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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsOn this day, April 10, 2023, Mad magazine cartoonist Al Jaffee died.
Al Jaffee, Mad magazines cartoon maestro, dies at 102
He was Mad magazines longest-serving contributor and proudly helped corrupt the minds of generations of young Americans
By Ali Bahrampour
April 10, 2023 at 5:10 p.m. EDT

Al Jaffee draws himself in a double self-caricature. (Al Jaffee)
{snip}
The monthly fold-in, Mr. Jaffees best-known Mad cartoon, is a one-page picture with a question above and a caption below. When the page is folded vertically into thirds, the two outer sections join to form a new image and a new caption, which answers the question.

A color fold-in by Mr. Jaffee published in Mad in June 1968. The fold-ins are optical illusion gags for the magazine's inside back page. (Al Jaffee/DC Entertainment)
Conceived in 1964 as a poor-cousin parody of the multi-page foldouts that were appearing in glossy magazines such as Life and Playboy, the fold-in became a regular feature and often provided the sole note of direct editorializing in the pages of Mad.
One 1968 panel, done at the height of the Vietnam War, showed students outside a job center and asked, What is the one thing most school dropouts are sure to become? ... It folded to depict a student in a cannon with the caption: Cannon fodder.
A picture showing 1972s presidential candidates splashing around in a swimming pool promised to reveal what the public could expect this election. When folded, the image became a giant toilet with a caption reading The same old stuff.
{snip}

Mr. Jaffee in 2011. (Stephen Morton/AP)
{snip}
Mr. Jaffees first piece for Mad about a golfer whose secret to a successful swing lies in the extra fingers he sprouts appeared in 1955. Two years later, he followed Kurtzman to his new magazine, the short-lived Trump, financed by Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, and then to Humbug, which also folded.
{snip}
In 2013, Columbia University acquired Mr. Jaffees archive. Despite the Ivy League imprimatur, the cartoonist was still happy when people called him the retching jackal guy, a reference to his Mad illustration showing that animal mid-vomit. ... It may be my most successful drawing, he told his biographer. Its utterly silly, I know, but Im utterly silly. Serious people my age are dead.
He was Mad magazines longest-serving contributor and proudly helped corrupt the minds of generations of young Americans
By Ali Bahrampour
April 10, 2023 at 5:10 p.m. EDT
Al Jaffee draws himself in a double self-caricature. (Al Jaffee)
{snip}
The monthly fold-in, Mr. Jaffees best-known Mad cartoon, is a one-page picture with a question above and a caption below. When the page is folded vertically into thirds, the two outer sections join to form a new image and a new caption, which answers the question.

A color fold-in by Mr. Jaffee published in Mad in June 1968. The fold-ins are optical illusion gags for the magazine's inside back page. (Al Jaffee/DC Entertainment)
Conceived in 1964 as a poor-cousin parody of the multi-page foldouts that were appearing in glossy magazines such as Life and Playboy, the fold-in became a regular feature and often provided the sole note of direct editorializing in the pages of Mad.
One 1968 panel, done at the height of the Vietnam War, showed students outside a job center and asked, What is the one thing most school dropouts are sure to become? ... It folded to depict a student in a cannon with the caption: Cannon fodder.
A picture showing 1972s presidential candidates splashing around in a swimming pool promised to reveal what the public could expect this election. When folded, the image became a giant toilet with a caption reading The same old stuff.
{snip}

Mr. Jaffee in 2011. (Stephen Morton/AP)
{snip}
Mr. Jaffees first piece for Mad about a golfer whose secret to a successful swing lies in the extra fingers he sprouts appeared in 1955. Two years later, he followed Kurtzman to his new magazine, the short-lived Trump, financed by Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, and then to Humbug, which also folded.
{snip}
In 2013, Columbia University acquired Mr. Jaffees archive. Despite the Ivy League imprimatur, the cartoonist was still happy when people called him the retching jackal guy, a reference to his Mad illustration showing that animal mid-vomit. ... It may be my most successful drawing, he told his biographer. Its utterly silly, I know, but Im utterly silly. Serious people my age are dead.
Thu Apr 11, 2024: On April 10, 2023, Mad magazine cartoonist Al Jaffee died.
Hat tip, littlemissmartypants
Tue Apr 11, 2023: Al Jaffee, longtime 'Mad Magazine' cartoonist, dies at 102 April 10, 2023 7:23 PM ET By The AP
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On this day, April 10, 2023, Mad magazine cartoonist Al Jaffee died. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Apr 10
OP
marble falls
(64,904 posts)1. The gods of my youth are thinning out. Losing Jaffe was a major gap.
Aristus
(69,755 posts)2. His paperback digest book "MAD Inventions" was the Bible of my youth.
He proved that inventions didn't have to be Rube Goldberg style in order to be funny and wildly impractical.
He was a god of satire.
Paladin
(30,254 posts)3. Jaffee was one of the great ones.
I grew up with "Mad" magazine---but I had schoolmates who were forbidden from exposure to "Mad," as their parents viewed it as a bad influence. To this day, many years later, I still feel sorry for those kids who lived "Mad"-free lives---they were deprived of a great deal of humor and societal awareness.