I have created a new page listing the stories in Jinty by publication date. This seemed like an interesting and useful addition to the list of stories in alphabetical order that has been in place on the blog since we started. As part of the information on that new page it seemed sensible to count the number of episodes for each story, too (where possible) – luckily for me, the Catawiki data that I was using to compile this information gave me the ability to include that for almost all stories. As I put together the list, I got the impression that in the last year of Jinty‘s publication, the story length was getting shorter and shorter: so I pulled together some stats on it.
For each year below, there are some stories I excluded from the statistics, either because I didn’t have a complete count of all the episodes (for instance where a story had started in Lindy or Penny before their merger with Jinty), or because they were by their nature long-running humour strips with no specific start or end point. I’ll give a list of the excluded stories and their running lengths further down this post.
- For 1974, the mean story length is just under 16 episodes and the mode (most usual) story length is 13 episodes
- For 1975, the mean is just under 18 episodes and the mode is 16 episodes
- For 1976, the mean is just under 15 episodes and the mode is 19 episodes
- For 1977, the mean is just over 14 episodes and the mode is 11
- For 1978, the mean is just over 16 episodes and the mode is 18
- For 1979, the mean is just over 14 episodes and the mode is 12
- For 1980, the mean is 11.5 episodes and the mode is 12
- For 1981, the mean is 11 episodes and the mode is 10
We can see that the two averages do go up and down over the run of Jinty. Having said that, the drop-off in episode length in 1980 and 1981 does look like a real change, despite that context of background variation. (I’m not going to do any full-on statistical analysis with standard deviations and so on though!) Both average figures are down in those two years, because there are fewer long stories pushing up the mean as well as a general trend to the slightly shorter length of 10 – 12 episodes.
Which stories did I exclude from the analytics, and why?
- The humour strips with no specific story arc: “Dora Dogsbody” (94 episodes), “Do-it-Yourself Dot” (62 episodes), “The Jinx From St Jonah’s” (112 episodes), “The Snobs and the Scruffs” (12 episodes), “Desert Island Daisy” (9 episodes), “Bird-Girl Brenda” (27 episodes), “The Hostess with the Mostess” (19 episodes), “Bet Gets The Bird!” (11 episodes), “Alley Cat” (163 episodes), “Sue’s Fantastic Fun-Bag!” (111 episodes), “Bizzie Bet and the Easies” (27 episodes), “Gaye’s Gloomy Ghost” (96 episodes).
- “Merry at Misery House” (66 episodes) is not a humour strip but like those above, it has no specific overall story arc, no obvious beginning or end that is worked towards throughout its run. I have therefore excluded that too. The same goes for “Pam of Pond Hill” which ran to a mighty 126 episodes in Jinty and then on into Tammy of course.
- The stories that I have incomplete episode information about: “Finleg the Fox”, “Penny Crayon”, “Hettie High-and-Mighty”, “Gypsy Rose” (these stories are not catalogued on Catawiki as a group), “Rinty n Jinty”, “Seulah the Seal”, “Tansy of Jubilee Street”, and “Snoopa”. Various of those would be excluded even if I had complete episode numbers, of course.
- Edited to add: further information has been given in the comments below. “Finleg” and “Hettie” ran for 7 episodes in Lindy, and “Tansy” ran for 45 episodes in Penny. “Seulah” ran for 11 episodes in Penny, and then started a new story in Jinty & Penny, which I hadn’t really realised. The two Seulah stories were more like separate arcs in a bigger story than self-contained stories in themselves. Many thanks to Marc for this information! I will add them into the spreadsheet and see if it makes any difference to the years in question.
- “Snoopa” ran for 45 episodes in Penny, which Mistyfan confirms below (many thanks). As a gag strip, this would not be included in the year-on-year statistics in any case.
Longest run of an individual story? “Alley Cat” has all the others beat, at 163 episodes; runners-up are “Pam of Pond Hill” at 126 episodes, and then “The Jinx From St Jonah’s” and “Sue’s Fantastic Fun-Bag!” neck and neck at 112 and 111 episodes respectively. However, if you exclude these and look at the length of the ‘normal’ stories, then the top three are “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” (36 episodes), “Fran of the Floods” (35 episodes), and “Always Together…” (29 episodes). (Phil Townsend does particularly well for long-running stories, as “Daddy’s Darling” clocks in at 24 episodes and “Song of the Fir Tree” at 22 episodes.)
At the other end of things are some short stories. There are only two single-episode stories: “Holly and the Ivy” and “Mimi Seeks a Mistress”. “Freda’s Fortune” is the only two episode story. “Mimi” was a reprinted story, printed towards the end of 1980; possibly “Holly” and “Freda” were intended for publication in annuals or summer specials and then used as filler.
There are a few 3 or 4 episode stories: “The Birds”, “The Changeling”, “Casey, Come Back!”, and “The Tale of the Panto Cat”. This is also an odd length for a story – long enough to allow for a bit of development, but short enough to feel a bit abruptly cut off when you get to the end. Of these four, I’d say that “The Birds” is the one I find uses its length most successfully, though “Panto” works pretty well as a seasonal short. The slightly-longer “Her Guardian Angel” (5 episodes) likewise uses its length reasonably well to give us a seasonal amusement. Some other shorter stories, such as “Badgered Belinda” (7 episodes), do read like they have probably been cut down from an originally-intended standard length of 10 – 12 episodes.
The spreadsheet with this information is available on request – please comment and I will be happy to email it to you if you want.
This is very interesting. I also keep a list of the stories I have read, with the number of episodes, the number of pages and the artist, so that once I’ve read every issue of a comic, I’ll be able to tell the average story lenght (both in episodes and pages), and make a top list of which artists contributed most to a certain comic.
Both “Finleg the Fox” and “Hettie High-and-Mighty” had seven episodes in Lindy, before the stories continued in Jinty. “Tansy of Jubilee Street” appeared in all 45 issues of Penny. I’d have to look up how many episoded “Seulah the Seal” had in Penny, but I would guess around 7.
The first Seulah story started 1 December 1979, but I don’t know when it ended so the sequel could start in the merger.
Yes, the sequel started when Penny merged with Jinty. The first story ended several weeks before the merger. The only unfinished story in the final issue of Penny was “Tansy of Jubilee Street”.
I checked, and the first episode was in issue 32 (1 December 1979), and the eleventh and final in issue 42. Each episode had four pages, so that makes 44 pages in total. It didn’t really end in issue 42. At the bottom of the last panel it said: “Look out for more adventures of Seulah soon”.
I think Tale of the Panto Cat had four episodes.
Oh oh! Catawiki seems to have missing or incorrectly categorised information for issue 287, 15 December 1979. I will check again in more detail shortly and advise of any changes that need making to their data. Well spotted!
That is because Sleuth, who entered all the Jinty data, does not have this issue. There are a few more missing, but not a lot. I think she still has five or so issues missing from her collection.
I can only spot two missing issues on a check of Catawiki: number 287 mentioned above, and number 273 (8 September 1979). I shall have to rework the numbers when I can.
Snoopa appeared in all 45 Pennys too.