Over the years,
Mad has branched out from print into other media. During the Gaines years, the publisher had an aversion to exploiting his fan base and expressed the fear that substandard
Mad products would offend them. He was known to personally issue refunds to anyone who wrote to the magazine with a complaint. Among the few outside
Mad items available in its first 40 years were cufflinks, a T-shirt designed like a
straitjacket (complete with lock), and a small ceramic Alfred E. Neuman bust. For decades, the letters page advertised an inexpensive portrait of Neuman ("suitable for framing or for wrapping fish") with misleading slogans such as "Only 1 Left!" (The joke being that the picture was so undesirable that only one had left their office since the last ad.) After Gaines' death came an overt absorption into the Time-Warner publishing umbrella, with the result that
Mad merchandise began to appear more frequently. Items were displayed in the
Warner Bros. Studio Stores, and in 1994
The Mad Style Guide was created for licensing use.
Recordings Mad has sponsored or inspired a number of recordings.
1950s In 1959, Bernie Green "with the Stereo Mad-Men" recorded the album
Musically Mad for
RCA Victor, featuring humorous music, mostly instrumental, with an image of Alfred E. Neuman on the cover; it was nominated for the Grammy for
Best Comedy Recording - Musical and has been reissued on CD. That same year,
The Worst from Mad No. 2 included an original recording, "Meet the staff of Mad", on a cardboard
33 rpm record, while a single credited to Alfred E. Neuman & The Furshlugginger Five: "What – Me Worry?" (b/w "Potrzebie"), was issued in late 1959 on the ABC Paramount label.
1960s Two full vinyl
LP records were released under the aegis of
Mad in the early 1960s: ''Mad "
Twists" Rock 'N' Roll
(1962) and Fink Along With Mad
(1963; the title being a takeoff on the then-popular TV show Sing Along With Mitch'', with "" being a general insult then current in American slang). In 1961, New York City
doo-wop group The Dellwoods (recording then as the "Sweet Sickteens") had released a novelty single on
RCA Victor, written by Norman Blagman and
Sam Bobrick, "The Pretzel" (a satiric take on then-current dance songs such as "
The Twist"),
b/w "Agnes (The Teenage Russian Spy)". Both songs were later included on ''Mad "Twists" Rock 'N' Roll''. (The Sweet Sickteens were Victor Buccellato (lead singer), Mike Ellis (tenor), Andy Ventura (tenor), Amadeo Tese (baritone), and Saul Zeskand (bass), In 1962, the Dellwoods (as they were now named), along with vocalists Mike Russo and Jeanne Hayes, recorded an entire album of novelty songs by Bobrick and Blagman. The album had originally been written and produced as a Dellwoods album for RCA, but was instead sold to
Mad and released on
Bigtop Records as ''Mad "Twists" Rock 'N' Roll
. There was a strong Mad
tie in – besides the title, a portrait of Alfred E. Neuman was featured prominently on the cover, and "(She Got A) Nose Job" from the album was bound as a flexi disc into an issue of Mad
. None of the material, however, referenced Mad
magazine, Alfred E. Neuman, or any other Mad'' tropes or features, having been recorded before the sale by RCA. Other songs on the album included "(Throwing The) High School Basketball Game", "Please Betty Jean (Shave Your Legs)", "Somebody Else's Dandruff (On My Lover-Baby's Shirt)". "Agnes (The Teenage Russian Spy)" and "The Pretzel" (now titled as "Let's Do The Pretzel (And End Up Like One!))". Other songs on
Fink Along With Mad included "I'll Never Make Fun of Her Moustache Again", "When the Braces on our Teeth Lock", and "Loving A Siamese Twin". This album also featured a song titled "It's a Gas", which punctuated an instrumental track with
belches (these "vocals" being credited to Alfred E. Neuman), along with a saxophone break by an uncredited
King Curtis).
Dr. Demento featured this gaseous performance on his radio show in Los Angeles in the early 1970s.
Mad included some of these tracks as plastic-laminated cardboard inserts and (later)
flexi discs with their reprint "Mad Specials". "Don't Put Onions On Your Hamburger" from the album was released as a single, credited to just the Dellwoods, and in 1963 the Dellwoods renamed themselves to the Dynamics and released a serious non-novelty single for
Liberty Records, "Chapel On A Hill" backed with "Conquistador".
Stage show An
Off-Broadway production,
The Mad Show, was first staged in 1966. The show, which lasted for 871 performances during its initial run, featured sketches written by
Mad regulars Stan Hart and Larry Siegel interspersed with comedic songs (one of which was written by an uncredited
Stephen Sondheim). In 1974, a
Mad animated television pilot using selected material from the magazine was commissioned by
ABC, but the network decided not to broadcast it. Dick DeBartolo noted, "Nobody wanted to sponsor a show that made fun of products that were advertised on TV, like car manufacturers." The program was instead reworked into
The Mad Magazine TV Special, which also went unbroadcast for the same reasons. The special was made by Focus Entertainment Inc., and was available for online viewing in
SD quality until 2022, when a 2K resolution scan of a
16mm film print was released online; The print was provided by one of the special's animators. In the mid-1980s,
Hanna-Barbera developed another potential
Mad animated television series that was never broadcast. In 1995,
Fox Broadcasting Company's
Mad TV licensed the use of the magazine's logo and characters. However, aside from short bumpers which animated existing
Spy vs. Spy (1994–1998) and Don Martin (1995–2000) cartoons during the show's first three seasons, there was no editorial or stylistic connection between the TV show and the magazine. Produced by
Quincy Jones, the sketch comedy series was in the vein of
NBC's
Saturday Night Live and
Global/
CBC's
SCTV, and ran for 14 seasons and 321 episodes. On January 12, 2016,
The CW aired an hour-long special celebrating the series' 20th anniversary. A large portion of the original cast returned. An eight-episode revival featuring a brand new cast premiered on July 26, 2016. Animated
Spy vs. Spy sequences were also seen in TV ads for
Mountain Dew soda in 2004. the series was composed of animated shorts and sketches lampooning current television shows, films, games and other aspects of popular culture, in a similar manner to the adult stop-motion animated sketch comedy
Robot Chicken (of which Shinick was formerly a writer and is currently a recurring voice actor); in fact,
Robot Chicken co-creator
Seth Green occasionally provided voices on
Mad as well. Critics and viewers have often cited the series as a kid-friendly version of
Robot Chicken. Much like
Mad TV, this series also features appearances by
Spy vs. Spy and Don Martin cartoons. The series ran from September 6, 2010, to December 2, 2013, lasting for four seasons and 103 episodes.
Video games In 1984, the
Spy vs. Spy characters were given their own video game
series in which players can set traps for each other. The games were made for various computer systems such as the
Atari 8-bit computers,
Apple II,
Commodore 64,
ZX Spectrum,
Master System and
Nintendo Entertainment System. Whereas the original game took place in a nondescript building, the sequels transposed the action to a desert island for
Spy vs. Spy: The Island Caper and a polar setting for
Spy vs. Spy: Arctic Antics. Not to be confused with the later television show,
Mad TV is a television station management simulation computer game produced in 1991 by Rainbow Arts for the Mad franchise. It was released on the PC and the Amiga. It is faithful to the magazine's general style of cartoon humor but does not include any of the original characters except for a brief closeup of Alfred E. Neuman's eyes during the opening screens. Another
Spy vs. Spy video game was made in 2005 for the
PlayStation 2 and
Xbox. A
Mad app was released for
iPad on April 1, 2012. It displayed the contents of each new issue beginning with
Mad No. 507, as well as video clips from
Cartoon Network's
Mad, and material from the magazine's website,
The Idiotical.
Computer software In 1996,
Mad No. 350 included a CD-ROM featuring
Mad-related software as well as three audio files. In 1999,
Broderbund/
The Learning Company released
Totally Mad, a
Microsoft Windows 95/
98-compatible CD-ROM set collecting the magazine's content from No. 1 through No. 376 (December 1998), plus over 100
Mad Specials including most of the recorded audio inserts. Despite the title, it omitted a handful of articles due to problems clearing the rights on some book excerpts and text taken from recordings, such as
Andy Griffith's "
What It Was, Was Football". In 2006, Graphic Imaging Technology's DVD-ROM
Absolutely Mad updated the original
Totally Mad content through 2005. A single seven-gigabyte disc, it is missing the same deleted material from the 1999 collection. It differs from the earlier release in that it is
Macintosh compatible. ==See also==