As you may recall, last Sunday I had a post uniquely named
SUNDAY FUNNIES. I only displayed the opening splash of GANEFS! which was a story illustrated by Will Elder in the first issue of
MAD Comicbook.
In the comments
Si wanted to know more about the story. So, without further ado, here's the rest of the story:
(click to enlarge)
A great one. Now we can add "Phud" to "Ganefs".
ReplyDeleteA great story of why I did not become a good dirty rotten thief. Can relate to Bumble. Like me in too many ways.
Thanks. Your magazine library must be second only to your family photo library.
Si,
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome... or as once someone said in an email to me: :"Your welcome."
I have a few original MAD Comic books which I never let see light. They are worth too much. And, I probably have over a hundred MAD magazines, which are not worth much at all.
HOWEVER, a few years ago, I bought a MAD CD set which has 5 CDs and at least the first 300 issues of MAD, maybe the first 500, I forgot which.... but that is where I get my MAD stuff from.
Do you know that "Ganefs" spelled backward is "Sfenag"? And "Phud" is "Duph"? Potsrebie !
ReplyDeleteMispelled it. Potzrebie!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=potzrebie
Mad magazine equivalent of the computer programmer's foo, that is, a word which can be used to stand in for any other (as in, for example, fictitious brand names, etc.)
The label said to induce vomiting, so I applied the Potzrebie maneuver.
I'm sorry, Ms. Jones, we're going to have to charge you $500 dollars for this repair... your, uh, Potzrebie device was broken. Yeah.
Went to Google Blog Search and looked for "ganefs". Lots of entries, most of them Jewish. Did you ever hear of the Eight Iron Ganefs?.
ReplyDeleteSi,
ReplyDeleteNo, I never heard of the eight iron Ganefs. It must mean what it really doesn't mean.
Harvey Kurtzman, the editor and only writer of MAD Comicbooks used the word Potzrebie a lot. I think it is a Yiddish slang word. Another word he used was Flusherburgering (I probably misspelled it).
Always liked potzrebie. Along with shazam. And Eccc. You are expanding my vocabulary.
ReplyDeleteSi,
ReplyDeleteThat reminds me, Anna received a tear-a-page-a-day calendar of a word origin each day. For the first several days I looked at it each day and learned how a some words were developed or derived from and worked themselves into our language then I forgot the calendar existed. I haven't looked at it in over a week. Thanks for the reminder.