Roger Noel Cook

Roger Noel Cook (born 1946) is a British comics writer, musician and magazine publisher.

Biography

Cook began working at IPC Magazines in 1962, becoming a staff writer on TV Comic in 1964. He wrote for various series in TV Comic, including Doctor Who, Tom and Jerry and Popeye. His extensive work on the Doctor Who comic has led to him being described as the most prolific Doctor Who writer in any medium.[1]

While at IPC, Cook, on lead vocals, formed the band Stud Leather with Alan Kirkham on guitar. The rest of the band were Haydn Gridley on bass, Johnny Aldrich on drums and Dickie Graves on backing vocals. The band was signed to DART but split up after one single, "Cut Loose" which also featured Raphael Ravenscroft on saxophone (who later played the famous sax solo on Gerry Rafferty's "Baker Street"). Cook then released a single with Alan Kirkham, "Slick Go-Getter", on DART, released October 1973.

Cook later became the UK CEO of Warner Bros.' publishing division at 24, before leaving to join lifelong friend Tony Power at Paul Raymond Publications. At Paul Raymond, Cook invented the first video men's magazine, Electric Blue, for which we also wrote and recorded most of the music, forming the band Broadsword for this purpose. Cook later worked for Richard Desmond, taking over Penthouse magazine.[1]

In 2004, Desmond commissioned Cook to write the first tabloid 3D picture strip, called "Big Shot", a soccer star soap.[1] Cook is currently working on a script for a graphic novel called "Guns 'n' Moses".[1]

gollark: Speaking of Minecraft, does anyone know of decent software providing a nice web interface for managing a modded server? I have a nontechnical friend who wants to run a server on my, er, server.
gollark: Yes. Yes it does.
gollark: I use Android, so I can use *Termux* on my phone, which is a nice local terminal thing which can also use SSH. Very convenient. Occasionally.
gollark: There might be software which just encrypts files and filenames/some metadata but keeps other stuff intact, or splits it up into several pieces, but leaking metadata would partly defeat the point.
gollark: The problem is more that *most* ways of encrypting stuff would just leave a giant binary archive or something which needs copying over in full on any update.

References


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