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Alfred E. Neuman is the fictitious mascot and cover boy of the American humor magazine Mad. The character's distinct smiling face, gap-toothed smile, freckles, red hair, protruding ears, and scrawny body dates back to late 19th-century advertisements for painless dentistry, also the origin of his "What, me worry?"
Mar 17, 2016 · There is no image more evocative of MAD magazine than the grinning, gap-toothed, freckled face of its mascot, Alfred E. Neuman. Ever since the big-eared redhead first graced the satirical...
Mar 3, 2016 · MAD insiders referred to the kid by various names—Mel Haney, Melvin Cowsnofsky—but when the magazine won legal rights to the face, he was officially christened Alfred E. Neuman. A pseudonym without a specific host, it was one of many counterfeit names used as running gags in the magazine.
Jul 20, 2021 · Mad magazine gave us Alfred E. Neuman and Spy vs. Spy and made irreverent, anti-establishment humor a thing. Here's what you need to know about 'Mad.'
Mar 15, 2020 · This collection of Neuman images in his sundry incarnations would not have been possible without ‘standing on the shoulders of giants’ like Doug Gilford, Mike Slaubaugh the guys who compiled the Totally MAD CD set and, indeed, data available on this, the MAD Trash website.
Mad’s mascot Alfred E. Neuman (whose motto is “What—Me Worry?”) first appeared in 1954 on the cover of a Mad reprint anthology. He next showed up as a small piece of clip art in the mail-order catalogue parody on the cover of issue number 21 in March 1955, when Mad was still a comic book.
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Apr 20, 2022 · Alfred Newman (the late) was in reality a movie‐music man whose credits were legion on the silver screen. Morgan would use the name for various innocuous characters that passed through his show, and I did in Mad, after Morgan's fashion.