Actually, I think Chris Lowder or somebody has admitted that, as Digifiend surmises, both Thunder and Jet were deliberately created to be combined with Lion and Buster after a short run in order to give both those titles a much-needed sales boost. This makes it rather less surprising that a majority of Thunder strips survived the merger since these were all intended for Lion from the very beginning and were created by the same editorial office. Oddly enough, when Lion finally merged into Valiant - supposedly due to falling sales - Lowder discovered that it was actually outselling its stablemate by several thousands. Apparently, IPC supremo Jack Le Grand had intervened personally to save the title he created himself.Lew Stringer wrote: Thunder and Jet were pretty much behind the times, (seemed to me to be lite versions of Valiant and Lion), - which may be why they only lasted 22 weeks.
As for Countdown, I bought every issue and generally found the artwork by Burns, Haylock, Lindfield, Harley, etc. of a high standard - yet in spite of that I was always vaguely disappointed with the title and considered it to be a rather second-rate version of TV21 in its heyday. What's more I seem to remember that was the ultimate verdict of its editor Dennis Hooper, who'd also worked as an art editor on its illustrious predecessor.
- Phil Rushton
