Mad long spaced out DeBartolo's articles to ensure that at least one appeared in every issue. From 1966 to 2019, new DeBartolo material appeared in 459 consecutive issues, dating back to 1966. This is the second longest such streak behind only
Sergio Aragonés (whose streak is active). DeBartolo has written well over 250 television or film parodies for the magazine, easily the most by any
Mad writer. DeBartolo recounted his first-ever experience submitting material to
Mad in 1961: :I wrote a sample script ("A TV Ad We Would Like to See") and sent it on to them. I had read in an article that writers should always send a
self-addressed stamped envelope along with a script they were submitting. That way, if the script was rejected you would get it back. Otherwise, it is just tossed out. Weeks later, I got back my own envelope. I was so disappointed. Then I figured I would open it in case it was a "nice try" kind of reject. But inside my envelope was cardboard. And scribbled on the cardboard was a note from associate editor
Nick Meglin. It said: "Ha ha, thought we rejected your script, but we bought it! Stapled to this cardboard is your check! Please call us about writing more stuff for us!" DeBartolo was also a writer for several TV game shows, beginning with
Barry-Enright before moving on to
Goodson-Todman. DeBartolo was on the staff of the original
Match Game in 1962, when the show was cancelled by
NBC. In what were supposed to be the final weeks of the program, DeBartolo is credited with coming up with the silly and suggestive style of questions that the show is remembered for, which led to improved ratings and an "un-cancellation" that kept the show on the air. At the same time, DeBartolo cast several of the show's panelists and guests in his own 8mm film comedies, which he shot on the studio's rooftop. A rare public showing of those films was held in a Manhattan hotel ballroom in 1964. DeBartolo told
Game Show Network in 2006 that when
Match Game moved its production west to Los Angeles in the 1970s, he stayed in New York and mailed in his questions to the
Match Game staff in
Los Angeles. The 1973 West Coast-based version ran for nine more years on
CBS and in syndication, with DeBartolo as a long-distance contributor; even writing questions for the
Match Game-Hollywood Squares Hour on NBC and the 1990 revival on ABC. Besides his experience on
Match Game, DeBartolo served as creative consultant on other Goodson-Todman game shows, such as
Tattletales and ''
What's My Line. In 1971, he was able to induce Mad
publisher William M. Gaines to appear on To Tell the Truth'' as himself. However, all four panelists failed to pick out the real Gaines. After stumping the panel, Gaines jokingly denied knowing DeBartolo. After the episode, panelist
Kitty Carlisle told DeBartolo, "I never figured it was him. I mean, look at the way he's dressed. I was looking for someone who ran a very successful magazine, so I thought it ''couldn't'' be him!" DeBartolo's book,
Good Days and Mad: A Hysterical Tour Behind the Scenes at Mad Magazine (1994), traces his first 30 years at
Mad and details his friendship with publisher William Gaines. Featuring contributions from other
Mad writers and artists, the book recounts memorable anecdotes, notably the ascent that DeBartolo, Gaines, and Gaines' wife Annie once made through the arm of the Statue of Liberty. DeBartolo was also the author of numerous non-reprint
Mad paperbacks, including
MAD-vertising,
MAD Murders the Movies, and
The MAD Book of Sex, Violence, and Home Cooking. DeBartolo also scripted several of
Don Martin's "
Captain Klutz" adventures, which appeared in Martin's series of paperbacks.
The Giz Wiz in July 2011 In February 2006, Dick DeBartolo and
Leo Laporte began producing a podcast called
The Daily Giz Wiz, a short, daily discussion about technology and gadgets appearing on
TWiT.tv. Each episode features one gadget chosen by DeBartolo, except for Tuesdays, when Laporte chooses it (Turn the Tables Tuesday). Many times, the gadget is not a fancy mainstream one, but a weird, odd, or extremely simple device. For the Friday episodes, DeBartolo picks the gadget from his Gadget Warehouse, an actual storage facility in NYC he rents for keeping his old gadgets. A shorter, weekly version of "The Daily Giz Wiz" had formerly appeared on Laporte's syndicated radio show
The Tech Guy, but was discontinued after a radio network request to make way for more live callers. But, as of mid-2010, DeBartolo comes on Laporte's radio show on Saturday to discuss a gadget. In 2011, the daily netcast program was refactored into a weekly netcast, therefore retitled "The Weekly Daily Giz Wiz". On July 24, 2012, "The Weekly Daily Giz Wiz," changed its day, format, and show title (again). Currently appearing on Thursdays, "The Giz Wiz" features DeBartolo and Chad "OMGChad" Johnson (or Leo Laporte before January 2014) sharing gadget reviews, a random gadget, and a pick from the "Gadget Warehouse." A new segment, in connection with "Turn the Table Turkey," started on July 31, 2012, features "Crap We Found in Skymall," where the viewers vote on the gadget they want reviewed on the next week's show. This segment ended in mid-2013. DeBartolo appears as a monthly guest of
Computer America, which is heard in over 30 markets including New York and Boston, as well as a streaming broadcast on the internet. He also has a periodic "gadget" segment on
ABC World News Now. DeBartolo made over 100 appearances on
Live with Regis and Kathie Lee, offering purchasing advice about various devices and products. On April 23, 2015, it was announced in Episode 1515 that The Giz Wiz would be leaving TWiT.tv and continuing the show solo with Chad "OMGChad" Johnson, utilizing Patreon for funding. == Personal life ==