AndyB wrote:But that still comes down to one thing: you are not a child.
Oh yes I am!
AndyB wrote:The tastes of an eight year old in 2013 are not the tastes of a typical 8 year old in 1981, speaking entirely personally. Times change, and we change with them.
Actually, Andy, times haven't changed that much. The only real difference between The Beano of today and of, let's say the '60s to the '90s, is that, with a few exceptions, it isn't drawn as well and it's aimed directly at a younger readership.
AndyB wrote:You are still on a complete loser if you want comics to be aimed at you, just as I would be. We can express our views, we should be disappointed if a script is so juvenile that there is nothing for us, but we should expect publishers to create content primarily for the target range.
I think we're getting tied up in knots over certain words. I don't want The Beano to be 'aimed' at me, as such. I want it to be accessible to everyone who still enjoys funny, well-drawn stories in a comic strip format. I recently linked here to a '50s Dennis page on my blog. I don't know who it was 'aimed' it, but everyone who's seen it seems to be in agreement - it was funny on different levels that a kid or an adult could enjoy. Most adults think that comics are for kids, we're all agreed there. They're never going to buy them and I'm not and never have been suggesting that we should 'aim' The Beano at them in order to persuade them to do so. I'm talking about those adults who are not averse to comics and still might occasionally buy them because it's been the habit of most of their lifetime to do so. Someone like
me, in fact. And, increasingly, I'm finding that new, young editors are coming in and trying to put their own stamp on a comic and ruining it in the process.
What I
am saying, is that keep the so-called 'target range' in mind by all means, but it should still be possible to do that and still appeal to the teenage or adult contingent that still buy and collect comics - and are
willing and
eager to do so until some bad choices on the part of 'management' cock it up for them. The Beano may look pretty on its nice shiny paper, but - in my experienced opinion - it's not as good as was. If it were, I'd still be buying it, believe me.
AndyB wrote:Anything we can enjoy is just a bonus, especially since every adult who buys a comic for themselves is more profit, but once we have ceased being a schoolkid, and until the day when we have a young person to represent, whether a child, nephew/niece or godchild, we don't have any right, moral or otherwise, to complain that we don't like a particular children's comic any more, and as such no publisher is under any obligation to take our views into account.
In the nicest possible way, Andy, utter tosh to that part after the 2nd comma. Whether we've got children of our own to represent or not, we're representing
all children when we want a dearly cherished part of our childhoods to survive for succeeding generations of children to come. I don't have kids, but I'd resist the lowering of the age of consent to younger than it is now, because I want children to be protected from those who would exploit them for their own ends. Are you saying I shouldn't be allowed to have a say, or not have an expectation of being listened to, simply because I'm not a parent? Okay, perhaps it's not on the same level of importance in the scheme of things, but the same principle applies in either case. I do agree that editors aren't under any obligation to take adult views into account, but neither are they with kids' views either - or anyone's for that matter.