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Fred Seibert's Blog


The completely mad Don Martin

June 3rd, 2008


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I was writing about my MAD mood recently, and it prompted me to buy my sons MAD’s Greatest Artists:The Completely MAD Don Martin which he promptly fell in love with (who wouldn’t?). Which, in turn, prompted me to remember fondly this unique spot (called “A Day in the Life”) my agency did for VH1 in 1990 that Don illustrated.”A Day in the Life”
VH-1: Video Hits One
May 1990
Written by Bill Burnett
Illustrated by Don Martin
Animation production by JJ Sedelmaier for The Ink Tank
Sound design and agency production by Tom Pomposello
Executive Producers: Alan Goodman & Fred Seibert
Agency: Fred/Alan, Inc., NY

“What I create is the atmosphere.”

May 25th, 2008

The MAD World of William M. Gaines

I’ve been in a MAD frame of mind recently because of our friend, producer David Levin, who introduced us all to the magazine’s inner workings on Pulp Secret last year, and brought by a couple of his MADdest friends (editors actually) to talk a few weeks ago. Meeting them put me into the frame of mind to read David Hadju’s The Ten-Cent Plague about the repressive moment in the 1950s when states across America actually tried to censor books (in this case, comic books).
The Ten-Cent Plague
So much of it revolved around the mythology of EC comics’ and MAD’s publisher William Gaines that I started routing around for something to read on the history of MAD. Unfortunately no one’s seen fit to research anything resembling an objective view, so I settled for this 1972 virtually authorized biography. Which made me try and find one of his obituaries that so influenced me on the eve of my joining Hanna-Barbera and the cartoon business full time in June 1992.

Why such an influence? I was new to the cartoon business, never having had anything to do with making anything with characters or stories (I’d produced quite a few animated commercials), and I was scared to death because I had no idea what to do. Then I read one of Gaines’ mythologizing quotes and I started to feel like, even if I couldn’t begin to be the kind of eccentric character he was, maybe I’d have a chance.

“My staff and contributors create the magazine,” Gaines said. “What I create is the atmosphere.”