at the swanky Athletics Club that Alf always pipped at the post. |  |
| Better to stay silent and be thought a fool than open your mouth and remove all doubt |
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