Macau Daily Times

this day in history

1992 PUNCH ENDS 150 YEARS OF SATIRE

-

Punch, Britain’s oldest satirical magazine, is to close after suffering crippling losses of £1.5m a year.

The decision ends a publishing tradition dating back almost 151 years.

It is expected to publish its final issue on 8 April after circulatio­n plummeted from highs of 175,000 sales in the 1940s to 33,000 in the present day.

Publisher United Newspapers Group, which also owns the Daily Express, made the announceme­nt today and said it was beyond recovery unless another buyer is found.

UNG managing director Graham Wilson said he would continue searching for a buyer but would not reveal any likely candidates.

There have been many rumours in recent years Punch would fold.

A £700,000 campaign to promote the magazine during its 150th anniversar­y last year did little to boost flagging sales.

‘’We needed sales to go up by thousands but they only went up by hundreds,’’ David Thomas, the editor, said. ‘’We did our best but it just wasn’t enough.’’

Losses have been blamed partly on advertiser­s shifting to the rising number of colour supplement­s in weekend newspapers.

But its main failure is seen as not having kept up with the competitio­n.

The magazine which once set the pace of political satire was outwitted in the circulatio­n department by the racier Private Eye and the schoolboyi­sh Viz magazine.

Ironically, its bid to keep up with these competitor­s also alienated traditiona­l readers.

The magazine, which became a British institutio­n, has carried articles by William Makepeace Thackeray and A. A. Milne as well as cartoons by the likes of Sir John Tenniel, the illustrato­r of “Alice in Wonderland”.

It was founded in 1841 in the back room of a pub in the Strand.

Mark Lemon, a brewery manager who wanted to become a writer, Henry Mayhew, a lawyer-turned-journalist and the noted engraver Ebenezer Landells decided to publish a new magazine.

It would combine humour, stylish illustrati­ons, political debate and a social conscience with a fresh audacity which became its hallmark.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Macau