Gırgır

Gırgır (the Turkish title is an untranslatable onomatopoeia) was a Turkish humor magazine published from 1972 to 1993.

Gırgır was founded by the brothers Oğuz Aral (1936-2004) and Tekin Aral (1941-1999).[1] After having started as a newspaper insert, the magazine's first issue was published on August 26, 1972 with the motto "Life is a hassle, scraping a living, boredom, heartache, fighting with your spouse over money... The solution? Gırgır. Also, Gırgır." Oğuz Aral directed the magazine until 1989, during which time it became Turkey's best-known humor magazine.[2]

With its sharp political satire cartoons, Gırgır was one of the best selling cartoon magazines in Europe in the 1970s with a circulation of up to 450,000.[3]

In 1989, the magazine was taken over by a large publishing group, and Oğuz Aral and other key staff members left. After that, circulation declined rapidly, and Gırgır folded in 1993.

Gırgır had a great impact on the satire of its era, and several later humor magazines followed the example set by the magazine. Many accomplished satirists worked at Gırgır, including Ergün Gündüz, İsmet Çelik, Nuri Kurtcebe, Engin Ergönültaş, İlban Ertem, Necdet Şen, Suat Gönülay, Gürcan Özkan, Cevat Özer, Atilla Atalay, Latif Demirci, Sarkis Paçacı, Hasan Kaçan, Bülent Morgök, Galip Tekin, Mehmet Çağçağ, Metin Üstündağ, Meral Onat, Can Barslan, Uğur Durak, Behiç Pek, Cihan Demirci, Mehmet Polat, Mim Uykusuz, Eda Oral, Gülay Batur, Özden Öğrük, Ramize Erer, Gani Müjde, Bülent Benli, Tuncay Akgün, Birol Bayram, İlhan Özsoy, Bülent Arabacıoğlu, Zeynel Esen, Murat Kürüz, M. K. Perker, Yavuz Nufel, and İrfan Sayar (who created the Rube-Goldberg-like Zihni Sinir Proceleri for the magazine).

The rights to the name Gırgır are now held by Ertuğrul Akbay, and a magazine under that name was launched in 2008, but with no connection to the original Gırgır.

References

  1. "Obituary - Oguz Aral". The San Diego Union-Tribune. August 5, 2004.
  2. Klaus Kreiser: Kleines Türkei-Lexikon. München 1992, s.v. Gırgır (German)
  3. N. Abadan Unat in: Südosteuropa-Handbuch Band IV. Türkei. Göttingen 1985, S. 575, ISBN 9783525362044 (German)