Welcome to the Cheeky Weekly blog!


Welcome to the Cheeky Weekly blog!
Cheeky Weekly ™ REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, COPYRIGHT ©  REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED was a British children's comic with cover dates spanning 22 October 1977 to 02 February 1980.

Quick links...
Basic Stats
Cheeky Weekly Index - Cheeky Annuals and Specials Index
Cheeky Weekly Artist Index
Features by Number of Appearances
Cheeky Weekly Timeline
Major Characters from the Cheeky pages
Features Ordered by Date of Commencement

*** ALL IMAGES COPYRIGHT ©  REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Used with permission. ***
*** CHEEKY WEEKLY, KRAZY, WHOOPEE!, WHOOPEE, WOW!, WHIZZER AND CHIPS and BUSTER ARE ™ REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, COPYRIGHT ©  REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ***
Thanks for reading the blog.

Sunday 31 October 2010

Cheeky Weekly cover date 07 January 1978

This week's cover foregoes the What A Cheek strip to announce the Cheeky Spotter Book of Fun, starting today.  Readers are invited to cut out the booklet instalments over the next four weeks, and assemble it when they have all the sections.

The cover looks to me as though it's an assembly of cut-and-paste and original artwork by unknown hand.



There's a running joke throughout Cheeky's Week with Do-Good Dora compiling a list of new year resolutions that eventually totals 1000 good deeds.

Page 2 is the only occasion where a day is continued from the previous issue, as we are still in the final seconds of New Year's Eve, eagerly awaiting midnight and the first guest of the New Year.  The first-footer turns out to be Uncle Hamish, making his debut.  Cheeky's mum has changed her outfit and hair colour in the few seconds that have elapsed since we saw her in the previous issue.  A group of Cheeky's (adult) pals arrive, including Milkie who has some bottles (of gold top?), and the new year bash commences.




6 Million Dollar Gran is brought forward a day to Sunday in this issue, and stars in a new year-themed episode as she carries the church bell to London for repair and returns it in time for ringing in 1978.

On Monday Cheeky visits the newsagents to collect his paper round money and is unable to resist a free read of the new James Bold novel.  On being discovered and ejected by the newsagent during the 'Suddenly' element of Cheeky's Week which is introduced in this issue, Cheeky walks past a puddle that some Krazy Town graffiti artist (surely not Cheeky?) has attributed to Walter Wurx.


Oscar explains on Thursday that he didn't have time to make a home movie this week, but we all know that the Home Movie page was actually bumped because of the New Year's Eve page, which resulted in extra Cheeky's Week material in this week's issue.

This week's Mustapha Million story is another new year resolution-themed tale, and concludes in a single page instead of the normal 2-pager.  We can't blame this one on New Year's Eve again - Mustapha owes his truncation to the amount of IPC in-house advertising in this week's issue.  Page 18 consists of 2 ads; one for Shoot!, which is featuring the first part of their cut out 1978 calendar, and another promoting the cut out spotter books starting this week in Krazy, Whoopee! and Whizzer and Chips.  On page 30 there's an ad for Roy of the Rovers, (whose readers can cut out the first part of a full-colour FA Cup chart), plus a couple of stamp collecting ads ('please tell your parents'), and the instructions for saving the spotter book instalment in this issue.  IPC management certainly believe reader loyalty can be secured by getting them to hack chunks out of their favourite comics.  Don't they think that if readers are keen on a particular title they will keep the whole comic rather than just bits of it?  I always feel short-changed by any cut-out-and-keep items, I much prefer pages of strips.

All the Cheeky's Week art this week is by Frank McDiarmid pencils.  Jim Petrie does the honours on the spotter book.  Uncle Hamish and Newsagent make their first appearances.  This week we say goodbye (and good riddance as far as I'm concerned) to the Wile E Coyote feature.


Cheeky Weekly Cover Date: 07-Jan-1978, Issue 12 of 117
PageDetails
1Cover Feature 'Spotter Book of Fun' - Art Jim Petrie (single art on feature) - Art Cut and Paste (first art on feature)
2New Year's Eve (final appearance) - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils (single art on feature)
3Sunday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
4Skateboard Squad - Art Jimmy Hansen
5Sunday evening - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
66 Million Dollar Gran - Art Ian Knox
76 Million Dollar Gran - Art Ian Knox
86 Million Dollar Gran - Art Ian Knox
9Monday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
10James Bold 'The Ghost Highwayman' 1 of 9 - Art Mike White (first art on feature)
11James Bold 'The Ghost Highwayman' 1 of 9 - Art Mike White (first art on feature)
12Suddenly (first appearance) - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils (first art on feature)
13Tuesday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
14Old Comic reprint from Chips 'Dickie Duffer' 1 of 2 reprint from Chips 'Rudolf the Red Nosed Ranger'
15Wednesday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
16Creepy Sleepy Tale - Art Keith Reynolds
17Creepy Sleepy Tale - Art Keith Reynolds\Wednesday (conclusion) - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
18Ad: IPC 'Shoot' 2 of 13 Ad: 'Spotter Books promo' 1 of 2
19Thursday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
20What's New, Kids
21Friday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
22Mustapha Million - Art Reg Parlett
23Joke-Box Jury
24Saturday - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
25Wile E Coyote (final appearance) 'Extra Long Division'
26Wile E Coyote (final appearance) 'Extra Long Division'
27Interval - Art Frank McDiarmid pencils
28Space Family Robinson 'The Icemen' - Art John Richardson
29Space Family Robinson 'The Icemen' - Art John Richardson
30Ad: IPC 'Roy of the Rovers' 2 of 8
31The Cheeky Spotter Book of Fun (first appearance) - Art Jim Petrie (first art on feature)
32The Cheeky Spotter Book of Fun (first appearance) - Art Jim Petrie (first art on feature)

1 comment:

  1. Niblet, I agree when it came to keeping my comics whole.

    When I originally owned my own copies of "Cheeky", I never cut up my comicm abd therefore had complete copies.

    Shame I no longer have the originals, as they disappeared during the house moves over the last decade.

    ReplyDelete