Everybody's (Australian magazine)

Everybody's was an Australian tabloid-style magazine of the 1960s. It has no relationship to the early 20th century British or American magazines of the same name.

History

First issued in 1961, Everybody's was published by Australian Consolidated Press (ACP). It evolved from an earlier ACP tabloid magazine, Weekend, which flourished in the 1950s. Weekend was edited by Donald Horne for many years and one of its most famous staffers was renowned journalist and rock writer Lillian Roxon, who wrote for the magazine for several years in the mid-1950s before moving to New York. According to Roxon's biographer Robert Milliken, Weekend had a dubious reputation in "polite society" and was considered very downmarket since it regularly featured lurid stories, often with sexual overtones. Roxon's mother was reportedly horrified by the idea of her daughter working for such a publication and concealed the fact from friends and family.[1]

When Weekend was relaunched as Everybody's, it also replaced the venerable women's magazine the Australian Woman's Mirror, which was first published in 1924 and ceased publication in mid-1961. Copies of Everybody's from this period indicate that it was definitely a "women's" magazine in its early days, featuring almost exclusively women on the covers, with typical content including celebrity stories, cooking, interior decorating and fashion.

Notable contributor

Noted Australian cartoonist, illustrator and artist Marie "Mollie" Horseman (1911–1974) was the Everybody's staff artist during the early 1960s. Her numerous illustrations (either anonymous or signed "Vanessa") included a weekly full-page colour cartoon of the "Sexy Man" type and the serial Girl Crusoe (1964), a parody of the popular 'good girl cheesecake' comic (see good girl art). In 1963 Everybody's hailed her (somewhat inaccurately) as 'Australia's only woman cartoonist', although she was definitely the best known.[2]

Becoming a pop culture magazine

As the 'Beat Boom' in popular music took off in Australia in 19631964 Everybody's began to cater for the burgeoning teenage market. Its content increasingly featured stories and pinups of local and international pop music, movie and TV personalities, although it still made regular excursions into tabloid territory, as evidenced by 'teaser' cover slogans like "Black Mass in Color: Shock Witchcraft Pictures", "The World's Most Topless City", "Trade Secrets of a Female Impersonator", "The World's Most Famous Nudes", "Those nude films", "What goes on in the suburbs?" and "Jayne Mansfield Tells All: Those Lewd Film Star Orgies".

Australian pop culture historian Jeffery Turnbull described Everybody's as:

"... really the ultimate magazine for Australia’s popular culture throughout the pre-Go-Set, early ‘Sixties because it covered the biggest stars of the period and wasn’t afraid to feature young Australian rock stars. It was published by the Packer organisation in Sydney but its circulation was national and in fact international, as it reached New Zealand readers. It did, however lean towards the Sydney scene. Kiwi musicians Mike Rudd (Spectrum and Ariel) and Glyn Mason (Ariel, Chain, Copperwine, Stockley See & Mason) have both spoken of the influence which Everybody’s had on New Zealanders in informing them of the swingin’ scene in Australia. Just to read about what was happening in Australia was enough to convince them to relocate across the Tasman Sea with their respective New Zealand Bands, Chants R & B and Larry’s Rebels."

Market

"Everybody’s was not effectively targeting the teen market as such, but aimed itself more towards the young adult profile and was a quality pictorial although at times it delved into the sort of stories that the lower quality tabloids liked to feature. From about 1964, it incorporated Disc magazine -– an insert specially dedicated to pop music and this was only really superseded when Go-Set came along. It covered everything from Australian lifestyle to views on current issues as well as fashion. Its format was colourful and bold and at times, it wasn’t afraid to feature the more insalubrious aspects of the new teen culture."
"Possibly for the first time, Aussie rock and pop artists were featured -- often on the cover. In 1967, The Masters Apprentices were presented with a trophy from Everybody’s as the “Most Original Band” for that year. Everybody’s was, like Pix, People and Australasian Post open to featuring the more liberalised attitudes towards sex. Towards the latter part of the ‘Sixties, this magazine found a strong challenger in Go-Set which began to focus even closer on the teen readership market. By 1968, all eyes were on the Melbourne scene and Everybody’s succumbed to the punches delivered by its new challenger, ceasing publication in that year.".[3]

Everybody's enjoyed a comfortable relationship with Festival Records, which was owned by ACP's rival News Limited (now News Corporation), and it did much to promote Festival artists such as Jimmy Little, whom it named "Australian Pop Star of the Year" in 1964. The magazine also covered a range of social trends; in 1964 it examined the "new beach cult" and fretted about the "surfies" -- "they come from good homes, they are well educated, why then, do they turn into common larrikins?" Everybody's also included cartoons, most notably The Phantom by Lee Falk.

"When The Phantom finished in the last issue of The Australian Woman's Mirror in June 1961, it was almost immediately picked up in Everybody's. The last story to appear in the Woman's Mirror was "The River Gang" (S54) but only the first eight weeks of the 20-week story were published. It is not known if this story was completed in Everybody's magazine. However, the next story "The Honeymooners" (S55) certainly was, and the weekly magazine continued with The Phantom Sunday strips in sequential order. The one exception was "The Astronaut and the Pirates" (S61) which was initially skipped before making an appearance a few years later. As with the Woman's Mirror, The Phantom strips in Everybody's magazine were about 16 months behind the original US newspaper appearance date. The last known Phantom story to appear in Everybody's magazine was "Rex King" (S68) in 1967. The magazine was cancelled in 1968 although it is not known if The Phantom continued until the end."[4]

The magazine also played a role in launching the career of TV and pop personality Denise Drysdale.

"Barry Bell at Channel 9 had taken some photos of me in a bikini for Everybody's Magazine, and that magazine had gone over to Vietnam, and American soldiers saw me, got in touch with Everybody's Magazine, and so they gave me 'Girl of the Year' ".[5]

Competition

Everybody's dominance was challenged in early 1966 with the appearance of a new Melbourne-based weekly pop magazine, Go-Set, which was launched by a group of former Monash University students. Although Everybody's enjoyed the advantage of being published by a large company and had an established national readership, its position in the teenage market was quickly usurped, and from 1967 until its closure in 1974, Go-Set reigned supreme as Australia's pop culture 'bible'.

In 1966 Everybody's attempted to expand its operations by starting up its own Everybody's record label, with the intention of selling singles via the magazine. The new label was a joint venture between Clyde Packer and Harry M. Miller and was managed by American-born entrepreneur, producer and songwriter Nat Kipner. The new label was not well received by commercial radio stations, however, and some Sydney stations reportedly refused to play the label's inaugural single, Tony Barber's "Someday", because it was seen as blatant cross-promotion for the magazine. As a result, the label was hastily relaunched as Spin Records, and it became one of the most significant local pop labels of the late 1960s.

By the late 1960s the focus of the Australian pop scene was firmly in Melbourne and while Go-Set (which was also based in Melbourne) evolved with the times and developed close links with the local pop scene, Everybody's essentially retained the one-dimensional "fanzine" style it had developed in the early 60s. Its circulation gradually declined, out-competed by the 'hipper' style of Go-Set, and it ceased publication during 1968.

References

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