
Private Ear & COBRA
#1
Posted 17 December 2004 - 17:31
It was a fearless weekly expose of the activities of people on the inside of motor racing and as such essential reading , after scanning the classifieds it was always my first stop in the magazine early thursday morning.
Quite where Nick got all this stunning inside info I don't know, presumably much of it was anonymous 'whistle blowing', but it was great reading and sadly missed.
Nowadays of course no one must say anything in anyway critical, well about anything really, free speech in terms of getting anything printed is a thing of the past.
Ironically also at that time a crudely printed motor racing satirical 'comic' called "COBRA" supposedly produced by underground members of the Brabham team was available by subscription
It was motor sports answer to "VIZ" magazine and equally irreverent..........and quite brilliant, this too got crushed under the jack boot of the emerging regime we live under today.
This week's high court judgement in favour of a group of merchant banks, which while dismissed as "Nothing at all " may just herald the start of a sea change, - it's all certainly a great deal more interesting than the present racing.
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#2
Posted 17 December 2004 - 18:31
Never imitated, so never equalled.
BTW, what has become of Mr. Brittain?
Edward
#3
Posted 19 December 2004 - 16:06
So Nick is in good form these days.
Graham Gauld
#4
Posted 19 December 2004 - 16:12
Originally posted by RTH
Ironically also at that time a crudely printed motor racing satirical 'comic' called "COBRA" supposedly produced by underground members of the Brabham team was available by subscription
MMM.....sounds interesting - any copies survive?
#5
Posted 19 December 2004 - 17:40
#6
Posted 19 December 2004 - 20:30
Originally posted by Twin Window
I've got twenty or so editions of Cobra!
Until Richard's post, I'd never heard of it.
Who was responsible and what, dare I ask, was the content???
Mark
#7
Posted 20 December 2004 - 12:05

#8
Posted 20 December 2004 - 12:08
#9
Posted 20 December 2004 - 15:12
Shame.
Edward
#10
Posted 20 December 2004 - 16:57
Originally posted by Mark Bennett
Cobra was mentioned a few times in Autosport - I never found out how to get hold of it though![]()
Wasn't it the Brabham Fan Club magazine?
#11
Posted 21 December 2004 - 00:49


#12
Posted 21 December 2004 - 08:10



More please!
#13
Posted 21 December 2004 - 10:25
#14
Posted 21 December 2004 - 10:50
I think it is your responsibility to contact the originators, and get permission to scan the whole lot in to a website somewhere!
Finally - - I get to read one!
#15
Posted 21 December 2004 - 12:44


#16
Posted 21 December 2004 - 12:47
#17
Posted 21 December 2004 - 13:48
Originally posted by Mark Bennett
Twinny,
I think it is your responsibility to contact the originators, and get permission to scan the whole lot in to a website somewhere!
Finally - - I get to read one!
I'd love to read them again, heaven knows where mine are - somewhere in the loft ! They really are like a breath of fresh air.
We need something like this somewhere today, - I suppose Jim Bamber comes closest, - But, - just a moment we have our own resident TNF cartoonist - How about a weekly cartoon Stuart ? sending up the ghastly mess the current scene is in, in the style of "Grumpy old Spectator " ?
#18
Posted 16 April 2008 - 08:49

I just found this thread and thought that you might like to read this article from Cobra, issue 42, November 1988. I have asked for permission from the magazine editor Martin Read, with whom I am in touch with as well as Keith Tonge. I grew up in the same street as Mik Hard with and went to school with some of the Cobra folks back in the 1980s, and ended up donating some of my old Tiger comics to them for the superb "Skid Mark" comic strip!
I've been reading the book "Bernie's Game" this week, and reliving some old Brabham memories, which has spurred me into reading my old Cobra mags.
Cobra also received contributions from people like the sadly missed Russell Bulgin who also worked for Autospod in the early 80s. Could anyone say what they did now? Or would Max bend them over and whip them into submission?!
The politcal goings on nowadays would be awesome material for Cobra, but I daresay litigation might be somewhat more likely, as Martin Brundle found out recently for daring to have an opinion on the ridiculous McLaren punishment thing.
#19
Posted 13 July 2008 - 20:17
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#20
Posted 14 July 2008 - 09:35

Cobra I never even heard off !(?) But cannot help feeling a bit weird , seing the minaret in the Silverstone post above ....a wellknown politician and "provocateur" in Denmark died last week , he having been jailed a couple of times in 1988 (and later)for racism ! Allthough the sketch suggests 1998 its getting close +10 years ! Very odd! And more F1 in the sands , were they psychic ?


#21
Posted 14 July 2008 - 19:29
There is no way you'd get away with it these days.

Rob Rowley
#22
Posted 15 July 2008 - 23:10
Originally posted by Bjørn Kjer
Cobra I never even heard off !(?) But cannot help feeling a bit weird , seing the minaret in the Silverstone post above ....a wellknown politician and "provocateur" in Denmark died last week , he having been jailed a couple of times in 1988 (and later)for racism ! Allthough the sketch suggests 1998 its getting close +10 years ! Very odd! And more F1 in the sands , were they psychic ?
Hate to say it but that sketch was published in 1988 - kind of a peek into the future if you will. Although Martin & co didn't strike me as the types to pay close attention to Danish politics

And yes, looking back it's amusing (and not a little sad) to see how many things Cobra predicted in jest that later came to pass. Even one or two of the bits I wrote have survived the test of time
