If the reported current circulation figures of THE DANDY are to be believed, the recent relaunch of Britain's longest running weekly comic must be considered a massive failure. Apparently, it's selling around half of what it did before it's massively-hyped 'reboot' back in 2010.
Of course, there are many reasons why comics today don't sell in the numbers they once used to back in the '50s & ''60s. Publishers today would even welcome the reduced circulation figures of the '70s with ecstatic glee should they ever find themselves in the fortunate position of being able to attain them. One of the reasons for declining sales is increased competition from other things kids can now spend their pocketmoney on, compounded by the fact that comics are no longer the cheapest form of entertainment available. In fact, they've increased their prices far beyond the rate of inflation, year by year, for a almost a couple of decades.
Also, buying comics weekly or monthly is a habit that needs to be developed and encouraged through the early stages of childhood, otherwise by the time children reach the age where they makes their own decisions on what to buy, spending their dosh on comics isn't going to be their first choice.
Forgetting the spurious defence to the contrary currently expounded on some other blogs, another reason for their fall from grace is that, in the main, they're not as entertaining as they used to be. "But wait a minute!", you cry. "Comics aren't aimed at your age group. As long as the kids of today find them funny then they're doing their job!" Rubbish! The declining sales, even allowing for other contributory factors, puts paid to that nonsense. And besides, if you feed sh*t to those who have never tasted steak, they're not going to know the difference, are they? Still no excuse 'though, is it?
There are certain comics and strips - from before I was born, or before I was reading them, or that I didn't see until years after they were published (hence no nostalgic sentimentality involved) - that I can sit down today and read (or re-read) and they are uproariously funny. The only strip that I can think of, off the top of my head, in recent years, that is always worth reading, is TOM PATERSON's CALAMITY JAMES in THE BEANO. (I'm not sure if it's still in it - I'll have to check.)
There are a handful of artists who still produce and provide solid, well-drawn, humorous work - but often they are let down by the banality of the scripts. Dennis, with a menagerie of pets in tow (GNASHER, GNIPPER, RASHER, etc.), was regularly zooming about in some futuristic rocket-ship contraption not that long ago, rendering the strip far too surreal and divorced from what readers can relate to, to be as memorable as early Menace strips used to be.
Nowadays there seems to be a disturbing trend to go for almost abstract style of art, in some misguided mission to appear 'up to date' and 'down with the kids'. The Dandy in particular pursues this position, to the extent that the 'fix' has resulted in it being far more 'broken' than was the case previously.
Even balloon lettering has suffered from this approach. Not that long ago, the Dandy editor defended his decision to switch to upper and lower case lettering on the grounds that research (of which I'm dubious) seemed to suggest that children found it easier to read. Let's just allow the possibility that it might be true for a moment. In what way would that justify the hard-to-read, amateurish scrawl that defaces some of the comic's strips? To my mind, hard-to-read lettering is hard-to-read lettering - regardless of whatever case it's rendered in. I'm quite sure that no research of any kind has ever led to the conclusion that BADLY RENDERED upper and lower case lettering was easier to read - for kids or anyone else.
Also, D.C. THOMSON would do well to make up their mind as to precisely what business they're in - comics or lucky bags. I'm sure that those cover-mounted 'gifts' deter at least as many buyers as they attract - especially as they usually add £1 - or more - to the price. If someone buys a comic for the toys, then they're not buying it for the comic, and that's the market Thomson's should be aiming for - the comic reader.
I could go on and on, but why flog a dead horse (or a dying Dandy)? The fact is, despite the claims of those who defended and applauded the new direction (that'll be downwards then?) of The Dandy, the evidence suggests that the treatment is killing the patient. Let's just hope D.C. Thomson have some miracle cure up their sleeves before it's too late.
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Feel free to comment and share your views on the matter. Unlike one blog I could mention, you won't be patronized or insulted for not agreeing with me. Nor will your comments be paraphrased and distorted for the sole purpose of taking a dig at you while petulantly denying you the right of reply.
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