March 19 -- MAD magazine's gap-toothed icon, Alfred E. Neuman, is still smiling as the parody-prone publication celebrates its 50th year in print. The popular magazine started out as a 10-cent comic ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. After 67 years, hundreds of issues, a spinoff sketch comedy series and countless imitators, MAD Magazine as it has been known ...
Mad first appeared in comic book form back in the fall of 1952 and cost a mere ten cents. It was published by Entertainment Comics, who were known for shocking horror and crime comics, including ...
Thanks to satire like The Simpsons and The Daily Show, it’s hard to imagine a time when irreverent humor wasn’t everywhere. But the 1950s were much different. Anti-establishment humor wasn’t part of ...
MAD magazine has always prided itself on being a subversive, counter-culture presence. Since its founding in 1952, many celebrated comedians have credited the publication with forming their irreverent ...
FURSHLUGGINER! POTRZEBIE! GANEFS! MAD is KAPUTNIK! Okay, maybe not quite. Physically and editorially speaking, the self-proclaimed “Number One Ecch Magazine” still exists. And yes, rumors of MAD’s ...
“Mad spoke to me before I even realized it was speaking to me,” said Joe Raiola, a man who spent 33 years as both a writer and editor for Mad magazine. “Kids generally understand that people are full ...
Alfred E. Neuman, the gap-toothed, freckle-faced mascot of Mad magazine. Publisher DC is halting the production of new content except for an annual year-end issue. Getty Images I am late to the ...
You don’t need a questionable photo app to see what the future holds for an elderly Batman and Joker—not when you have MAD Magazine! The long-running humor magazine is celebrating Batman’s 80th ...
This week's New Yorker is just one of countless publications around the world honoring the victims of the Charlie Hebdo massacre. The mass shooting at a satirical magazine strike very close to home ...