An unexpected visit from an old friend
Mookie (who blogs dead people) and I had the house to ourselves today while mom did her last day of work for awhile. We did some chores and straightening up, then sat down to watch George of the Jungle together. If you haven't seen that movie, then you need to be smacked upside. If you saw it and thought it was stupid, well... duh!
So as the closing credits rolled, we were watching for the song titles because one in particular had caught our fancy, when a name jumped out at me. Sergio Aragones. He was listed as one of the animators for the opening credit cartoon. Does that name ring a bell? I spent years loving his little doodles in the margins of MAD magazine. Each issue had countless little masterpieces scribbled in random corners of each page. And that brought back names I didn't even know I remembered. Don Martin (master of odd sound effects), Dave Berg (The Lighter Side...), Antonio Prohias (Spy vs. Spy) and Mort Drucker. These guys were my heroes growing up, because I wanted to be a cartoonist too. I wasn't bad, but nowhere near talented enough to make a living at it. Oh well. On the first trip to the grocery store every month I'd scan the magazine rack and snag the latest issue of Mad. My mom would just roll her eyes and add it to the pile at the checkout. She never complained much because I would read them cover to cover. Heck, most of my popular culture came from those pages, as I read parodies of the movies of the day - movies I'd never see in their original versions. I'd carefully fold each back cover to find their secret message (thanks to Al Jaffe), and cover my lunchbox with Mad stickers trumpeting inane sayings. Once my brother got old enough, he started to get Cracked magazine, and I always looked down on him for it. Cracked was funny (remember "Shut up's"?), but it wasn't the original, ya know? I have a box of old Mad magazines in my basement that I rescued from my parents house a few years ago. I was actually kind of amazed that they had kept them for all those years. I was proud to introduce my kids to 'the usual gang of idiots'. Update: While doing some research for this post, I found references to early illustrations done by Basil Wolverton. I loved his work, but only found it in the complilations and paperbacks. He was a little before my time. Also, fans should check out Doug Gilford's Mad Cover Site, especially his very cool cover trivia pages.
Posted by: Ted at 08:35 PM
Comments
Also, see if you can find Sr. Aragones's "Groo the Wanderer" comic book somewhere. Hilarious!
Posted by: Victor at November 30, 2003 12:28 PM (16A49)
Posted by: Stevie at November 30, 2003 01:37 PM (NC1Ly)
Posted by: Tuning Spork at November 30, 2003 09:26 PM (4sM+s)
And I couldn't pore through an issue of MAD without searching out every Sergio Aragones mini-cartoons in the margins. Those were pure friggin' GENIUS!
And of course the Fold-Ins were always a hoot. I don't ever recall one being lame.
Great--now I'm pining for a good issue of MAD and an ice-cold Dr. Pepper to sip while reading it. And I can't get either right now because the store is closed. AAAAAARGH!!
--TwoDragons
Posted by: Denita TwoDragons at November 30, 2003 09:42 PM (Vw1x9)
A fray!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at December 01, 2003 12:30 AM (LBXBY)
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