AndyB wrote:Both the Beano and the Dandy were way behind on content in the 80s. Euan Kerr and Morris Heggie gave them a much-needed shot in the arm.
Just a shame that
"much-needed shot in the arm" didn't really revitalise the comics' fortunes then, isn't it? Otherwise we wouldn't now be talking about The Beano's potential demise.
AndyB wrote:I would suggest that whatever printers are working for DCT now would be perfectly happy to be very flexible about the paper they use, and would charge accordingly for the privilege. I would also suggest that if the contract wasn't tied into two or three types of paper, we would see more variety between titles, rather than the homogeneity we have.
Do you know for a fact that DCT are tied into paper types, Andy, or is that merely an assumption?
AndyB wrote: These days it's probably not significantly dearer to print in colour rather than black and white, which is quite different from years ago - indeed, it may be that the contract assumes all internal pages of a given magazine are the same - either black and white or colour, and nothing inbetween.
"Probably",
"may be",
"assumes" - all very well when it comes to supposition and conjecture, Andy, but you're insisting on your point far more dogmatically than that.
AndyB wrote:I'd suggest you spend some time in the children's magazines section of a newsagent. Note how many titles (not just comics) have a contents section. Note how many have it on page 3 (there's an extremely good reason not to put it on page 2, by the way.) Note the purpose of having a contents page (not so much to tell you where to find what, but to advertise that the characters and features are there without you having to look!)
That's a bit feeble, Andy. To say that other titles have contents pages is no argument at all for justifying that The Beano should have one. As you said, other comics have more filler pages and less comic strip content - is that a valid reason for The Beano doing the same if it wanted to? And I for one, when it comes to a comic like The Beano, would much rather thumb through the comic on my own initiative, without having a contents page to guide me. I spend quite a bit of time in the comics sections of shops, and I see kids doing one of two things. Opening The Beano and then putting it back on sight of text pages, or just opening the comic up in the middle, then sitting down on the floor to read it. However, it was once regarded as a given that a comic should grab a kid's attention as soon as they turned the cover, and I know that I'm more inclined to read it if it has something interesting on page 3. (Hey, it works for the Sun.)
Andy B wrote:Also note the prices and the quality of the paper where they aren't bagged. Have a look at the DCT titles such as Jacqueline Wilson etc.
Then come back here and seriously try to tell us that a 20 page comic selling at £1.50 just to cover its costs could hope to compete. It's not realistic, and if that model worked, the Beano, Dandy, Beezer, Topper and Nutty would still be with us. The Beano still is the best and least expensive product on the market, demonstrably so, and that is reality.
You're forgetting that when The Dandy was relaunched in late 2010, for 36, full-colour pages it was selling for £1.50. Up until fairly recently, when it shot up a whole 50p in one go to £2, it was selling for £1.50. That was for 36, full-colour pages. What I'm saying is that as far too many of these pages are pointless, it would be better if the page count could be reduced to the bare eseentials and the comic could be cheaper. Yes, I got your point from the very beginning, but I wasn't so much interested in what you imagine to be the case (and may well be), but in what would've been better for the comic in the long run. As for it being a demonstrable reality that The Beano is still the best and least expensive product on the market, I'll tell you what else is. The fact that I still regularly hear parents telling their kids to put it back on the shelves because there's no way in hell that they're going to pay two quid for a comic. There's a possibility that if comics were cheaper they'd sell more; if they sell more, circulation (and thus profit) increases.
Something has to be done. Publishers can't keep increasing prices whenever sales drop in order to compensate for lost revenue. All that'll do in the end is price their product out of the market.