Kingcat, Wow!
Don't take my response as a persona attack, as it isn't meant to be taken that way.
You are quite entitled to your opinion and your reactions.
Here is mine!
Sorry, Robb, I just don't get Teenage Comics, any more than I get Funny Animals. Did they really appeal to teenagers? When I was a teenager (that's from 13 upwards, right?) I was far more interested in 1) Superhero Comics, 2) Pop Music, and 3) Girls. Of course the great divide meant that the life of UK teenagers was a long way removed from that of their USA counterparts, and we had very little, culturally, in common, so Archie and his various imitators held nothing I could relate to.
Curious, then that you close your post by quoting the Beach Boys. Surely, if the argument that 'the great divide meant that the life of UK teenagers was a long way removed from that of their USA counterparts,and we had very little, culturally, in common, Archie and his various held nothing I could relate to' was the only reason for 'not getting Teenage comics', It would apply to American Movies, books, music and across the range of culture? There must be something more.
In my case in Australia, I had, to read,
Enid Blyton, the 'Just William' books, the Perishers, the 'Broons', Dan Dare, Tiger Tim, and at the other extreme,
Archie, the Flintstones, Blondie and Dagwood, Uncle Scrooge, Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse and so on. In other worlds most of the cultural materiel I was exposed to came from two
foreign cultures. I learned to glean the common elements, and appreciate the level of creativity of the writers, artists, filmmakers and musicians. The elements of basic human relationships that make up the raw material of story-telling are the same in all cultures. I could have disliked Archie comics, out of resentment, because like most guys i never had 2 gorgeous women fighting over me. But I love the skills and talent of the creators, regardless - maybe in spite of the subject matter. I wish I could draw like that, I wish I could write like that and I admire the editorial skills needed to keep the Archie behemoth going successfully for 80 years.
You and I are both 'Blueslovers' and that culture surely, in terms of our daily lives, comes from a reality ' a long way removed from that of our USA counter parts.'
The Liverpool Beat, Beatles-led revolution, seen as British, was in fact a case of people in Europe, not just the UK, being exposed to US culture and then sending it back across the Atlantic to change US culture. Same thing for the Teddy Boys, and the early Jazzers and Bluesmen. What happens with exported culture is that once exported it mutates and changes into a local variety. Or just dies, which doesn't happen often.
'Funny Animals' and why they exist as a genre, is an interesting topic, and you are not the only one who doesn't get them.
For myself, telling stories with fictional cartoon animals means you can have them do things that would be unbelievable and unacceptable if you told those stories with identifiable human beings as characters
I mean in terms of slapstick and so forth.
When I was a teenager (that's from 13 upwards, right?) I was far more interested in 1) Superhero Comics, 2) Pop Music, and 3) Girls.
Well, I'm with you when it comes to music and girls,but I was just interested in good, believable narratives,
in terms of comics;- Detective and Crime stories, Westerns, War stories, Science Fiction, Horror, Mystery and Book and Movie adaptations, as well as Superhero comics.
And are Superhero comics any more relatable to the life of a UK teenager - in those decades - than Teenage comics and Funny Animal ones?
By the way, I have a similar reaction to
Billy Bunter stories, they do nothing for me!
Go well, my friend!