Desperate Dan

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  • Rover_KE
    Full Member
    • Mar 2011
    • 20

    Desperate Dan

    Why was Desperate Dan so called?

    For the first 12 years of my life I thought 'desperate' meant 'having superhuman strength and a voracious appetite'.

    Rover
  • Lateralthinking1

    #2
    Originally posted by Rover_KE View Post
    Why was Desperate Dan so called?

    For the first 12 years of my life I thought 'desperate' meant 'having superhuman strength and a voracious appetite'.

    Rover
    Early on, he was a desperado.

    People said "why don't you come to your senses?". So he came down from his fences, opened the gate and switched sides.

    Comment

    • johncorrigan
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 10466

      #3
      Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Post
      Early on, he was a desperado.

      People said "why don't you come to your senses?". So he came down from his fences, opened the gate and switched sides.
      I used to think he was loosely based on the character Dangerous Dan McGrew from 'The Shooting of Dan McGrew' by Robert Service written in the first decade of the 20th Century, and they changed it to desperate as it was also alliterative - usually the fashion in comics. He was certainly a much tougher character when I started reading comics - he's been made more PC in latter days - give it a couple of years and he'll be on the mcaroni pies.

      Comment

      • Lateralthinking1

        #4
        Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
        I used to think he was loosely based on the character Dangerous Dan McGrew from 'The Shooting of Dan McGrew' by Robert Service written in the first decade of the 20th Century, and they changed it to desperate as it was also alliterative - usually the fashion in comics. He was certainly a much tougher character when I started reading comics - he's been made more PC in latter days - give it a couple of years and he'll be on the mcaroni pies.
        http://www.paulmorris.co.uk/beano/st...speratedan.htm
        You might be right John. Certainly Dan's brother Barney McGrew influenced a generation.

        Comment

        • kernelbogey
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 5841

          #5
          Originally posted by Rover_KE View Post
          Why was Desperate Dan so called?

          For the first 12 years of my life I thought 'desperate' meant 'having superhuman strength and a voracious appetite'.

          Rover
          Thanks, Rover_KE, for starting this thread - welcome! - and for this very interesting observation. I realised on reading it that I must have had some similar sense as a boy of the meaning of 'desperate', at least in that context.

          Desperate Dan was the most prominent character for me in the Dandy which, together with the Beano, was to be found in the houses and pockets of working-class contemporaries - but not (alas, I felt) in our house in a more snooty street of bungalows and semis. I think they were so thoroughly disapproved of by my father that I didn't even need to ask if I could 'take' one or the other.

          Of course when the Eagle came along, famously printed on better quality paper which is said to have made it acceptable to middle-class parents, as no doubt did the whiff of Christian morality emanating with the scent of its superior colour printing, I was allowed a weekly order. So I identified with the officer-class Dan Dare (there's that 'Dan' again), while Digby's NCO class and style was made obvious by his northern accent.

          The sense of violent danger that, for me, hung around Desperate Dan seemed to echo the faint sense of menace that my family perceived in the council estate over the back wall of our garden, and that I experienced more directly in my contemporaries at my junior school who came from that way. For all I knew, cow pie was eaten for tea in their houses, and their Dads shaved with a hammer.

          So were class attitudes learned by that small boy. In my imagination I set off with Dan and Digby in pursuit of the evil Mekon who no doubt had similar origins....

          Comment

          • mangerton
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 3346

            #6
            Kernelbogey, I could have written and signed your last post; our fathers could have been brothers!

            Class distinction reigned in central Scotland too.

            Comment

            • vinteuil
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 13064

              #7
              ... I don't know exactly how class discrimination operated in 1950s Wiltshire - but - we were allowed the Beano - but not the Dandy - my father, a pacifist, wd not have allowed the Eagle - and I remember our charlady's children had the Beezer ( which, of course, we envied them) ...

              Comment

              • amateur51

                #8
                Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
                ... I don't know exactly how class discrimination operated in 1950s Wiltshire - but - we were allowed the Beano - but not the Dandy - my father, a pacifist, wd not have allowed the Eagle - and I remember our charlady's children had the Beezer ( which, of course, we envied them) ...
                If I remember rightly, the Beezer tended to have the best give-aways

                My fondest memory is of those A4 cardboard triangles that gave off a most satisfyingly* loud retort when you whisked them downwards at speed


                * satisfying as in 'causing unsuspecting adults to jump with a shout, spill their tea, drop a stitch, that sorta ting

                Comment

                • Nick Armstrong
                  Host
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 26601

                  #9
                  Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
                  gave off a most satisfyingly* loud retort

                  * satisfying as in 'causing unsuspecting adults to jump with a shout, spill their tea, drop a stitch
                  Known as "Hornspielers" perhaps...? (Or formerly, at any rate.... )
                  "...the isle is full of noises,
                  Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
                  Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
                  Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."

                  Comment

                  • amateur51

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Caliban View Post
                    Known as "Hornspielers" perhaps...? (Or formerly, at any rate.... )
                    naughty


                    Comment

                    • vinteuil
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 13064

                      #11
                      Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
                      If I remember rightly, the Beezer tended to have the best give-aways

                      :
                      ... if we had been foresightful greedy little capitalists, we wd have retained in immaculate condition those comics and especially those giveaways. I understand that the weirdos who buy and collect such things on e-bay and the like will pay hundreds of pounds for a single good copy - much more if with the free giveaway. I could have funded my claret habit if I had been more retentive....

                      Comment

                      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                        Gone fishin'
                        • Sep 2011
                        • 30163

                        #12
                        Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
                        If I remember rightly, the Beezer tended to have the best give-aways

                        My fondest memory is of those A4 cardboard triangles that gave off a most satisfyingly* loud retort when you whisked them downwards at speed


                        * satisfying as in 'causing unsuspecting adults to jump with a shout, spill their tea, drop a stitch, that sorta ting
                        Oh yes: I remember these! A single sheet of thin cardboard folded to make two triangles with a thick piece of brown paper "hinge" that flapped open to produce the "retort"! They gave these away with the Topper, too: yclept a "Whizz-Bang" if memory serves.

                        I got (we were too poor to "take"!) Beano, Topper and Sparky and swapped with the lad next door's Dandy and Hotspur (which I didn't really like). The Beezer was always available in the Barber's: I was fascinated by The Numbskulls: a staff of tiny people who "operated" a man: I often wondered if Woody Allen ever knew the strip - it wasn't a million miles away from the "Sperm" sequence in Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex ... .
                        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                        Comment

                        • amateur51

                          #13
                          Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
                          Oh yes: I remember these! A single sheet of thin cardboard folded to make two triangles with a thick piece of brown paper "hinge" that flapped open to produce the "retort"! They gave these away with the Topper, too: yclept a "Whizz-Bang" if memory serves.

                          I got (we were too poor to "take"!) Beano, Topper and Sparky and swapped with the lad next door's Dandy and Hotspur (which I didn't really like). The Beezer was always available in the Barber's: I was fascinated by The Numbskulls: a staff of tiny people who "operated" a man: I often wondered if Woody Allen ever knew the strip - it wasn't a million miles away from the "Sperm" sequence in Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex ... .
                          Fondly remembered, ferney but I'm amazed that I haven't heard the sound of a fast-approaching tuk-tuk

                          Comment

                          • johncorrigan
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 10466

                            #14
                            Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
                            ... I don't know exactly how class discrimination operated in 1950s Wiltshire - but - we were allowed the Beano - but not the Dandy - my father, a pacifist, wd not have allowed the Eagle - and I remember our charlady's children had the Beezer ( which, of course, we envied them) ...
                            When I was a kid, Thursday night my dad would work late and bring in the Beano, complete with Rory of the Eagles, which I loved. Friday night was the Topper with some American cartoons in it too. There were two main British producers of comics in the 60s - DC Thompson in Dundee producing the Beano, Dandy, Topper, Beezer, Hotspur, Hornet, Victor, Wizard, Bunty, Judy, Jackie and a pile more; and Fleetway which produced the Eagle, Lion, Tiger, Valiant, Champion, Hurricane, June, Shoot, Chips etc and then eventually the magnificent 2000AD. My favourite was the Hornet but when I was a paperboy I used to spend days getting paid to walk round reading comics before sticking them through a letter box. Those wonderful days of the weekly comic where you were left on tenterhooks for a week wondering what was going to happen to The Deathless Men in V for Vengeance, or what exploit Wilson was going to get up to next, or if Roy was going to manage to retain the trophy for Melchester Rovers, or whether Middenface McNulty would manage to retain his lumps, are largely over. However they were one of the great parts of growing up and where I won't particularly mourn the demise of the Dandy, I am sad at the loss of the weekly comic.

                            Comment

                            • salymap
                              Late member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 5969

                              #15
                              Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
                              naughty


                              You may think so, I couldn't possibly comment.

                              Refers to #9 and 10. I am being punished for my comments as things have moved on

                              Comment

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