Jump to content

BEEB

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 86.141.66.242 (talk) at 12:29, 23 November 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

BEEB
Issue 10, a typical mid-run example of the publication
CategoriesChildren, teenagers
FrequencyWeekly
First issue29 January 1985
Final issue11 June 1985
CountryUK

BEEB was a weekly, children's magazine centred on the BBC's most popular programmes at the time of its publication.[1] It was published by Polystyle Publications and was created as a competitor to ITV's Look-in magazine.[1] It lasted 20 issues between 29 January 1985 and 11 June 1985. There was no announcement in the last issue, or any resolution to the ongoing comic serials.

Typical contents

  1. One By One. This followed the popular zoo vet series, based on the David Taylor books.
  2. Grange Hill. These were specially written stories. Drawn by John Armstrong. Each issue's Grange Hill comic was 3 pages long.
  3. The Tripods. These were very well drawn stories, partly in colour on three pages. Drawn by John M. Burns.[2] As the series progressed an attempt was made to appeal to female readers by introducing the young woman character of Fizzio.[1]
  4. Bananaman, in colour, on a single page. These have recently been reprinted in The Dandy, the third comic that Bananaman appeared in, after Nutty and BEEB, and before The Funday Times.
  5. The Family-Ness, in colour, on a single page.
  6. General articles about BBC programmes, usually children's shows, with frequent references to Blue Peter, Doctor Who and Grange Hill.
  7. Pin-ups of pop stars and other celebrities.
  8. Competitions and letters from the readers.

Releases

# Topic: Release Date:
1 Doctor Who and Blue Peter 5 January - 4 February 1985
2 Wham! and Grange Hill 5–11 February 1985
3 Howard Jones and Doctor Who 12–18 February 1985
4 Eastenders and Peter Shilton 19–25 February 1985
5 Kim Wilde and Roaring Boys 26 February - 4 March 1985
6 Shakin' Stevens and Grandmaster Flash 5–11 March 1985
7 Howard Jones Daley Thompson Keith Chegwin 12–18 March 1985
8 Tears For Fears and Paul Young 19–25 March 1985
9 Hazell Dean and Helena Shenel 26 March - 1 April 1985
10 The Power Station 2–8 April 1985
11 Matt Bianco, Floella Benjamin and Nik Kershaw 9–15 April 1985
12 Duran Duran, Bryan Adams and John Shackley 16–22 April 1985
14 Frankie Goes To Hollywood and Paul King 23–29 April 1985
13 30 April-6 May 1985
15 Big Sound Authority, Fame and Lucinda Green 7–13 May 1985
16 Gary Glitter 14–20 May 1985
17 Tina Turner, Belouis Some and Thin Lizzy 21–27 May 1985
18 John Taylor, Boy George and Go West 28 May - 3 June 1985
19 Kim Wilde, Larry Hagman and Stephen Duffy 4–10 June 1985
20 Alannah Currie, China Crisis and The Beatles 11–17 June 1985

References

  1. ^ a b c Kibble-White, Graham (2005). The Ultimate Book of British Comics 70 years of mischief, mayhem and cow pies. Allison & Busby limited. pp. 49–51. ISBN 0749082119.
  2. ^ "The Tripods". Archived from the original on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2006.