Ballyhoo (magazine)
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Ballyhoo was a humor magazine published by Dell, created by George T. Delacorte Jr., and edited by Norman Anthony, from 1931 until 1939, with a couple of attempts to resuscitate the magazine (Now edited by Bill Yates) after the war between 1948 and 1954. In common with other magazines of the era it featured a central section dedicated to one-off cartoons, but in the surrounding pages it presented spoof ads and articles much in the manner later popularised by the 1950s magazine Mad. When questioned about this at a gathering of the British SSI (Society of Strip Illustrators) 'The usual gang of idots' from Mad Magazine were unequivocal in their response. "We know nuthin', and what's more we ain't sayin'".
Delacorte's publishing history up to this point had been in Reader's Digest sized magazines of the kind not normally of interest to advertisers, so making fun of advertisements in Ballyhoo held no fears for him. Launched during the worst of the Great Depression the first issue, featuring a garish quilted pattern which went on to be part of Ballyhoo's visual image for several years, sold out completely within a week. The magazine quickly became a victim of its own success as real advertisers flocked to advertise. Anthony was concerned that the real ads would not be in the true spirit of Ballyhoo and demanded that they should fit in with the magazine's editorial policy. What this actually resulted in was the Ballyhoo editorial staff writing the advertising dialogue, leaving very little difference between the real and spoof ads (An ad for a radio kicked off with the bannerline "Now! All the crap in the world... At your finger tips!" and ended with "...It will do everything but give you good programs and Gawd knows no set will do that" while a spoof ad merely pointed out the advantages of balanced radio. A balanced radio will stand on the window ledge so you can receive a decent signal, whilst an unbalanced radio will fall off).
Ballyhoo's success led, of course, to a number of imitators (One even called itself 'Hullaballo'), and requests to use the Ballyhoo brand name to sell almost everything from boardgames to brassieres; in 1931 the magazine inspired the Ballyhoo pinball machine. Sales peaked at almost 2 million but started slipping towards the end of the century when the decision was taken to close the magazine down. There were two attempts to relaunch, one in 1948, and another in 1952. Ironically this final attempt folded in 1954, the year before Mad flipped from comic book to magazine format.
In the 60s the name of Ballyhoo was used for a 'girly-mag' which also failed to set the world alight.
According to the Magazine Data File, there was a 1950s British Ballyhoo which was probably unrelated to the American magazine.
According to The Fiction Mags Index, there was a later 1950s Australian Ballyhoo humour magazine which reprinted earlier editions of the American magazine.
[edit] Sources
- Ballyhoo magazine (Various)
- Print magazine; "Fish in a barrel" by Carrie McLaren - RC Publications, Jan/Feb 2000.