I wished I could say it ain't so.......
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/07/04/m...rnd/index.html
I wished I could say it ain't so.......
https://edition.cnn.com/2019/07/04/m...rnd/index.html
What? No more[mad]it seems that many of our institutions are passing from view.
Greed,politics ,bad management..take your pick!
Mad Magazine helped form my thinking in my youth. A small town country boy exposed to NYC dry cynicism presented through ribald [[within tasteful limits and self imposed standards) humor. It all seemed like something from far away , a life view I knew nothing of.
At age ten , I had gone to a friend's house and there it was on his older brother's bed. What is this ?? "Mad magazine!" [[ Issue 100) Thumbed through it and then got muy own copy, read it cover to back cover and from then on couldn't wait for each new issue [[ nine per year).
I convinced my parents to stop at the used book and magazine stores in Hollywood when we would visit my grandparents in Long Beach so I could seek out old copies. I wanted every issue , and sent away for old issues back east. I finally owned them all up until the year I stopped collecting . Unfortunately , like vinyl, condition means everything. I just wanted to own and read them and I bought what my parents were willing to let me get . VG reads just as good as MINT. Oh well , what me worry!
Thanks Mad Magazine , William Gaines for providing me years of eye opening entertainment in my formative years!
Last edited by Boogiedown; 07-07-2019 at 04:17 AM.
I haven't read MAD for years, but it was part of my life as a kid. And in high school, I picked up my copy from the soda shop across the street from the school and read it in study hall. [[Of course, camouflaged in my notebook)
In a way though, I think it lives on.
thanks Marv. yes , those monster mags! when we'd go to the market with my dad, my brother and I would b-line it to the magazine rack to look at those.
I enjoyed the developmental years of Mad the best. Once they hit they're stride, their content became a little too formula. Understandable because each writer was submitting his particular shtick, like Dave Berg Looks At..... Then to stay relevant to a more sophisticated youth , they widened their boundaries and had lost their innocence. I won't miss the magazine in its present form , but I know its not aimed at me anyway.
Kind of scary what becomes increasingly acceptable in our society as the norm, the goal lines of decency keep getting pushed out . The gutter level of things middle aged ladies discuss on BRAVO for instance .............
I once had the copy I was caught reading in class confiscated by my teacher.
My sister used to say I looked like Alfred E. Neuman, and I have spent the last 50 odd years taking my revenge.
Last edited by 144man; 07-09-2019 at 02:20 PM.
The cartoonists for Mad back in those days were excellent!
I used to like the Marginal Thinking Department. I can still remember some of the proverbs such as "A fool and his money buy this magazine" and "He who laughs last has just seen another meaning".
I preferred, Crazy magazine myself. I think Marvel was behind it.
you sure you didn't mean "Cracked"? It was a tad more controversial.
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