Another humor magazine from the 1950s and
Ace Paperbacks' magazine division, which included Candar Publishing, which did a number of mens' magazines, as well as
Cracked. It differed from many of those others with spot color, mostly parodies of comics and no
Severin art. This issue is from March 1959.
The Universal Monsters were really popular around this time, so this is the magazine’s cashing in.
art by
Bill Everett.

Many magazines parodied
Norman Rockwell's “Look ma, no cavities!”
Crest Toothpaste print ads, this time by
Don Orehek.

The masthead, like many of the magazines of the time, was full of obvious pseudonyms, which I believe were probably those of the ubiquitous
Paul Laikin. As the book
If You're Cracked, You're Happy states:
“Although he did not originate the form or create any of the spin-off titles (save for
Wacko in 1981), Laikin did write for virtually every black and white humor magazine that was created from 1956-1986 and edited three of the four magazines with the lengthiest runs (
Cracked, Crazy, Sick) at one point or another.
Laikin explains, 'When
Mad made the big splash and then
Cracked came out, there was
Thimk, then I got calls and when I saw
Frantic. As soon as I saw that, I went there, too. There was no one to stop me. I could write for all of them. I was writing for
Thimk, and every one. All I had to do is see the first issue and I went over there. I couldn’t write it with
Mad's kind of criteria with every word checking this. My own level of humor was sustainable in these magazines and there really was no one else to question it. They had to take me. Only
Mad objected and with
Bill Gaines, they paid good money and were #1. The rest didn’t care. The readers didn’t care. Just change your name, which I did. I would change my own name. I was writing for
Thimk, Frenzy, Loco, all while writing for
Cracked. I was writing for
Zany too, yeah. [...]I guess [Robert Sproul] felt there was enough market for two humor magazines.”

Another mandatory
Believe It or Not parody

Orehek also drew did this parody of
Smilin' Jack.


I'm not sure who did this parody of Mickey Spillane's
Mike Hammer, another popular target of 1950's humor magazines.



Or this parody of
Alley Oop.

The mandatory article about how people are portrayed versus what they're really like.


Continued on Thursday.