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Doohickamabob

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Posts posted by Doohickamabob

  1. Just got this one in the mail -- French Mad #1, from 1965. I've been looking for this for a long time, and am very happy to have found it in nice grade. (Now I need to get Italian Mad #1, Danish Mad #1, etc.)

     

    mad-french.jpg

    My favorite thing about this is the translation of "What, me worry?" to "Quoi -- moi, m'en faire?"

     

  2. I have a Spanish issue somewhere - but for whatever reason, if I recall - the cover is kind of blah. I'll try to locate it and post a scan.

     

    That's cool. Yeah, some of the foreign issue covers are blah, or just U.S. covers with foreign-language text. But they're still kinda cool. It's interesting how some jokes translate completely, and some have to be reworked or discarded. (I'll show some examples of this when I post more of my foreign issues.)

  3. Loved the Spy vs Spy animated shorts they showed with MadTV

     

    That's a good one. I wonder if those are all compiled somewhere? (Maybe on YouTube?)

     

    I really dug MadTV, but the "Mad" connection is pretty nebulous outside of the Spy vs. Spy cartoons. I went with my brother to a live taping once, when Seth Green was the guest star. It was interesting watching a skit performed numerous times, with little bits of improv and variation in each performance (the best moments of which would later be edited seamlessly into a single sketch).

     

    During a break in the shooting, Seth Green walked up and talked to us in the studio audience, and said how happy he was to be a part of this because "Mad" had been such a major influence on him during his youth, and on his style of comedy in "Robot Chicken," etc.

  4. Here are two of my favorite foreign issues in a sequence together. The one on the left is German issue #83. The one on the right is Argentina #1. (This cover concept was based on a Mad article that showed the aftermath of various Mad covers -- I can't remember which issue this was, but it fascinated me when I was a kid, and I longed to enter an alternative reality where such issues existed. Little did I know, they did in fact exist with foreign issues.)

     

    mad-shark-sequence.jpg

  5. Okay, so let me get the ball rolling on some of my favorite foreign Mad issues. These are from my collection. First, here are some foreign #1 copies:

     

    mad-foreign-number1.jpg

     

    Starting from the upper left and going clockwise, that's the Great Britain #1, the Netherlands #1, the Turkey #1, and the Argentina #1.

     

    (Just got the French #1 on eBay, and it's supposedly in the mail from Europe. Can't wait to get it!)

     

  6. Here's my #1, which is one of the first books I had slabbed. I purchased it as a VG/F on eBay for a song. Shows how much that site has regressed. These days, many sellers would call it NM.

     

    Fantastic copy! I am sure you could get much more than a song for that now. Probably a whole iPod's worth of songs...

  7. Thought it would be fun to try a group shot of my 1940s/50s sci-fi books, across various titles and companies. I get such a kick out of those early, quaint notions of what "the future" and "space travel" would be like... and it definitely fired up the imaginations of a lot of great comic artists! (Also note the cool logos represented here.)

    Hope to beef up my collection further with some early-ish Planets and more Xela airbrush covers in the months to come.

     

    GAscifi.jpg

     

    Beautiful collection of sci-fi comics! The sci-fi aesthetic from that time period is so beautiful. I especially like your Startling #48, which looks like a really clean, nice grade.

  8. There is something that is confusing me, and I wonder if anyone here can shed light on the relationship between Ziff-Davis and St. John between 1951-1953?

     

    When you're done with that, somebody please explain the connection between Timely, Atlas and Marvel comics. Also I'd like to know what's up with the Youthful Magazines and Trojan connection, and the link between Avon and Realistic.

     

  9. the shomburg cover on 13 is worth of a detail shot, but are high heels functional in the jungle?

     

    They'd be great for poking holes in coconuts or mangos. And don't forget -- as the L.B. Cole cover of Guns #6 demonstrates, high heels are also great for swimming 'n' shark-fighting.

  10. Mailday with this Wild Boy issue, # 11 a.k.a. # 2. The little secret here is that Ziff-Davis paid very competitively, esp. once they brought in Siegel as editor and therefore was able to attract top talent freelancers to draw their books. This Wild Boy is a little too early for that effect to truly kick in but the art is competent.

     

    That kid's feet must have been pretty messed up afterwards.

  11. I just won this in the August Heritage auction. I don't know if this would qualify as an underground comix. Robert Crumb and his brother Charles made this when they were kids.

    Foo #2

     

    Foo.jpg

     

    Wow, that is amazing! How many copies do you suppose are out there? Three?

     

    I suppose you already know this, but the cover is based on a panel Wally Wood did for the story "V-Vampires!" in Mad Comics #3.