BuzzFlash Reviews
MAD About Politics: An Outrageous Pop-up Political Parody (Hardcover Pop-Up Book)
The MAD Magazine Crew
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From the publisher:
The votes are in, and the resounding message from the American public is: �What�Me Worry?�
From the idiotic pages of MAD Magazine comes a ridiculous look at American politicians� most embarrassing faux pas and scandals. From Monicagate to Dick Cheney�s hunting �accident� to George W. Bush�s entire presidency to the mind-numbing 2008 presidential campaigns of McCain, Hillary and Obama�it all jumps to life in this unique and subversive pop up book.
Engineered with infinite chutzpah, MAD About Politics: An Outrageous Pop-up Political Parody mocks the stupidity of both parties in moronic 3D. Utilizing an ingenious pop-up design and special satiric inserts, �The Usual Gang of Idiots� is at their best making ridiculing Washington�s most revered hypocrites! Turn the pages and watch as the heads of the free world fall flat on their face and pop back up for more in six full-color, full-page spreads!
Inside MAD About Politics you�ll discover:
Campaign 2008 follies rendered in fabulous 3D! (Presidential hopeful�s contradictions have never looked so multi-faceted)
A John McCain-inspired Al Jaffee fold-in
An official Alred E. Neuman for President convention pop-up announcement of his candidacy�making a special case for bringing this idiot to the White House
The Alfred E. Neuman for President Campaign Kit, to spread the word about Alf�s abiding interest in the highest executive office
The Presidential Candidate�s Choose your own Adventure Book
The Dick Cheney Operation Game�peek inside to see if this VP really does have a heart!
Postcards from the Bush presidency�s long list of . . . accomplishments vacations
Rejected presidential portraits of �Slick Willy� (with a special, very presidential pop)
� And much, much more!
Alfred E. Neuman is the gap-toothed, idiot mascot of MAD Magazine. He first ran for President against incumbent Dwight D. Eisenhower in l956 in a hotly-contested battle. His independent candidacy in 1972 is said to have cost George McGovern the election. More recently, he handled his defeat in 2000 at the hands of the Supreme Court with grace and apathy. No one can argue that Neuman firmly stands for what he firmly believes in and firmly believes in what he firmly stands for. He is the only candidate running on a platform of change and consistency simultaneously. What � him worry?
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