04 January 2009
▶︎ Chucklers Weekly (5): the small print
Rotary Colorprint is still around, in Surry Hills. It also printed, for example, Phantom comics and Larry Kent pulp detective novels.
For all my posts about Chucklers Weekly, click through to the label CHUCKLERS WEEKLY.
03 January 2009
▶︎ Chucklers Weekly (4): Charlie Chuckles Club
I was a member of the Charlie Chuckles Club. I lost my badge long ago, but I like to think that the one I bought through eBay (below) is my own badge, mystically reunited with me after fifty years. Now, if only I could locate my old Argonauts' Club badge..
For all my posts about Chucklers Weekly click through to the label CHUCKLERS WEEKLY.
▶︎ Chucklers Weekly (3): Pat Boone, Bob Rogers and make a book cover!
Apart from the comics, Chucklers Weekly included short stories, puzzles, general knowledge features, pop music news, competitions and readers' advertisements (Exchange Corner and Penfriends). The content was wholesome, even educational, fare. (Crystals are interesting!) There was nothing here that would upset parents at a time when comic books had had some bad press.
The pin-up boy of Chucklers Weekly was Pat Boone, the clean-cut American crooner and movie star who had hits with whitebread versions of Little Richard and Fats Domino songs and otherwise occupied the lighter end of the pop spectrum. He even wrote an advice book for the youngsters called 'Twixt Twelve and Twenty that I remember being promoted through Chucklers Weekly. In fact, looking back, Chucklers Weekly was nuts about Pat Boone, almost an Aussie branch of his PR team.
Of the two white-collar-and-tie disc jockeys featured here, Bob Rogers from 2SM in Sydney was the most famous nationally. Five years later, by then with 2UE, he was embedded with The Beatles' tour of Australia, an arrangement that was continually crashed by 2SM's Mad Mel, a wacky deejay from America who would have seemed shocking in 1959.
For all my posts about Chucklers Weekly click through to the label CHUCKLERS WEEKLY.
▶︎ Chucklers Weekly (2): comics
- Captain Justice (Australia, Monty Wedd)
- King Comet and the Space Rangers (Australia, Monty Wedd)
- The Blue Triangle featuring Dan Cooper (Belgium, Albert Weinberg, French-language comic , from Tintin magazine)
- Rivets (USA, George Sixta)
- Beetle Bailey (USA, Mort Walker)
- Wendy and Jinx (UK, wr. Valerie or Michael Hastings, dr. Ray Bailey, from Girl magazine)
- The Jackson Twins (USA, Dick Brooks)
- All About Debbie Reynolds (Australia, Arthur Hudson)
- Joey Jumper Serial (Australia, Anonymous)
- Wilbert (USA, Gill Fox)
For all my posts about Chucklers Weekly click through to the label CHUCKLERS WEEKLY.
Click on an image to enlarge it.
References, further reading: 1. Dan Cooper at CoolFrenchComics.com. 2. Monty Wedd - Australian cartoonist by Greg Ray at Collecting Books and Magazines. 3. Dick Brooks, The Jackson Twins at Lambiek.com. 4. MortWalker.com and the Wikipedia entry on Beatle Bailey . 5. Wendy and Jinx: Valerie and Michael Hastings at Steve Holland's Bear Alley; Ray Bailey at Lambiek.net. 6. George Sixta, Rivets at Lambiek.com and ComicStripFan.com. 7. Gill Fox at Ger Apeldoorn's 50s blog. 8. John Ryan, Panel By Panel (1979).
02 January 2009
▶︎ Chucklers Weekly (1)
Chucklers Weekly was a children's magazine published in Sydney that seems to have flourished in the mid- to late-50s. It was the first magazine I ever subscribed to, when I was 9 or 10 years old. I was a member of the Charlie Chuckles Club, named for the magazine's kookaburra mascot.
My childhood collection being lost forever, I bought these two copies online, from 9 January and 28 August1959.
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For all my posts about Chucklers Weekly, click through to the label CHUCKLERS WEEKLY.