Paul Dowswell's journey from foolish youth to mithered old codger is near to its end. In between these two points he has written some books and hopes to write some more. His website can be found here.
The Inuit, famously, have over 40 words for snow. That’s
nothing. Readers of Viz’s Profanisaurus, their “ever-expanding
dictionary of contemporary profanity, euphemism and obscenity”, will know that
the British have hundreds of words for the perineum. And there are probably
just as many for assorted other nether regions and what you might be doing with
them. And there are certainly scores more terms than the Bristol Stool Chart’s
eight, for what might come out of your bottom.
Those who have never read it will probably regard Viz
as an Olympic-standard wallow in schoolboy puerility. Well, I can’t argue with
that. But it can also be very funny, and just as witty as anything the last 40
years has conjured up to amuse us. The Guardian ran a piece about Viz
in 2021 and over 500 readers wrote in to share their favourite thing in it.
In its early ’90s peak it was selling almost as much as the Radio
Times and TV Times. When I first started reading it in 1987, it
seemed fantastically fresh. It spawned a host of short-lived imitators too,
with titles such as Zit, Spit and Poot. They were equally
obscene but they all lacked the spark of genuine invention and joie de vivre
that Viz possessed in abundance. That’s not to say that Viz wasn’t
also prone to alarming lapses of taste and judgement. But this piece is about
the best things in Viz so I’m going to leave that can of worms unopened.
I could attempt to intellectualise
its appeal and employ words like scatological, Rabelaisian, earthy, ribald
– but in essence it was four young men who should have known better, trying to
make each other laugh in a Newcastle pub with the most outrageously obscene
ideas for comic strips they could think of.
Chris and Simon Donald, Simon Thorp and Graham Dury, and a
rotating cast of contributors, certainly had a lot of them. And most of them
were very funny. The initial idea – take the template of the Beano and
the Dandy but have the characters you create doing bizarre and
inappropriate things – was an instant success. The titles of the strips alone
will give you the idea: ‘Buster Gonad and his unfeasibly large testicles’, ‘Sid
the Sexist’, ‘The Fat Slags’, ‘Bertie Blunt, his parrot’s a c***’, ‘The Bottom
Inspectors’, ‘Terry F***wit – the unintelligent cartoon character’.
More often than not, these strips were as one dimensional as
their names would suggest. But occasionally, Viz would come up with
something deeper and more disturbing. Victorian Dad, for example, featured a
nightmarish modern-day parent with the mindset of a puritanical Victorian. He
becomes sexually aroused by the sight of table legs and beats his son every day
to remind him that life isn’t fair. Another character goes by the unlikely name
of Fru T. Bunn. A baker by trade, Frubert Bunn, whose daughter is, of course,
called Chelsea, is an extraordinarily vivid portrait of middle-aged male sexual
frustration. He channels his sex drive into the creation of gingerbread sex
dolls and most episodes end with him grievously injured in Beano-style
bandages and Plaster of Paris.

In its heyday the writers often seemed to be vying with each
other over who could scrape through the barrel and go right down to the Earth’s
core. Dr Poo (Tom Baker era Dr Who searches in vain through time and space
for a quiet, unoccupied lavatory where he can ‘go’.) Dr Poolittle (a
Doolittle-like character suffers from constipation), Billy Bottom and his zany
toilet pranks – go on, have a guess…
The similarity in style to the Beano and the Dandy
even presented the characters talking directly to their audience. ‘Hello
readers. Today I’m going to…’ Funniest of all, and nearest to the Beano
in its lack of swearing and material of a sexual nature, was Johnny Fartpants
(Tagline “There’s always a commotion going on in his trousers.”) Schoolboy
Johnny even has a German pen pal called Hans Honkyhosen, who visits from time
to time. On one occasion (best suspend your disbelief here...), as an April
Fool prank, Johnny furtively ‘buries’ a fart in a cake mix his mother is
preparing for a visit from the vicar. The fart then springs out when the vicar
cuts the cake. (Of course it does…). Even if you are appalled by the subject
matter I invite you to admire the sheer ‘leaping off the page’ gusto of the
artwork. The episode takes a nightmarish turn when Johnny’s exasperated parents
feed him quick drying cement disguised as porridge to clog up his alimentary
canal and put an end to his ‘bottom pranks’.

Viz’s fondness for mixing high art and science with
low humour was also a frequent feature. One quiz tie-breaker invited readers to
name their favourite noble gas. The comic strip The Bach that dogged in the
night featured JS Bach taking a break from his cantatas to go dogging in a
nearby forest, much to Mrs Bach’s displeasure. Max’s Plank featured the
German atomic physicist Max Planck as a schoolboy, getting up to mischief with
a magic plank.
More than anything, Viz loved a pun – evidenced here
in a one-off 2003 strip by relatively new boys Barry Farmer and Lee Healey, and
their terrifying creation Vidal Baboon:

One thing I quickly grew to love about Viz was their
complete disregard for the bottom line (so to speak). They took enormous risks
in offending both a potential readership and the advertisers that flocked to
present their wares in their unexpectedly vast circulation publication. The
Clown Chat Line spoof below is a perfect example of Viz having its cake
and eating it too. At the time (early 1990s) the back pages of their comic,
along with the UK’s downmarket tabloids, were festooned with real-life telephone
sex lines, the advertising of which no doubt brought their publisher a
substantial income.

True, most of the Viz output was and remains
cheerfully obscene, but they could also be admirably prescient. One long
running character Timmy Timpson (appearing in Spoilt Bastard) is a hideous
eight-year-old in a sailor suit whose adoring mother Cissy submits to his every
whim. He has milkshake and Skittles for breakfast and habitually calls
his poor mother a ‘fat old toilet’. The strip had the unsettling effect of
making the reader wonder if they had ever behaved quite so appallingly, or
indeed allowed their own child to do so. But one particular episode, shown
below, from a 1997 edition of Viz, uncannily predicts the political
landscape of 2026:

And Viz could produce contemporary satire just as
sharp as Private Eye. Here’s a strip featuring the vainglorious Luvvie
Darling – a rather Daily Mail inspired caricature of those actor types –
approaching a vanity publisher with his memoirs. I grew to detest vanity
publishers while teaching creative writing classes and hearing stories about
them from students, so there is much to relish in this depiction:

And finally, I have to include one of Viz’s magnificent
advertising spoofs, this one for a ‘Sexual Temperance Spoon’, designed to
discourage unwanted amorous advances. Whoever came up with the slogan ‘The only
spoon that stops stirring’ has earned my undying admiration.
All illustrations reproduced by kind permission of Fulchester Industries/ Diamond Publishing.