Parade in 1961 Parade in March 1965 had a pin-up colour centre spread of actresses, such as Raquel Welch, but there were no topless pictures Parade Escort in 1967. A special issue of stories and pin-ups (many in colour) and an A3 poster. See Tony Palmer's book Trials of Oz for details. Oz prosecution 400 other officers were imprisoned or left The resulting anti-corruptionĭrive saw the jailing of the senior officer responsible for the Soho pornographers paid bribes to avoid jail. Such as Oz and the Little Red Schoolbook while The accusation that police were prosecuting hippie publications Released in 1999 showed that the authorities held an inquiry into Oz sales rose toĨ0,000 but the magazine closed in 1973 (issue 48).
Of up to 15 months sparked protests from John Lennon and many others.
UK's Obscene Publications Act 1959 over 'sexually perverted cartoonsĪnd articles' in the School Kids Issue (issue 28, May 1970). Neville Felix Dennis (later founder of Maxim publishingĮmpire) and Jim Anderson were prosecuted for conspiracy under the Obscenity trail that held Briton in thrall. In 1971, Oz was the subject of an infamous The cover ran around the front and back of the School Kids Issue,įor example, and issue 37 (September 1971) could be read from eitherĮnd as A World of Young Love (portraying sex and drugs and rock The publishing and design rules and was highly creative and influential. Strictly a men's magazine, it is included here as the training groundįor Maxim founder Felix Dennis. 'swinging London' and brought the concept with them. January 1967-November 1973 Oz was an underground magazine set up in Australia originallyīy editor Richard Neville and artist Martin Sharp. The last issue (issue 48) carried a photograph of the staff, naked. Two covers for issue 37: Angry Oz and A World of Young Love The School Kids Issue triggered an obscenity trail IPC profile Breakdown of Nuts first issue Striker comic closesįirst issue of underground magazine Oz, above.
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The new look delivers a fresher, more modern feel to reinforce that mix, while introducing a new range of must-read editorial franchises every week, including an all-new Striker.” An advertising campaign in football grounds included six-sheet posters and TV screens in washrooms and concourses designed to reach 1.8 million football fans. They told us they love our classic mix of girls, sport, news, humour, gadgets and gear. Nuts editor Dominic Smith said: ' said they wanted more from Nuts. The addition was part of a £500,000 promotional push at 49 football grounds across the UK ahead of the World Cup in South Africa. In the issue, Nuts relaunched with the 3D computer-generated football cartoon strip Striker, which had appeared in both the daily Sun newspaper and in the launch issue of rival men's weekly Zoo before being launched as a standalone comic that closed in 2004. However, they were both seen off by the web, along with their monthly bretheren, by 2015. Sales of Nuts stayed ahead of Zoo, peaking at about 300,000. The weeklies Nuts and Zoo took away younger readers from the men's monthlies, Loaded and FHM, and also hit Issue (23 January) was sold for 60p, half the aimed-for regular Launch costsįor Nuts were estimated at £8m. Launch its men's weekly and establish a new sector. Of WH Smith and sent out copies with media trade magazines to IPC gave away a million free copies of Nuts at branches Poster promoting Striker football cartoon strip in Nuts IPC set out to create a new weekly sector for men's magazines with Nuts