Showing posts with label PAUL REINMAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PAUL REINMAN. Show all posts

Monday, June 30, 2014

Cracked #2, 2 of 2

This is the last of that issue of Cracked from last week. The second issue dated May 1958, to be exact.

Here are some ads by Bill Ward
I printed some of the original art for a page of this Highway Patrol parody a few months ago.
Paul Reinman
Like I said last week, they reprinted a lot of things in there own magazines and various spinoffs and I've posted many before. There was an article here illustrated by Kurt Schaffenberger called How Times Have Changed.

Then something by Joe Maneely called Frankenstein Rock 'n' Roll that was reprinted in Monster Howls.
Here's their fake letters page with a drawing by John Severin
Inside front cover by Paul Reinman
And back cover by Bill Ward.

Monday, June 23, 2014

Cracked #2, 1 of 2

Cracked and its various specials and spinoffs often repackaged materials so much and I've posted excerpts on this blog so randomly it's hard to tell what's been shown and what hasn't, but I'll try.

This is all from the second issue dated May 1958.

Most of their early covers, like this one by John Severin, had cavalcade covers, which had several things going on at once, and usually showcased who was famous at the time, probably inspired by Jack Davis' cover for Mad #27. It would take forever to identify everyone featured, so I won't. In addition to Sylvester P. Smythe, who was initially there to fix the cracks throughout the magazine (Cracked. You get it?), the other mascot was supposed to be the Veronica Lake look-a-like in the lower left. She's mentioned in the (fictitious) letters page I'll show next week.
Parody of the Old Grand-Dad whiskey ads drawn by Paul Reinman.
.
The next page after this was a one-pager called The Breaking Point, byBill Ward which was used in the facsimile of Cracked #1 that I previously posted a couple years ago.

This looks like it was drawn by Russ Heath.
This definitely was.
Drawn by Bill Everett.
Here was the Superman parody by Kurt Schaffenberger I posted here.

Next was this magazine parody from Paul Reinman.
This was a parody of Bridge on the River Kwai I put here years ago.

Then the Shut-Ups by Bill Ward I previously posted here.
Then their parody of American Bandstand. More from this issue next week.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Zany #3, 3 of 4

Hard to believe, but Abbie 'n Slats was once as big as any blockbuster movie.



So was Big Ben Bolt





Marlboro had a campaign as being a "man's cigarette."


I'm not sure what this is a parody of.


At one time, American Express was the only company to have traveler's checques.


I'm not sure what this parody by Paul Reinman is of either.


Zany did their share of TV parodies, like this one of Maverick by Don Orehek, who generally wasn't known for doing caricatures.




concluded on Thursday...