Bizarre (magazine) explained

Bizarre
Editor:David McComb
Frequency:Every four weeks
Company:Dennis Publishing
Firstdate:February 1997
Finaldate:February 2015
Circulation:11,603 (ABC July–December 2013)[1]
(print and digital editions)
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Bizarre was a British alternative magazine published from 1997 to 2015.[2] It was published by Dennis Publishing and was a sister publication to Fortean Times.

History

Bizarre was launched as a bimonthly title by John Brown Publishing in February 1997[3] and was edited by Fiona Jerome. It was an immediate success and changed to monthly issuance a year after its launch. Circulation peaked at more than 120,000 in 2000, but later the same year declined to less than 30,000[4] when I Feel Good (IFG) bought the magazine for £5 million. IFG was a company founded by James Brown, the former editor of Loaded magazine. When IFG collapsed, Dennis Publishing acquired Bizarre.[3] The editor of Bizarre became David McComb in December 2013.[5] Bizarre announced the end of publication in early 2015, with the January issue, published on 20 January, being its last.[6]

On 28 February 2020 it was announced, via the magazine's social media pages, that Bizarre was in the early stages of making its return, both physically and online, under entirely new ownership. To date, no further details have been announced regarding the magazine's reboot.[7]

Content

Bizarre covered alternative culture through interviews with counterculture personages, and articles about the Occult, LGBT culture and drug, fetish and other subcultures. It also reviewed the work of avant-garde directors, musicians, authors and visual artists.

The magazine's news coverage included unusual news events from around the world; development and impact of legislation concerning censorship, civil liberties, sex offences and occasionally, incidents of human rights abuses. Articles in Bizarre examined the Manchester police's Operation Spanner of 1987, Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, British legislation banning "extreme pornography" and the Terrorism Act 2000. After the murder of Sophie Lancaster in 2007, Bizarre campaigned for awareness of bigotry against people who exhibit some form of cultural deviance.

Like lad mags, issues of Bizarre commonly featured a semi-nude female model on the front cover and reviews of weird gadgets, films, music and websites.

Pornography

Earlier issues of Bizarre included a sealed section featuring censored pornography, in which images of anuses, genitalia, semen and sex acts were obscured. The censorship was self-imposed to avoid alienating mainstream newsagent's shops and booksellers.

Further reading

News: Brook . Stephen . 3 December 2007 . Redesigned Bizarre gets new editor . The Guardian.

Notes and References

  1. News: FHM circulation drops below 100,000 . John Plunkett. 14 February 2014. The Guardian. 13 February 2014.
  2. http://www.dennis.co.uk/Bizarre/IE_index.html Media Information
  3. Book: Caroline Taggart. Writer's Market 2010: Make Money Writing. 7 August 2016. 30 June 2010. F+W Media. 978-0-7153-3529-1. 509.
  4. Web site: Product Page. ABC. 19 January 2010. https://archive.today/20120718032552/http://www.abc.org.uk/Products-Services/Product-Page/?tid=9418&epslanguage=en-GB. 18 July 2012.
  5. https://www.theguardian.com/media/2007/dec/03/pressandpublishing?gusrc=rss&feed=media David McComb becomes editor of redesigned Bizarre
  6. News: Tom Eames. Bizarre magazine to cease publication after 18 years. 17 August 2015. Digital Spy. 15 January 2015.
  7. https://www.facebook.com/BizarreMagazine/posts/10155878172407465