News

MAD magazine fans began paying tribute to the 67-year-old publication amid unconfirmed reports it would soon be folding. While its owners at Warner Brothers have remained quiet, two of the humor ...
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 ...
For American kids coming of age in the early 1970s, Mad magazine was many things. It was a guilty pleasure. An eye-opening first look behind the curtain of the adult world. Just plain fun.
"It's been a logical development." MAD magazine hit a peak of more than 2 million subscribers in the early '70s, when it memorably satirized shifting social mores and cultural attitudes.
Mad magazine, America’s journal of adolescent satire, turns 70 this year. The publication will come out of hiatus on Oct. 4 for an anniversary edition headlined by tributes from Jordan Peele and ...
Donation Options Search Search Search This 1956 cover illustration by artist Norman Mingo, depicting Mad magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman, was presented at auction in 2008. Heritage Auction ...
“It’s been a logical development.” MAD magazine hit a peak of more than 2 million subscribers in the early ’70s, when it memorably satirized shifting social mores and cultural attitude ...
Mad, known for mocking movies, presidents, pop culture and everything else, enjoyed immense popularity in the 1960s and 70s. The magazine will continue to print issues but featuring all classic ...
(Kevin Sullivan/AP) The demise of Mad magazine is hardly a surprise. Times are tricky for print publications in general — all the more so for a title targeted with exquisite precision at middle ...
But the ’60s and ’70s were America’s adolescence ... In a way, the eulogies for Mad are coming late. The magazine was dead to me the day it started accepting advertisements — real ads ...
Mad magazine will celebrate its 70 th anniversary with a special edition due out on October 4 th, DC has announced. The cover features a glass with a denture in it, and the headline “70 Years Dumb!
Mad Magazine began in 1952 as a comic book that made fun of other comic books – and soon became an institution for mocking authority in all spheres of life, from TV, movies and advertising ...