Well, it finally happened. I hate saying when the end of an era has
come. After all, am I even qualified to
make such a determination? Especially in
this regard where I have no say in the matter at hand, no horse in this race,
no Miss South Dakota in the pageant. All
I can do is assess my surroundings, take stock of what has come and what is
going to come, and make a final prognosis.
So if you would all please join me in taking our hats off in respect,
saying a quick if not irreverent prayer, and meeting in the fellowship hall for
dry ham sandwiches and soggy potato chips, I would greatly appreciate it. The time has finally arrived. MAD
magazine has passed away.
With issue #550, MAD magazine as we all know it will cease to exist. Yes, there will be a rebooted MAD coming in
April 2018 with a new first issue, but for all intents and purposes the
magazine that William M. Gaines founded is now ultimately gone. They are moving operations from New York and
most if not all of the staff are not going along for the ride to the new digs
in Los Angeles. There will be a new
editor-in-chief taking over the reins from 30+ year veteran John Ficarra and
according to DC co-publisher Dan DiDio, “I knew moving to the west coast
wouldn’t change MAD too much.” Huh. (This
is the same creative mind that put his okay on DC’s New 52, so DiDio certainly knows
what is unintentionally hilarious.)
And so it begins. MAD
on the west coast? While I bear no ill
will to the new creative staff, I must encouragingly say this: “Nah.” By severing ties with the last vestiges of
the Usual Gang of Idiots, Time Warner/DC Comics has shown that they are only
concerned about the MAD name
brand. Content is secondary at
best. As DC has displayed such wisdom
with how they reboot their comic universe every fifteen minutes or so, why
continue to prove that you don’t know what you’re doing by doing what you’re
doing to MAD?
I'm guessing DC never brought their Stupid Questions to Al Jaffee. |
Now to be fair, MAD hasn’t been the sales giant it once was. Back in the 1970s, I believe everyone with a
vowel in their name bought an issue. But
those times are past and we’re now in whatever the hell decade we’re calling
this one right now. MAD was a monthly publication for a while, and then 8 times a year,
then a monthly, then a quarterly, and then 6 times a year, and then only in
months with the letter ‘R’ in their names.
Part of the reason to cut back production was definitely sales, but
there always has been a core audience. And
here’s where it gets odd.
MAD
magazine is certainly a peculiar duck among publications. They haven’t changed much from what Bill
Gaines established. Yes, they went to color printing. Yes, they started having ad space for actual products that actually exist. But overall, the format has been
retained. In a world where print is dead
every other day, MAD was a constant
in an ever-changing world. Others might
argue that is why a change like a reboot had to come because the magazine was a
dinosaur. But by cutting off the ties
with the past, I’m sure most of the current readership no longer have that
nostalgic feeling and won’t go forward with MAD:
The Reboot.
We miss you, Bill. |
You see, yes the audience is graying,
but they were passing along their love of the magazine to their kids and
beyond. Millennials aren’t flocking sight
unseen to the newsstand, if they can find one, to seek out a print humor magazine
that started out in 1952. The audience
isn’t blindly coming from that pool, no matter how many times you stick Donald
Trump on the cover as of late. The circulation
comes from the older readers handing it over to the new blood. But when the older contributors are no longer
a part of the magazine, I lose interest entirely.
My
daughter is 7 years old and thankfully she now knows MAD. Or at the very least
she knows MAD’s Maddest Artist Don
Martin via a couple of books that I gave her.
She loves them and I have a wonderful feeling when I see mommy yelling
at her to read something better than that stuff. Obviously parental solidarity prevents me
from overtly showing how pleased as punch I am about her reading material
choices. (Hey, I was that same kid
hearing the same stuff from my mom!) What’s next for her? The MAD
Marginal cartoons? The Lighter
Side? Spy vs. Spy? The Fold-ins?
The primers, the parodies, the songs, the MAD Takes a Look at whatevers?
No one but Sergio Aragonés could make that many ducks look intimidating. |
I’ve been a reader of MAD since 1987 and I can still remember
the cover of the first issue that I got.
Beverly Hills Cop II’s Eddie
Murphy was grinning about how he’s about to shoot at a target with Alfred E.
Neuman behind it. The next issue was
even better with a Season’s Greetings cover that had Alfred dressed up as the
Easter bunny going into a snow-covered chimney.
My nine year-old mind was hooked from that moment.
If only Eddie smiled this much today... |
I
hunted down the magazine and sought out their paperbacks at grocery stores and
flea markets. I proudly owned the MAD board game, frustrating all that
agreed to play it with me. Every MAD Super Special was grabbed up and when
there was no MAD available, I even
sought out rivals like Cracked. (This was back when Cracked was a moderately funny magazine, instead of the moderately
unfunny, tar pit of lists website it is today.)
For
an art fair in grade school, I woodburned an image of Alfred and the MAD logo, placing third since the judges
either had taste or didn’t, depending on how you want to interpret that. From the MAD
parodies, I knew the ins and outs of movies and TV shows that I had never seen.
Most importantly, I discovered what the word “schmuck” meant. (Judging by some comment about the west
coast, I now believe it started out as a derivation of the word “didio”.)
This makes more sense than the actual Easter Bunny. |
Thinking that I had evolved past MAD, I fell off the wagon for some time. However, discovering myself in the Upper
Peninsula of Michigan with a new job and unfamiliar surroundings, I fell back
on what I knew. I started picking up MAD again and sure enough there were plenty
of the old guard around, keeping watch on the content, never straying from the
roots. I proudly framed the Soul of MAD art print I received for subscribing
again so every day I can see Alfred painting the blacktop in my bedroom. Feel free to put whatever dirty double
entendre you’d like on that.
MAD
almost felt like a family member to me: it came over to eat me out of house and
home, was almost always found in the bathroom, and avoided my entreaties to help
move a couch. Unlike a family member,
the art was quite good, I could skip over the dull bits, and it never
complained when I would do the fold-in. Continuing
the family parallel, I found myself very saddened when MAD staffers would pass away.
Jack Davis, Don “Duck” Edwing, John Caldwell, Paul Peter Porges, Bob
Clarke, Al Feldstein, Lenny Brenner, Barry Liebmann have all gone in the past several
years alone. I was genuinely taken aback
when I heard of each one passing.
Jack Davis had to have at least 18 fingers in order to draw all that. |
Even more remarkable were the voices
that still were working on the magazine at this time. Editor-in-Chief John Ficarra had been an
Editor-in-Chief since 1984. Art Director
Sam Viviano, Senior Editors Charlie Kadau and Joe Raiola, writers Dick
DeBartolo and Frank Jacobs, artists Sergio Aragonés and the venerable Al Jaffee
still contributed to the magazine. It
was great to have these voices of continuity.
Because above all else, the voice of Bill Gaines continued on through
these writers and artists and editors.
There was the connection, the bridge to the past, the nostalgia. And now it is gone.
Fortunately, old issues aren’t
outrageously over-priced. MAD paperback books consisting of
reprints or original material are in plenty of places online or in used book
stores. MAD did some newer hardcover reprints of material as tributes to individual
artists and writers such as Dave Berg, Don Martin, Frank Jacobs, Mort Drucker,
and Sergio Aragonés. These are easy
enough to find or if you want to come over to my house, call ahead and you can
read some of the copies I have for a nominal fee.
Going forward, the magazine for all
intents and purposes is gone. MAD, you will be missed indeed. Thank you for the entertainment and some of
the best art and writing from the greatest group of schmucks and schmendricks
ever assembled on the MAD
zeppelin. The legacy of the original MAD is still alive. At least in my household as I raise my own
Usual Gang of Idiots. As always, “What, Me
Worry?” Potrzebie!
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