Like many cartoonists of my generation, I grew up reading MAD magazine. By the early 1970s, when I discovered William Gaines' subversive publication, MAD was undergoing a kind of second renaissance. Inside a typical issue of the time you'd find work by Mort Drucker, Jack Davis, Al Jaffee, Angelo Torres, Don Martin, Dave Berg, Bob Clarke, George Woodbrige, Antonio Prohias, Jack Rickard, Stan Hart, Tom Koch, Larry Siegel, Frank Jacobs, Arnie Kogen, and Dick de Bartolo -- a veritable hall of fame of American cartoonists and satirists.
The changing social, sexual and political attitudes of the late 60s and early 70s provided great fodder for the magazine, and the Usual Gang of Idiots (as publisher Gaines dubbed his contributing artists and writers) produced some of the best work of their careers.
As an impressionable 10-year-old, I devoured every new issue of MAD, relishing each irreverent page. I copied Jack Davis and Mort Drucker drawings, trying to figure out just how these cartooning titans created their mirthful masterworks. I even wrote my own "MAD-like" comics, featuring such terrible puns as "Broom 222" (after the TV show "Room 222") and drawings of singer Tom "Bones."
I'd long wanted to make it into the pages of MAD, and submitted material sporadically over the years, always receiving rejection slips. A couple of years ago I began to submit again and actually received a response from one of the editors He liked TRIPLE TAKE and invited me to submit more material. Many submissions and rejections later, he finally accepted a piece for publication.
I received my comp copies of issue 483 today -- the "Zombie" issue. Flipping to page 27, I found my cartoon: "Product Placement in Horror Movies." Yes!
MAD may not quite be the same magazine it was when I was a kid: Jack Davis stopped working for it years ago and Mort Drucker contributes material only sporadically. But Sergio Arragones is still there every issue and a new generation of cartoonists has taken up the MAD mantle: John Caldwell, Tom Richmond, Hermann Mejia, Tom Bunk, Drew Friedman, to name but a few. And Al Jaffee continues to do the inside cover fold-in.
One of the usual gang of idiots. Me? I couldn't be more proud.
Congrats, Scott!
ReplyDeleteI subscribe to MAD, so I'll be sure to see it.
Congratulations, man. That's a dang cool roster to join.
ReplyDeleteWow!
ReplyDeleteGood going. Another thing to add to your growing list of cartoon accomplishments.
Go for the cover of Time Magazine next.
Ok...I'm just gonna come out and say it. I'm willing to wager Brubaker is really Kazoo from The Flintstones...the dude pops up everywhere, out of nowhere.
ReplyDeleteCongrats on the Mad Magazine cartoon...well done.
I was in Crack once. No, not Cracked Magazine. 'Crack'
I'm not even gonna tell you what kind of magazine it was or the illustration I did, Brubaker is young, and this isn't for young ears.
Go for TIME Canada first...
Jarrett,
ReplyDeleteIsn't "Crack" Magazine the Plumber's Monthly?
Congratulations, Scott!
ReplyDeleteSeeing your own cartoon in "MAD" must be an great feeling. This cartoon was very funny, and actually might have fit in with "EEK!" although the irreverent humor of "MAD" is a good fit.
"EEK!" is still awesome, by the way. Keep it up.
Thanks guys!
ReplyDeleteChris, funny you should mention EEK! This chainsaw gag was actually written for the strip and was part of the initial submission package (although the art's since been revised).
When I sold the gag to MAD, I pulled it from the pile before EEK! launched.
Brubaker is like the wind...the ghostly wind....
ReplyDeleteHey Scott did you hear about how they're making a new Jason movie -- what a coincidence!!!!
ReplyDeleteI mean I assume that it's Jason in the cartoon. lol
ReplyDelete