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Caglianone very much at his own pace pondered questions about social media attention and pressure and might as well have been a latter-day Alfred E. Neuman — the old Mad magazine icon known for the ...
The humor magazine that began in 1952 as a comic book making fun of other comic books soon became an institution for mocking authority in all spheres of life, from TV, movies and advertising, to ...
Drawn by 80-year-old illustrator Norman Mingo, Mad magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman graced the cover of Issue No. 181 in a glorious powdered wig.
Neuman is the name of the red-haired kid with a gap between his front teeth and a mischievous look often gracing the cover of "Mad," a satirical magazine that reached its heyday in the 1970s but ...
When the army needed fresh bodies to toss into the minefields of Vietnam, Alfred E. Neuman dismissed the crass commercialism by asking “Who needs you?” MAD aligned with the counterculture.
Mad magazine gave us Alfred E. Neuman and Spy vs. Spy and made irreverent, anti-establishment humor a thing. Here's what you need to know about 'Mad.' ...
Alfred E. Neuman and his “What, me worry?” motto go back decades before MAD magazine first used the character in 1954. Since then this gap-toothed kid has become synonymous with the MAD brand.
I soon understood “MAD” was a this-is-not-your-parents’-magazine kind of magazine. As a new teen, I was hooked. Some things I never quite understood – like the “MAD” icon Alfred E. Neuman.
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Several supremely talented illustrators made possible Madison Magazine’s tribute to MAD magazine. And lending the project legitimacy, two of the artists have done extensive work for MAD itself.
President Donald Trump recently dismissed Democratic candidate Pete Buttigieg by comparing him to the Mad magazine cartoon character Alfred E. Neuman.
Mad magazine mascot Alfred E Neuman, in his signature ‘What, me worry?’ pose finally has reason to worry as the struggling satire magazine ceases production of new issues.