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Lad and Ladette Culture

Stuart Maconie on the history of modern Britain in 50 records. How the new men's magazines of the early '90s gave men an excuse to rediscover their inner Neanderthal.

The term: 'new lad' was first coined by journalist Sean O'Hagen in an article for Arena magazine, in 1993. But there was nothing essentially 'new' about this lad. In fact he seemed a throwback to the late '60s/early '70s - a simpler time when men were interested in beer, football, fast cars and dolly birds. This was explained away as a reaction to the sensitive 'new man'; a confused reaction to feminism or, more patronisingly, as a middle-class aspiration towards some sort of mythical working-class values. But, of course, all of this could be also argued to be absolute nonsense, and it was just a lucrative marketing ploy driven by cynical magazine editors at the likes of GQ and Loaded. They recognised that many young men will always be interested in the same things, even if it wasn't politically correct to admit this, hence Loaded's motto, 'For men who should know better'.

James Brown, one of the driving forces behind Loaded, had said ultimately he'd wanted to capture his old employer the NME's readership, and in the process kill the old music press. At the height of its success, Loaded would sell nearly half a million copies a month, celebrating male rogues (say Liam Gallagher, Ollie Reed or George Best) and scantily clad women. But music also played a big part, exemplified by the likes of sharp-dressed geezer Paul Weller or boozing, brawling Manc loudmouths, Oasis. And what better anthem could lads have than Cigarettes And Alcohol?

57 minutes

Music Played

  • Oasis

    Cigarettes & Alcohol

  • Symarip

    Skinhead Moonstomp

  • Morrissey

    Suedehead

  • Sham 69

    Hurry Up Harry

  • Wham!

    Bad Boys

  • Primal Scream

    Loaded

  • Sleeper

    Inbetweener

  • Oasis

    Cigarettes & Alcohol

  • Blur

    To The End

  • Oasis

    Champagne Supernova

  • The Mike Flowers Pops

    Wonderwall

Share your comments and stories

Your contributions will play a key part in this episode, take a look at the questions below and :

  • Did you buy Loaded magazine when it first came out?
  • Looking back, was ‘laddism’ exciting or embarrassing?
  • Is there anything wrong in men liking cars, booze, women and song?
  • Did our culture take an ugly turn around the time of ‘laddism’?

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  • Wed 19 Jun 2013 22:00
  • Wed 14 Sep 2016 23:00

Song Profiles

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