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Mad Magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman is famous for saying, "What? Me worry?" But the iconic character now has real cause for concern as it's the end of a comedy magazine with a legacy spanning ...
George Woodbridge, an illustrator for Mad magazine for nearly 50 years whose exquisitely detailed pen-and-ink drawings were featured in nearly every issue, has died. He was 73. Woodbridge died of ...
Not until Mad magazine arrived to poke holes in everything ... One of the biggest mysteries behind Mad actually started more than 50 years before the first issue was printed.
Given that the magazine’s readership peaked 50 years ago; that so many of the early Mad men—it was always a boy’s club—have died; and that Alfred E. Neuman is basically a museum artifact ...
David Pogue is a six-time Emmy winner for his stories on "CBS Sunday Morning," where he's been a correspondent since 2002. Pogue hosts the CBS News podcast "Unsung Science." He's also a New York ...
While some posts on social media claim the cartoon appeared in the magazine in 1968, it actually happened the following year. An image supposedly showing a cartoon from a 1968 issue of MAD ...
Al Jaffee, the longtime cartoonist for Mad magazine and creator of its distinctive ... Jaffee’s initial, one-off contributions to Mad predated his 50-year run beginning in 1964.
Mad magazine, America’s journal of adolescent ... Fold-In puzzle to Mad’s back page for all but one issue over a 50-year stretch (1964 to 2013). Mad’s anniversary volume will also include ...
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How Mad Magazine's humor created a revolutionNestled the rolling hills of rural Massachusetts. swathed by manicured grounds, sits the Norman Rockwell Museum. And there, side-by-side with the wholesome works of America's most beloved ...
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