If you're unfamiliar with The Trigan Empire, British comic fans will tell you it's a legendary comic strip drawn by Don Lawrence, which ran in Look and Learn comic through the 1960s and 70s, and was reprinted in Vulcan comic in the 70s. Fans will tell you how much they treasure this fully painted art and how it brings jot every time you find an intact page of it in the wild. What very few will confess to doing is cutting out panels of it and sticking them in their diary, thus ruining the original comics and rendering them worthless. But that's what I did.
The strip was running in Vulcan at the time of this diary entry and that's where I cut it from, to decorate a spread where, as usual, not a lot was happening apart from me reading (and dissecting) comics (and not metaphorically, in case that wasn't clear), and watching the telly.
I was also busy writing and drawing a book of comedy comic strip called The Amazing 3rd Looney Buke. I'd completed two of these books so far, and they were about as good as you'd expect comics by a 12-to-14 year old to be. Actually they were probably worse than that. Some day I'm sure I'll dig them out, as I happen to know they still exist, they turned up when clearing out the old family home.
The BBC was marking the 40th anniversary of the start of telly with a series of special programmes. I don't remember much about the programmes themselves, but I've subsequently learned that this was the point at which they realised they'd been systematically erasing programmes that they were only now discovering they might want to show again. So the wiping of the vaults stops about here in 1976, a bit late for most of the TV up till this moment.
My Records For The Day were both from the 60s, for whatever reason, and off albums that I owned then and still have, though I've not played them for years.

















No comments:
Post a Comment