Happy #NationalBurgerDay everybody! And there's really only one story I can tell today...
Let's look back at the Wimpy Bar!
The Wimpy chain originally began in 1934 in Chicago. The name was inspired by the character of J. Wellington Wimpy from the Popeye cartoons created by E. C. Segar.
And in 1954 the company sold a license to J. Lyons & Co - owners of the Lyons Corner House - to use the Wimpy name in the United Kingdom.
Fast food was finally coming to Britain!
For twenty years Wimpy was the dominant hamburger chain in the UK. McDonald's would not enter the British market until 1974, followed two years later by Burger King.
Wimpy built on the Lyons Corner House business model of fast table service for people wanting a quick meal: no cutlery, pre-packaged condiments and a wipe-clean table.
Sounds a bit like Nandos...
The Wimpy Bar was a well known feature of many towns and cities in Britain and Ireland throughout the 70s and 80s. In July 1977, the business was acquired by United Biscuits.
Under this new management Wimpy began to phase out table service and adopted the more traditional counter service of rivals McDonald's.
Wimpy's UK mascot was Mr Wimpy, an orange figure dressed as an oversized Beefeater. He was famous enough to feature in his own video game.
And no children's party was complete without a Mr Wimpy surprise: normally a badge and a comic rather than a personal appearance alas.
Wimpy did have some bizarre ideas though. In the early 1970s it stopped admitting unaccompanied women after midnight as they might be prostitutes. In protest the Wembly Women's Lib group stormed the Golders Green branch after midnight demanding to be served!
In 1989 Wimpy was sold to Grand Metropolitan, who began converting many of them into more profitable Burger King outlets.
Around 70 Wimpy Bars still exist in the UK today, now owned by South African company Famous Brands.
In its heyday the Wimpy Bar was the place to go. Even Phil Lynott hung out there.
Perhaps in retrospect Wimpys wasn't the true taste of America was yearning for. But we loved it regardless, because it was there and it was ours.
Wimpy was the home of the Shanty Salad, the Big Bender and the lethal Brown Derby dessert. For many people it was a childhood right of passage and one of the few exciting places to visit on their local High Street.
Its glory days will never fade. Wimpy - Twitter sales you!
(Fun fact: Paul Darrow reprised his role as Avon from Blakes 7 for a 1985 Wimpy ad:
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Time for another pulp countdown, and today I'm looking at my top 10 film versions of British sitcoms!
There were more than you may think...
At no 10: Never Mind The Quality Feel The Width (1973). Rarely shown on TV nowadays, this comedy of a pair of mismatched tailors in the East End went to the Vatican for its big screen outing. A bit like Nuns On The Run, except with turn-ups...
At no 9: Up Pompeii! (1971). Frankie Howerd stars in the quintessential British 1970s sex comedy. Now look 'ere missus...
Happy to address this point Matthew. I wasn't aware of your book until now and I haven't tried to lift any copy from it. The thread was sourced from a number of different web sources and is a re-run of a thread I first did in 2018, but with some updated pictures.
As a rule I try to be careful with my research and I choose multiple sources. On this thread I used a fair bit of Wikipedia, a couple of sources in the IBM machine, a few computer sites for the Wang, Osborne and Electric Pencil info, etc.
I am more than happy to credit, retweet and promote anyone who has a good book on a particular subject. But I wasn't aware of your 2016 work at the time this thread on word processing was written.
Today in pulp.. I look back at a few forgotten British comics from the '80s!
Let's start with Load Runner. Launched by ECC in 1983 it was an attempt to cash in on the home computer boom. A mash up of tech-noir, school stories and the Oric 1 it lasted 13 issues before it was game over.
Eagle was relaunched by IPC in 1982, giving traditional hero Dan Dare a bit of a Star Wars makeover. However its novelty factor came from its extensive use of photostrip stories: Doomlord, Sgt. Streetwise etc. Sold to Robert Maxwell in 1987 the Eagle finally crashed in 1994.
Today in pulp: a quick look back at the rise and fall of romance comics!
"You'll share every kiss, every tear..."
Romance comics grew out of the 'True Confession' magazines of the 30s and 40s, but were targeted at a post-war teen market. The comics industry was looking to diversify and love stories looked like an untapped market.
Romance comics told first-person stories of the agony and the ecstasy of teenage love, even if their early protagonists looked anything but teen-age! Having older characters helped them tell more mature stories however.
Apart from the songs #Eurovision itself was a pioneering - and often chaotic! - attempt to collaborate on new technology across Europe. And it only happened because of Queen Elizabeth ll.
Let's look back at the birth of European broadcasting...
After WWll Britain and France quickly restated their TV services. Each had different standards: the BBC's 405-line standard quickly allowed for full national coverage, but France's 819-line format needed more powerful transmitters which reduced its broadcast range.
And by 1950 Holland had a TV service using a 625-line standard. However Belgium was caught in the middle: should it use the Dutch or French standard? In a classic euro-fudge it chose both. This made Belgium a pioneer of TV broadcast signal conversion!