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Last Friday, President Trump likened Democratic presidential contender Pete Buttigieg’s looks to those of Mad magazine’s Alfred E. Neuman. Personally, I don’t see it.
In this third legend of an all-"Mad Magazine lawsuits" installment of Comic Book Legends Revealed, we learn why Mad was able to use Alfred E. Neuman despite someone else owning a copyright on ...
In recent years, Mad fans have been treated to such masterpieces as Alfred E. Neuman picking his nose, sitting on the toilet and vomiting. Inside the covers, exploding internal organs seemed to be ...
The world’s dumbest cover boy — the red-headed, freckle-faced Alfred E. Neuman is turning heads once again. Neuman, the fictitious mascot of MAD magazine, is part of a current exhibition on ...
The news has been greeted by legions of MAD fans as a death knell. Aragonés contends the magazine and gap-toothed cover boy Alfred E. Neuman are still kicking.
Alfred E. Neuman, Mad’s freckle-faced, tooth-deficient mascot, has served as the magazine’s cover boy from the Eisenhower years to the present, appearing in various guises, including Barbra ...
This 1956 cover illustration by artist Norman Mingo, depicting Mad magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman, was presented at auction in 2008.
When Mad magazine debuted in 1952, there really wasn’t anything else like the satirical humor magazine and its mascot and cover boy Alfred E. Neuman on the pop culture landscape.Flash forwar… ...
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.
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. It’s one of 275 original paintings and drawings ...
Had the venerable satirical magazine never existed, there might have been no SNL, no Letterman, no Stewart. But as its apt pupils went mainstream, MAD itself became redundant.