Mad 1952 #87 - back issue - $9.00
Serious dramatic films sanitized and altered to appeal to a pre-teen audience. Films parodied are "Days of Wine and Roses", "The Hustler", "Irma La Douce" (with an all funny animal cast), "Never on Sunday" and "Monte Cane".
Merry mix-ups at a costume shop.
Examples of advertised bargains with hidden costs concealed in the fine print.
The Black Spy tricks the White Spy into thinking he has a rodent problem.
Then current television commercials given satirical endings.
A satirical look at circus acts.
Record album covers designed to make you think you're getting something you're not.
The White Spy fools the Black Spy with a fake time bomb.
The 1040 form is redesigned by a psychiatrist.
A satirical look at owning a home.
A dead body objects to a bad blues singer.
Escalating examples of redesigned cigarette filter tips.
Answering machine messages designed to discourage certain callers.
Common words or phrases are given anthropomorphic embodiment.
A man attempts to install a ceiling light fixture.
A niche magazine for people with violent tempers.
People watch a marathon for rats.
Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller debate who should be the 1964 Republican nominee.
Parody of Contact Cold Remedy print ads; The makers of Contact explain how well they profit off of illnesses prolonged by their ineffective product.
On-sale date from 1964 Periodicals, Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
- Drawn Out Dramas - Cartoons drawn into the margins of random pages.
- Who Wants to Be President More than Anything? - Inside back cover.
- What Have We Got Against Colds - Back cover.
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