News

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-school boys. They are ...
It covers the full 72-year history of Mad, highlighted by the stretch from the mid-1960s to the early 1990s, when the magazine pilloried mass culture—television, movies, politics and more—in a ...
“Working for Mad means never having to grow up.” John Ficarra, Mad magazine editor-in-chief 1985-2018The Norman Rockwell Museum’s current exhibit provides a nostalgic voyage for Baby Boomers ...
Mad will no longer publish new content, we were informed, but will continue into the uncertain future by repackaging old material between new covers. Television used to do a version of that. It ...
STOCKBRIDGE — It’s an election year, so perennial presidential candidate and MAD magazine cover boy, Alfred E. Neuman, has once again thrown his hat in the proverbial ring. The imp-faced redhead has ...
Mad magazine’s special anniversary issue, publishing Oct. 4, brings back the usual gang of idiots, plus Weird Al Yankovic and Jordan Peele, to reminisce about the satire publication’s long run ...
Mad Magazine's ageless wise guy delighted millions of readers with the sneaky fun of the Fold-In and the snark of "Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions." Al Jaffee had retired at age 99.