Mad magazine has its own exhibit at the Cincinnati Art Museum featuring original art from “The Usual Gang of Idiots.” ...
"What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine" features interactive galleries and original artwork from the satirical publication.
"It’s shocking to me that DC would entrust their beloved superheroes to the Usual Gang of Idiots at Mad," said mag editor John Ficarra. "Then again, this is the same company that hired me and my staff ...
Nestled the rolling hills of rural Massachusetts. swathed by manicured grounds, sits the Norman Rockwell Museum. And there, side-by-side with the wholesome works of America's most beloved illustrator, ...
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 ...
(CNN) -- Once a cultural touchstone, Mad Magazine is halting the publication of new content and vanishing from newsstands. The seminal humor publication will no longer be available on newsstands after ...
Al Jaffee, who created Mad Magazine’s tri-fold back cover with a hidden punchline and other features like “Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions,” has died, according to multiple media reports. He was ...
Frank Kelly Freas, 82, an artist and illustrator who earned 10 Hugo awards for his imaginative science fiction illustrations and helped refine the iconic satirical smirk of Mad magazine's Alfred E.
“Mad Magazine” cartoonist Al Jaffee — who worked to create one of the satirical publication’s signature features, the back-cover “Fold-In” — has died. He turned 102 on March 13. His granddaughter, ...
NEW YORK – 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 Monday in ...
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