I’d like to share a few thoughts with you. Thing is, I doubt many people read these
things anyway –‘boring’ compared to the reviews, hmm?
Now, yes, I have made my peace with the new folk at IPC and
they have been very kind. That said, I
promised not to dredge up the problems I had before –mainly caused by one
person who had no idea what he was doing.
I have tried to make peace with “The Scottish company that
must not be named” (a little like “The Scottish play that must not be named” –bad
luck. Actually….no. No.). My name was mentioned to someone at the company (an
editor I’ve been told but as he never said it to me I’ll not name him) who spat
out some abuse which also involved my name. Oh dear.
I still firmly believe, as I have said and written many
times before, that Thomson (agh! I said the name…..no. Nothing. Okay my bladder
voided but I’m old and was getting there anyway) have the characters and links
to news agents and shops that could make it a true comic publishing house to be
reckoned with –especially since DC and Marvel don’t appear in all those outlets
(Panini reprints have vanished in Bristol shops –not been in W. H. Smith for a
while so…).
But seriously and honestly it would call for a total
restructure and clear out. We have all seen that the humour strips are not
drawing in the comic readers –we are living in an age when kids are super hero,
fantasy and action mad. The odd gimmick in Beano or Dandy won’t help.
Thomson (whoops!) have the characters. Just not the interest
in using them or having a person/driving force to make something of them.
IPC could do the same but its CEO has stated very
clearly that IPC is OUT of the comic publishing business and has
absolutely no interest in getting involved in it again.
To all intents and purposes the UK is a Small/Independent Press
based industry and some 65% of those involved in it have no knowledge of comics
or comics history –seriously.
So what was purported to be an industry is dead as far as
mainstream publishing goes. I’d encourage anyone into comics to visit local
Small Press events if they can and see what is going on there. You might be very surprised.
There was a brief hope, back in the early 2000s, that Indian
publishers, waking up to the international boom it found itself in, might
venture into UK
comic publishing. They chickened
out. More recently, companies in China have asked for information on the UK
scene and what might sell, etc., but there has been no follow-up. Chinese publishers could literally move in
and take over and revitalise UK
comics –leaving the door open to getting into the US
and Europe.
When you think that comics can lead into animation, TV and
lots of merchandising it’s only a matter of time.
There you go, not too painful I hope? Just a few thoughts.
Of course, somewhere there could be a multi-millionaire
business-person who is mad on comic books.
It could happen. I can dream.
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