The Thing on the Mat
(January –
April 1985)
by Stephen Agar
Issue
33 (January 1985)
Pete
Doubleday, the editor of The Thing on the Mat, was one of the true characters of
postal Diplomacy - quick witted, intelligent, anarchic and willing to call a
spade a shovel, he made Thing one of the best reads around. Thing was mimeo
duplicated, multi-coloured, and Pete often went to a lot of trouble to include
several drawings in each issue (and drawing on a stencil is no joke - it is
difficult and time consuming). Issue 33 was no exception - 8 cartoons in 16
sides. Pete was at his best when just rambling on in the finest Birksian
editorial tradition or just putting other editors in their place. Don't expect
to get any insights into the Hobby ten years ago - but maybe this page will give
you an insight into one side of Pete Doubleday.
January
1985 saw our Pete a might frustrated. "I've suddenly realised that all my
ambition is totally unfocused, in that I can't think of a single thing I want to
do but I definitely want to do something or other particularly badly, in that I
am extremely frustrated. Maybe I should settle down and get married; unlike the
rest of Cambridge, I don't find hollowed-out turnips sufficient unto my
need."
Still,
January is always a good time of year to review the previous 12 months
happenings. So what of 1984? "It hasn't been good; one might almost
characterise it as a year of despondency. We have seen Walkerdine's prediction
of twenty folds in a year prove staggeringly accurate, we have seen NMR! lurch
ever further to a reverse take-over where Bain gets lumbered with even more work
than he presently has, we have seen the rigours of hypermodern technology push
Greatest Hits back to being a quarterly - all this has dominated the good news
section of the Hobby, it is true, but there has been much to the bad as well.
Take the resuscitation of Dolchstoß, for instance: in its pages the Diplomacy
Hobby appears to be splitting away from the mainstream, it being a healthy
magazine of some 150 subscribers, who are typically pure Diplomacy players who
see no other zine at all, with the possible exception of Mercurius Aulicus, a
zine from the same stable, and currently a non-runner. We have been subject to a
two-toned whinging from the fairies of the Hobby, firstly claiming that we
complain too much when accused by Dolton of being stingy, heartless bastards,
and secondly insisting that we should accept the 'personal zine' as the wave of
the future." Of course 10 years later the FRP side of the hobby has all but
disappeared along with the 'personal zines' so Pete really had little to worry
about.
Unusually,
even the Letters Column was rather dire, but as Pete explained: "There are
times in every editor's life when, for no readily apparent reason, he dries up.
In Andy Blakeman's case, this is brought on by an inflated view of his own
artistic talents; for my part, and where other, real editors are concerned, the
reason is normally depression combined with a feeling that you've said it all
before. At such times the preferred curative specific is a good-sized mailbag
packed with zest and fire, which can best be employed to fill gaps and generally
make the editor feel secure, well-loved and commercially viable. Unfortunately,
when you produce several depressed issues in a row this doesn't happen."
In
order to improve the efficiency o f the zine from the point of view of his game
players Pete announced that henceforth he would produce Thing six-weekly, with a
games only interim issue in-between. This was to cause him problems...
Issues
34 and 35 (February 1985)
"Up
yours and welcome to another issue of The Thing on the Mat, in which editorial I
intend to expose a few inconsistencies in the way I have implemented the new
fast-turnaround system. Issue 35 is enclosed, for those of you who are not
playing and have therefore not yet seen it, and you will immediately deduce that
the first cock-up is in what John Fowles calls 'mispagination' and what a less
pretentious person would call the numbering system. No to put it too discreetly,
this is issue 34 appearing three weeks after issue 35. Sadly the reason for this
mistake is not excessive intake of drugs, other than alcohol at least, and more
to do with sheer incompetence. To make matters worse I have committed myself on
the cover of the last issue to making the even-numbered issues chat-based and
odd-numbered issues games-only. Strict I implementation of this policy would
ensue in issue thirty seven appearing before issue thirty six, issue thirty nine
before issue thirty eight and so on... now, stranger things have happened in the
Hobby, but as I approach middle age (SA: Pete was 23) I feel that it is not the
job of a responsible and long-established zine like TotM to indulge in such
fripperies. Consequently I have put some thought into rectifying my error. The
first solution that occurs is to overturn the entire infrastructure of number
theory and declare every second integer from one onwards to be even and the rest
odd - I have sent off a tentative paper on this theme to the Journal of Prime
Number Theory, but I entertain little hope of such a radical thesis being
accepted by the mathematical community at large..."
But
what of the rest of the hobby? Turning to Pete's Hobby News column
("nothing more than a blatant attempt to be nice to all those editors whose
bodies I crave and very unpleasant indeed to anyone who I think can take it or
else is most likely to sell me his body on a sado-masochistic basis") .
Pete recommends the first issue of C'est Magnifique (which recently folded after
1xx issues) to his readers, and commends William Whyte's NERTZ (which folded in
1993 but none of us realised until 1994) despite the fact that Williams appeared
to take both Dr. Who and Graham Staplehurst seriously. Other newish zines
included Coolnacran from Nicholas Whyte (which promptly folded), Hacking Times
from Dylan Harris and Pigbutton from Pete Groome. On the resurfaced Bohemian
Rhapsody Pete was very candid. "I am not in the mood for the sort of
placatory tosh we see around the Hobby at present, along the lines of 'Collapsed
once, not entirely trustworthy, bags of enthusiasm, don't want to knife the poor
bugger before he gets a decent Christian trial.' Personally I would rather see
both Malc's balls stuffed up his nostrils before encouraging a single member of
the Hobby even to consider asking for a sample copy." If only Pete had
still been around when Andy Bate re-launched Froggy or Duncan Adams resurrected
The Laughing Roundhead!
Issue
36 (April 1985)
With
this issue Chris Spall's Slap and Tickle merged with Thing in the hope that
Chris would bring to the zine some much needed GMing ability.
Most
of this issue was taken up with a transcript of a radio interview Pete did on
Radio Oxford about his attempt to be elected as MP for Oxford under the name
Cerebus the Aardvark. Unfortunately for all schoolteachers John Patten actually
won the seat. On the zine front Pete said what he thought about Derek Caws
(editor of War & Peace): "Caws is a dangerous right-wing lunatic with a
distressing lack of consistency, a mind as closed and oppressive as the colon of
a constipated hamster and a moral sense derived in part from traditional,
offensive Mittelstand values; in part from vicarious greed; and in part from
excessive and intolerant use of dangerous Drugs, in this case Fresh Air. He
should have his nose plugged with Plutonium and his lungs washed out with the
greater part of Dublin Bay." I couldn't do justice to the three page attack
on Caws (though it was interesting to see an excerpt from a Ryk Downes letter to
Caws ("W&P seems to have good coverage of Diplomacy strategy. This is
what I like (and need) to see in a zine"),
but we're all entitled to change our minds over time.
Pete
Doubleday is one of those characters that invariably crop up in the conversation
when the Hobby old-age pensioners have one too many Shandys at the MidCon bar.
With no Thing and no NERTZ the Hobby has no resident weirdos to spout a few home
truths - and even David Oya is but a pale imitation compared to a Pete at his
best. Will we ever see his like again?
Reprinted
from Spring Offensive 31
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