I've no idea if Roger went through the same interview process as me when he joined DC Thomson & Co. Ltd (purveyors of fine journalism, including the UK's leading children's comics back then), but it certainly remains one of the more bizarre mornings of my life, and that's saying something. It was akin to speed-dating, long before that was a thing, where it felt to me like I was being interviewed by everyone in the company, one after the other, as they filed in and out of the small Office Of Interrogation, asking me a myriad of questions ranging from pertinent journalistic themes, to "What football team do you support?" (that was Podgy Whiner, Roger). I later found out that all these people were either editors or their deputies, sizing me up for the assorted office junior vacancies, and I like to think they all met up in a big room afterwards and fought to near death over who was getting me. Although I suspect it was more a case of drawing straws to see who had to take me (it was 'The Beano').
The most bizarre bit though was the timed multiple-choice questionnaire, delivered to me, and invigilated, by the intimidating (but lovely) head typist, Big Nancy. Memory perhaps plays tricks, but it must have been at least 200 pages long, with questions even more varied than the sea of faces that preceded them that day. I've forgotten what most of them were, but the one that sticks in my memory, word for word (because I read it several times, after my spontaneous guffaw prompted Nancy to remark, "Ah - you've reached that one!") was this...
If you spotted a two-year-old child alone in the street, would you:
a) Ignore it.
b) Ask its name and address.
c) Take it to the nearest police station.
d) If it was a nice one, take it home and keep it.
Imagine the dilemma over that one (and a number of others that were like it) when you knew you were being interviewed for a humorous publication.