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Dandy Doodles; Smasher; Brassneckio; The Geordielocks and the Five Bears; Mutt and Moggy; Postman Patel; Winker Watson; Bully Beef and Chips; Desperate Dan Hikes with the Horrors; Bananaman; Dinah Mo; Iron Fish; The Incredible T-Shirt; Tristan; The Hunt for The Loch Ness Monster
Animation Segments of The Shmumberland Comic Book in Olive and Otto in Shmumberland Parts 1 & 2, the Arcade Machine video game in Game Time and Ocean's Story of why The Cherry-on-Top-inator should not be destroyed in The Cherry-on-Top-inator Space Dandy: Japan: 2014: episodes 1 and 16 The Simpsons: United States: 2016
Over the years the British comic magazine The Dandy has had many different strips ranging from humour strips to adventure strips to prose stories. However eventually the Dandy changed from having all these different types of strips to having only humour strips. Prose stories were the first to start being phased out in the 1950s.
Black Bob and the mud-pie boys. Black Bob's phone-call fire-call. Black Bob and the mad alsatian. Black Bob's blizzard battle. The danger light on Bradman's Bridge. Black Bob and the perky pup. Stop that tiger! Faithful old friend. 1951. Brave Bob's island adventures. The feud at the Clattering Crags. Black Bob and the schoolboy scallywags.
The Dandy was a Scottish children's comic magazine published by the Dundee based publisher DC Thomson. [3] The first issue was printed in December 1937, making it the world's third-longest running comic, after Il Giornalino (cover dated 1 October 1924) and Detective Comics (cover dated March 1937).
The Dandy Annual is the name of a book that has been published every year since 1938, to tie in with the children's comic The Dandy. As of 2023 [update] there have been 86 editions. [ 1 ] The Dandy Annual still continues to be published, even though the weekly comic ended in 2013.
Saying goodbye to Mr. Feeny was tough, but saying goodbye to each other was even harder. Boy Meets World‘s Rider Strong, Danielle Fishel and Will Friedle can recount filming the final episode of ...
The Smasher (later shortened to just Smasher) was a British comic strip, published in the British comic The Dandy. The title character was a boy with a tendency to destroy things and who was reminiscent of Dennis The Menace from The Beano, though when he destroyed things it usually tended to be by accident rather than design. Initially Smasher ...