•
Andy The Anarchist by
Anthony Smith – a stereotypical anarchist. •
Arseover Tit by
Hunt Emerson – a
two-headed creature called Alf (as in "half and half") and his adventures in society. Usually Alf would get mangled after failing to decide which way to jump from an oncoming attack due to having two heads. •
Cameraman by
Stevie Best – a day-to-day story of a cynical
paparazzo (tabloid photographer). • '''Hell's
Rotarians''' by unknown – setting septuagenarian Rotarians as
Hells Angels •
Home Front by
John Erasmus – a strip involving a mother and son, the mother being a cheerful psychopath who caused carnage each issue, embarrassing her son. •
Rymeword Scrubs by
Doug Cameron and
Ben Norris – a prison to house cartoon characters with rhyming names (e.g. David Fottom, with a talking bottom). •
The Striker Wore Pink Knickers by
Tony Husband and
Ron Tiner- a pastiche of
Roy of the Rovers type strips about a girl playing
professional football posing as a man. The strip ended with all the main characters realizing they were
homosexual and being murdered by a
skinhead. •
The Watchdogs by
Tony Reeve – two cartoon dogs, based on
Douglas Hurd, the then Foreign Secretary, and
Mary Whitehouse, the Christian morality campaigner. •
Sam Shovel by
Kev F. Sutherland – a pun-filled detective parody in the style of
Jim Steranko's early graphic novel
Chandler. •
Watch With Mutha by Doug Cameron and Ben Norris – one-off strips poking fun at
children's television, with adult themes. •
We Ran The World by
Andy Oldfield and Mike Roberts – a lavish colour strip containing analysis of British
culture and
history from a left-wing (and often
Marxist) perspective. Two recurring characters were a teenage skinhead indoctrinated by
tabloid newspapers and his world-wise grandfather (who had fought against
Oswald Mosley). These characters were later replaced by an archetypal bearded, bespectacled intellectual and an immortal
Karl Marx. •
Wildtrouser Hall by Cluff – about an aristocratic family who were psychopathic Nazi parasites. •
The Andy Oldfield Column – political rants accompanied by satirical cartoons by
Clive Wakfer. •
Edith Appleby: O.A.P. Warrior by
David Leach – a little old lady in a nursing home becomes a vigilante after the murder of a number of her friends at the hands of the home's corrupt staff. Written as a series, only two episodes were published before the magazine's closure. •
Diary of a Mad Housewife by
Neil Nixon/
Stanley Manly – the surreal rantings of a married woman, written as a diary entry, which appeared regularly in Elephant Parts. Nixon wrote prose pieces and items for all the Galaxy adult humour titles, including some repeating ideas, but this was his only regular strip. •
TimTim by Herpes, a parody of
Hergé's Tintin. ==References==