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Some of these are quite good.
Some of them look funnier than they are as cartoons as well. Viz reprinted a copy of the very first issue a few years ago. Even they couldn't understand how they got to make a 2nd edition. My personal favourites were a discription of how an Advertising agency works (not sure if it's in the above list) and the Boyband 'conveyor belt' strips. |
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* Reverend Ramsden's Ringpiece Cathedral a vicar with a life-sized church up his bottom.
Classic stuff - Lost bloke - 'Which way's the Cathedral?' Ramsden - 'Walk down Fulchester High Street, turn left at the Post Office, then it's straight up my dirtbox' Also, mastery of Geordie accent in Sid The Sexist Random bloke in kebab house (while rubbing kebab meat on face to mask perfume smell) - 'Can you smell porfume on us? Wor lass is like Shorlock fckin Herms.' |
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One strip which I can't see mentioned in the list above, but which appears in the exhibition, is Childhood Sweethearts (I may have got the title wrong). This tells the story of two young kids, aged about 5 and 6, who run away to London from Newcastle, and get involved in the drugs and vice scene. Photomontage is used which gives the cartoon a startling reality. Now, I found it highly amusing, but at the time national tabloid newspapers(the usual suspects) went ballistic, trumpeting their readers' supposed moral outrage. Questions were asked in parliament, and the strip quickly withdrawn.
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Paul Whicker will never be beaten IMO
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I still subscribe to Viz and as I'm sure everybody else does, I moan that it's crap now, nowhere near as good as it used to be etc. every time the latest issue arrives.
Mind you I've been saying that since the late 80s. |
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Rude Kid
"Do you like your new shoes dear?" "Let's go fck a copper" |
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A classic one-time-only Viz character, Mickey's Monkey Spúnk Moped (http://www.viz.co.uk/archive_strips/motorised_strips/viztv_popup_monkeyspunk.html) (click the panel to move the story on) was the heartening story of a young lad and his moped which, surprisingly enough, runs on monkey spúnk. He runs out of simian love fuel a few panels into the story, and much hilarity ensues as he attempts to avail himself of some more monkey sperm to make the moped run again. Eventually he realises that his monkey spúnk moped is probably not the most practical vehicle around, and swaps it for a car that runs on leopard's fánny batter, which is obviously not much easier.
Unfortunately Viz removed the strip archive mentioned from their website. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Vibrating_Bum-faced_Goats
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A classic one-time-only Viz character, Mickey's Monkey Spúnk Moped (http://www.viz.co.uk/archive_strips/motorised_strips/viztv_popup_monkeyspunk.html) (click the panel to move the story on) was the heartening story of a young lad and his moped which, surprisingly enough, runs on monkey spúnk. He runs out of simian love fuel a few panels into the story, and much hilarity ensues as he attempts to avail himself of some more monkey sperm to make the moped run again. Eventually he realises that his monkey spúnk moped is probably not the most practical vehicle around, and swaps it for a car that runs on leopard's fánny batter, which is obviously not much easier.
The very strip is shown in the exhibition. |
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And there was the one which, after much torutuous plot development, ended up with the line
"I've got a feather to make me grow big, and now I've got the horn. Can I get into your daughter's box?" Just prior to one savage beating. Also loved the "Jack Black and his dog, Silver" ones, where invariably some poor old dear would end up being hanged whilst everyone stands around laughing. |
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Oh, and of course "Euro School", where the Johnny F kids still got thrashed at the cricket despite all their national-sterotyped **ing shenanigans. Included the line:
"I'm so ashamed to be foreign". |
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I get the VIZ annual for Christmas every year , cant wait
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Billy No-Mates
:D |
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Unless my eyes deceive me the best Viz character isn´t there namely the much maligned, misunderstood 8 Ace.
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Your eyes...
* Eight Ace an alcoholic who drinks "Ace" beer (eight cans for £1.49) and struggles to stay on the right side of his wife and many children as a consequence. Many of the strips involve Ace being entrusted with or somehow managing to acquire exactly £1.49 which he inevitably uses to buy "Eight Ace". His real name has been mentioned as 'Octavius Federidge Tinsworthy Ace', the 'Federidge' in his name being derived from the Federation Brewery who brew 'Ace' lager. |
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Ah, looked at it too quick, thank you Kenneth.
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Terry **witt - I'm as thick as f uck me
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* Alexander Graham Bell-End A crazy inventor who continually rubs his ***** on things and then tricks his assistant into touching them with his hands or mouth, at which point Alexander laughs uproariously whilst exclaiming "I TOTALLY rubbed my bell end on that!"
:^0 |
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* Thieving Gypsy ******** Infamous one-off strip about Irish travellers, "Mc O'Dougles", who descend on a middle-class front garden, steal and vandalise everything in sight, with the approval of the local council (even taking a pet dog's testicles!) before moving on. On the next page there was a three-panel "compensatory" strip entitled The Good Honest Gypsies. It involved an old Romany woman giving change back to a home owner who had been overcharged for some clothes pegs. An end note adding that in next month's strip The Good Honest Gypsies would be renewing the car tax on their big American car. Both strips caused uproar from race relation groups in the UK. The publishers were accused of promoting prejudice and hatred against an ethnic minority. Following involvement by the UK's Commission for Racial Equality, the British Romany Council and even receiving a reprimand from the United Nations[1], the next issue of Viz contained a 'cut-out-and-keep' apology; subtitled "what every gypsy's been waiting for!"
would love to have seen that one. |
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Everything's Gone Green 08 Dec 13:44
I still subscribe to Viz and as I'm sure everybody else does, I moan that it's crap now, nowhere near as good as it used to be etc. every time the latest issue arrives. Mind you I've been saying that since the late 80s. Spot on. Personal 'current' faves = Gilbert Ratchet, Real Ale Tw@ts, Tin Ribs & The Drunken Bakers. Enjoyed the 'Britain's Most Haunted' spoof a few months back, too... |
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Does anyone remember this one?
Harold and Fred - They Make Ladies Dead A one-off from a few years ago, featuring neighbours Harold Shipman and Fred West competing in Beano style over who gets to kill the new lady neighbour - who turns out to be Ed Gein(a particularly gruesome American serial killer) in a skin suit. |
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There's some extremely clever satire in amongst all the bum-faced vibrating goats, but the bit I laughed at most, lord knows why, was when Buster Gonad, having accidentally destroyed a friend's entry in an Easter Egg competition, saves the day by painting his own enormous testicles and entering them as eggs...only for the mayor to call for the winning entry to be ceremonially smashed with a giant hammer. It was just the look on his face as the hammer comes down...
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i always laughed at finbarr saunders to be honest.. :)
and some of the spoof ads in it were quality. as were the letters :) they also used to rip lorry drivers for being rapists and murderers as well which i found amusing.. might go and buy it tomorrow seemed to go downhill a bit when james brown took over it.... |