welcome and enjoy!

Hi and welcome to my blog about comics from other people’s childhood! It is dedicated primarily to British humour comics of the 60s and 70s. The reason they are not from my childhood is simply because I didn’t live in the UK back then (nor do I live there now). I knew next to nothing about them until fairly recently but since then I’ve developed a strong liking for the medium and amassed a large collection, including a number of complete or near complete sets. My intention is to use this blog as a channel for sharing my humble knowledge about different titles, favourite characters and creators as I slowly research my collection.

QUICK TIP: this blog is a sequence of posts covering one particular comic at a time. The sequence follows a certain logic, so for maximum results it is recommended that the blog is read from the oldest post up.

Copyright of all images and quotations used here is with their respective owners. Any such copyrighted material is used exclusively for educational purposes and will be removed at first notice. All other text copyright Irmantas P.



Thursday, February 6, 2020

WHOOPEE! PULL-OUTS IN 1978



In my opinion, in 1978 WHOOPEE! was beginning to loose some of its appeal. Scream Inn had ended last year in the issue dated 1st October, 1977, replaced for the time being by Spooktacular 7 – still drawn by the excellent Brian Walker and featuring the same old happy gang of spooks – but readers’ story ideas were no longer used. As 1978 rolled on, Spooktacular 7 was put to rest after the issue dated 22nd July, 1978, as was Ken Reid’s World-Wide Weirdies after the issue of 21st October, 1978. Fans of ‘Orrible Hole, Creepy Car, Fun Fear and Evil Eye saw less of their favourite strips because the Editor began rotating them, and each was printed only once every four weeks. That said, it was still a good comic, with the well-established strips such as Sweeny, Frankie Stein, Scared-Stiff Sam, Bumpkin Billionaires, Toy Boy, etc. still going strong.

Let us not forget that the topic of this series is WHOOPEE! pull-outs, and 1978 was a very good year in that regard – as many as 26 issues came with something extra!

The first four issues of the year had the Whoopee Spotter Book of TV


This time the cut-outs weren’t on the centrespread – they were printed on two inside pages of each issue, containing four pages of the booklet. Once collected together, the booklet was 16 pages thick:



Readers’ response to the WHOOPEE! cut-out masks offered towards the end of 1977 must have been good because the Editor decided to do more of those and included one of Sweeny in the issue of 18th February, 1978: 



… followed later in the year by one of Smiler in WHOOPEE! issue of 6th May, 1978:



The four issues of 1st – 22nd July, 1978 had four mini comic samplers promoting companion comics. 


Mickey Mouse Mini Sampler was first in line, and featured Mickey, Goofy and Donald:



It was followed by Cheeky Weekly Mini Sampler, featuring What a Cheek, 6 Million Dollar Gran, The Skateboard Squad, Mustapha Million and of course the toothy funster himself:



Next came the mini sampler of Whizzer and Chips with Krazy Comic, featuring Shiner, Sid’s Snake, Sweet Tooth, Paws, Fuss Pot, Horace and Doris and Buytonic Boy:



The last one was Buster and Monster Fun Mini Sampler, featuring Buster’s Diary, Stan Still’s Stopwatch, Kid Kong, X-Ray Specs, Kid Gloves, Tin Teacher and Clever Dick:



Once cut out and folded, each sampler booklet was 8 pages thick, with front and back covers printed in full colour. Rather than appearing on the centerspread, all the booklets were printed on four pages at the back of the paper.

The next issue dated 29th July, 1978 had this mysterious advert:


The answer came in the next four issues (5th – 26th August, 1978) in the form of Whoopee Pocket Puzzler pull-out booklet: 


The b/w booklet, drawn by Cliff Brown, was given two pages in each of the four issues (i.e. four pages of the mini-book per issue). Once collected together, it was 16 pages thick.





The issue with the last part of the Pocket Puzzler also had this advert trumpeting the arrival of different colour cut-out games in four of IPC’s weekly comics, starting from next week:


In the case of WHOPPEE!, it was Lolly Pop Money Game, presented in the four issues dated 2nd – 23rd September, 1978:


Each of the first three issues had one part of the board, plus one page of game cards:








... while the fourth contained the last batch of the cards, along with assembly instructions and the rules how to play the game:





This was followed by an 8-page black and white Whoopee Pull-Out Minibook –Time Travellers, featuring The Bumpkin Billionaires, printed on the centre pages of WHOOPEE! dated 7th October, 1978:



… and another one – Look Out London, featuring Sweeny – in WHOOPEE! dated 14th October, 1978, illustrated and signed by Paul Aley:



… and then yet another one – Frankie Stein in Transylvania – in WHOOPEE! dated 21st October, 1978. Drawn by Robert Nixon, it was a doctored version of the original booklet printed in SHIVER AND SHAKE No. 56 back in 1974 as part 4 of Frankie Stein’s Mini Monster Comic Book:



The next issue (28th October, 1978) came with a double treat: Brian Walker’s Guy Fawkes’ mask printed on the centerspread:



… and Three’s A Crowd Whoopee Cut-out Minibook featuring Lolly Pop (an 8-page b/w booklet illustrated by Sid Burgon):


But that was not all because after a week’s break, the issue of 11th November 1978 included yet another 8 page b/w pull-out booklet – Secret Agent 009, featuring Scared-Stiff Sam:



The next issue (18th November, 1978) saw the change of the logo and came with a free gift of Top Pop Hummer which I don’t have. Besides, the issue had four beautiful cut-out colour X-mas cards featuring WHOOPEE! stars:



The next two issues had more of the colour Xmas cards: there were four in the issue of 25th November, 1978:



… with a further two in the next issue (2nd December, 1978), which was also the last one with a pull-out in 1978:



More pull-outs may have been planned for the rest of December, but WHOOPEE! once again fell victim to industrial action and missed the next three weeks. Luckily, things came back on track just in time for the release of that year’s Xmas issue. 



Characters are © Rebellion Publishing Ltd 

And while you’re here, I would like to remind you that my promotion for the POWER PACK OF KEN REID is still on. Get your copies of the books and BONUS FREE PRINTS on eBay or from my online shop HERE!



5 comments:

  1. Excellent post (and series)! That Smiler mask is a little creepy though I think...

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    Replies
    1. I think all those masks are a little creepy :) ...

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    2. Do you remember a Witch mask being published about this time

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  2. The small comics are so well done...the art is so brilliant..
    love to read the whole story Bumpkins..etc..

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  3. One can’t help but wonder if Ghostly Go Round was intended, at least partly, to ease Reg Parlett’s workload as by 1977 he was 73 and drawing 75% of the alternating strips. Still going strong of course and would continue to do so for another decade but even so.

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