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Mad Magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman at a 1997 news conference in New York and Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg in Los Angeles, May 9. Photos: AP/Richard Drew and Mario Tama/Getty ...
The Good Doctor investigates the location of an old UDF store, the origin of Alfred E. Neuman, and Pete Rose's childhood home ...
Alfred E. Neuman is the longtime wispy haired boy mascot of MAD magazine. When asked, Buttigieg told Politico, "I’ll be honest. I had to Google that," he said.
Sergio Aragonés has drawn for MAD magazine for some 57 years and contends the partnership will survive despite massive changes to the magazine.
President Donald Trump recently dismissed Democratic candidate Pete Buttigieg by comparing him to the Mad magazine cartoon character Alfred E. Neuman.
Mad Magazine is to print what Weird Al Yanokovich is to music. Exactly 60 years after pumping out its first parody, Mad Magazine is taking its spoofs to the iPad, with an app that offers the ...
Celebrities and other fans of Mad, the satirical magazine that pokes fun at politics and pop culture, were reeling this week amid reports that the nearly 70-year-old publication will no longer be ...
Time to start worrying, Alfred E. Neuman. Mad magazine, the iconic satirical publication known for gap-toothed, freckle-faced mascot Neuman and his “What, me worry?” mantra, will no longer ...
The face of Alfred E. Neuman is framed by attendees at the Comic-Con International in San Diego on July 20, 2017. (Kevin Sullivan/The Orange County Register via AP) So Mad magazine, it seems, is ...
President Donald Trump recently dismissed Democratic candidate Pete Buttigieg by comparing him to the Mad magazine cartoon character Alfred E. Neuman.
“Alfred E. Neuman cannot become president of the United States,” Trump told Politico on Friday, using the name for the gap-toothed, big-eared Mad magazine mascot to refer to Buttigieg.
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