This article is about 1980s UK comic magazine. For the character from Happy Tree Friends, see Nutty (Happy Tree Friends). For the adjective of nut, see Nut.
Nutty was a British comic magazine that ran for 292 issues from 16 February 1980 to 14 September 1985, when it merged with The Dandy. Published by D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd, Nutty was an attempt to create a more lively and chaotic comic compared to many on sale at the time.
Strips
Nutty's strips included:
Bananaman was its main strip, and by far its most popular. Drawn by John Geering, it survived the merger with The Dandy and that comic's eventual closure in the 2010s, moving to The Beano.[1][2]
Big 'n Bud was a double-act style comic strip: they observed various scenarios, and then made jokes based upon what they observed. They appeared in the first edition.
Blubba and the Bear, an Eskimo in conflict with a polar bear trying to steal his fish, who later appeared in the Dandy as reprints from number 3408 but ended when Dandy Xtreme started.
Dick Turban, Desert Highwayman, a boy desert raider who rode a camel.
Doodlebug, a slightly surreal tale of a bug in a comic-book world who could draw and remove things with a magic pencil. The other inhabitants of this world were also bugs, with their names reflecting their personality. Humbug, for instance was of a miserable disposition. Bedbug was portrayed as a sleepy character, often seen in bed or at least in bedclothes. These characters often reappeared, but it wasn't always the same character that had been seen previously. The strip was drawn by Gordon Bell
Ethel Red, a Viking girl.
General Jumbo, a new series of the former Beano character, drawn by Sandy Calder.
Horace Cope, a boy of the same name who enlisted help from his grandmother, Madame Zsa Zsa, an astrologer.
Jay R. Hood, "He's Anything But Good", a junior version of J. R. Ewing, drawn by George Martin.