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  1. Sua primeira aparição deu-se em novembro de 1954, numa coleção de edições anteriores da revista, intitulada " Ballantine's 'The Mad Reader' " ( Ballantine, o leitor de Mad ). Foi, depois, em 1956, batizado e sua imagem definitiva fixada pelo desenhista Norman Mingo .

  2. Alfred E. Neuman is the fictitious mascot and cover boy of the American humor magazine Mad. The character's distinct smiling face, parted red hair, gap-toothed smile, freckles, protruding ears, and scrawny body dates back to late 19th-century advertisements for painless dentistry, also the origin of his "What, me worry?"

  3. 17 de mar. de 2016 · March 17, 2016. Leonard Ortiz/ZUMA Press/Corbis. There is no image more evocative of MAD magazine than the grinning, gap-toothed, freckled face of its mascot, Alfred E. Neuman. Ever since...

  4. 3 de mar. de 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.

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  5. Mad ' s mascot, Alfred E. Neuman, is usually on the cover, with his face replacing that of a celebrity or character who is being lampooned. From 1952 to 2018, Mad published 550 regular magazine issues, as well as scores of reprint "Specials", original-material paperbacks, reprint compilation books and other print projects.

  6. 23 de jan. de 2013 · CBC. 474K subscribers. 849. 77K views 11 years ago. In this clip from 1977, publisher Bill Gaines talks about the real history of Alfred E. Neuman - the fictitious mascot and cover boy of Mad...

    • 4 min
    • 77,7K
    • CBC
  7. 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.