Showing posts with label MAD Magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MAD Magazine. Show all posts

Thursday, February 8, 2024

THE SHADOW KNOWS...AGAIN!

By the time you reach a certain age and you do not have anyone to share your life with, you realize you're chances of meeting someone are close to nil, so you accept the fact and move on with your existence...
However, the impulse is still there...and the shadow knows!

Friday, February 2, 2024

ME AND MY SHADOW!

The old 1930s THE SHADOW radio show began with the line: "What evil lurks in the hearts of men? The shadow knows!" And my shadow has always been a dead giveaway of my own personal secrets!
The shadows play a crucial part every February 2nd, where Punxsutawney Phil comes out of his hole to take a look at its shadow in what is known as Groundhog Day.
Groundhog Day is a tradition observed in the United States and Canada on February 2 of every year. It derives from the Pennsylvania Dutch superstition that if a groundhog emerges from its burrow on this day and sees its shadow, it will retreat to its den and winter will go on for six more weeks; if it does not see its shadow, spring will arrive early. In 2024, an early spring was predicted.

MAD Magazine's Sergio Aragonés created an entire series of funny cartoons entitled The Shadow Knows and as an homage to him, I've drawn my own shadow fantasies a few times.

Monday, April 10, 2023

Al Jaffee, King of the Mad Magazine Fold-In, Dies at 102

 Al Jaffee, a cartoonist who folded in when the trend in magazine publishing was to fold out, thereby creating one of Mad magazine’s most recognizable and enduring features, died on Monday in Manhattan. He was 102.






















The news comes from the Twitter feed of Tom Heintjes, dedicated to Eisner Award winner Hogan's Alley. "I'm very sad to report that the great Al Jaffee has died," the tweet reads. "He had celebrated his 102nd birthday just last month. An incredible legend. RIP to a giant of cartooning." Along with being known for Mad Magazine, Al Jaffee also contributed to Timely Comics and Atlas Comics, which would eventually become the publishing juggernaut Marvel Comics. His longest-running Mad Magazine feature was the Fold-In, which featured a piece of artwork that had to be folded vertically and inward to reveal a new image. 


The First Fold-In appeared in MAD # 86!

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

MORT DRUCKER : MAD magazine's Best Caricature Artist!

Remembering MAD artist Mort Drucker on his birthdate: March 22, 1929! He's always been my all-time favorite artist. Mort's cartoons were the feature I always looked forward to whenever I got the latest issue of MAD. When he left the magazine, I stopped reading it but never forgot his artwork and I still keep revisiting him often! 


Friday, August 26, 2022

MAD Magazine is now 70 Years Old!

Incredible as it may seem, MAD magazine's first issue hit the newsstands back in 1952.  At the time, I was merely one year and three months old so, understandably, I was unaware of its existence.  The date of publication for MAD #1, was October/November, 1952 and it was a late entry in the Entertaining Comics (EC) line, which by 1952 was already publishing TALES FROM THE CRYPT, VAULT OF HORROR, THE HAUNT OF FEAR, CRIME SUSPENSTORIES, SHOCK SUSPENSTORIES, WEIRD SCIENCE, WEIRD FANTASY, TWO-FISTED TALES and FRONTLINE COMBAT. EC's publisher William B. Gaines was unusual and innovative, to say the least. Upon the death of his father in a boating accident, Gaines, at the age of 25, was suddenly faced with the ownership and management of the comic book company.

Along with Harvey Kurtzman, his comic book editor, Bill Gaines conspired to put out a humor comic which was intended to be utterly unique and unlike anything else on the newsstands of the day.
And so, MAD was born! 


In the summer of 1955, Kurtzman convinced Gaines to turn the comic book into a magazine. The first magazine issue sold out and actually went back to press for a second printing! Within a year, MAD's original contributors, Kurtzman, Will Elder and Jack Davis left because of editorial differences with Gaines so Al Feldstein took over as editor and MAD's circulation and fame continued to rise.
 

The further details of how MAD Magazine grew to become the iconic humor magazine known to so many generations of faithful readers, are easily found elsewhere on the internet so I won't go into that. My own experience as a MAD reader began with issue #95 from June 1965, when I saw it on display at a magazine rack in a local store and convinced my doubting father to buy it for me.


From that moment on, I was hooked on the irreverent and wild humor of MAD and tried to get every issue of the magazine I could find. 



 Soon enough, I developed a taste for the artwork and began to study the drawing style of some of the Usual Gang of Idiots, picking out my favorite contributors:

JACK RICKARD





DON MARTIN




PAUL COKER JR.



SERGIO ARAGONES


BOB CLARKE 



JACK DAVIS




DAVE BERG



AL JAFFEE's marvelous Fold-Ins!


Jaffee's Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions were hilarious!



And of course, my top favorite, the immortal MORT DRUCKER!






I especially enjoyed his treatment of Sean Connery's James Bond!







Who can forget those silly fake ads?


And the unforgettable bonus flexi-disc which came attached to the Ninth Annual Edition of the Worst from MAD, with Alfred E. Neuman "vocalizing"?


Yes! I was a devoted fan of MAD Magazine!


That is, until about the year 2000 when most of the original Gang of Idiots had left and the humor began to fade becoming less and less relevant, at least for me. That's when I stopped buying the magazine and satisfied myself with reading and rereading the old material, over and over again. 
And to think MAD is only a year younger than me!

WHAT - ME, WORRY?