MAD says the Internet
There was a time when MAD was a cult: witty, subversive, all in black / white and a man with a friendly name was editor in chief (Herbert Feuerstein). There was Don Martin, and David Berg & spy spy. "Lechz" and "choke" were included in the language of youth. But Herbert did, the Kiddies were sitting in front of MTV and Viva, 1996, the original set. What you can find today is more of a weak infusion, target group of students - nothing more for me. Yet I have with the current focus on "MAD said the Internet" access and scroll through for nostalgic reasons. Okay, it's "nice" and sometimes even elicited a "Schmunzler". informieren … Therefore: If you want to put time back in his school days, which may indeed have a look in and, for example, information about ... "MADs 50 THINGS WE HATE THE INTERNET!"








Yes, very sad what has become of it. The gloss has here made a lot of the old flair Broken and thus what once went out of it destroyed. Finally, the magazine was once proud to be a fact printed on toilet paper Schundmag. Debt, only the computer kiddies who have never understood that the magazine only optically pretended to be garbage, while inside were funny but true pearls. The magazine has brought me through many a boring math class celled.
Ok, My Comment has been deleted. May I ask why?
Ah ... sorry! Eyes open. (Pending review) had seen the comments already published as. Ey .. but here it takes a long time!
Dear Cromax,
)
the managing editor of this blog still looks all "by hand" through - as the confirmation of this can take quite some time - but eventually realizes it every reader * giggle * pant **
Herbert H. (not Herbert F.
Aha ... so is still good old manual labor.
By the way, I was quite taken aback recently when I stumbled upon the cover of the first (Us)'m MAD. http://www.collectmad.com/madcoversite/index-mad001.html In the U.S. there was the magazine are already 1952nd The first issue is also one of the great artist with Us drin.Der ingenious, but unfortunately too little known in this country, Jack Davis. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Davis_ (cartoonist)
Because memories are awake! I used to love MAD and also had an even larger collection. At some point I have, unfortunately for the proverbial apples and eggs again lent me ... could now bite in the ass. Well, yes.
My favorite sections were the Filmveralberungen and of course Don Martin's (almost) always brilliant cartoons! One I can still vividly remembered.
On the road there is a beggar, a passer-by yells at him: "Pick kindly 'ne job, you bum"
Next panel: The beggar is in a huge modern office and says: "Well - now what?"