Mad magazine, Buttigieg bite back at Trump mockery
Mad
magazine got in on the action between President Trump and 2020
Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg on Saturday, after
Trump compared his young political rival to a cartoon mascot from the
venerable humor mag.
First, Trump took aim at Buttigieg, the Democratic mayor of South Bend, Ind., at a “Make America Great Again” rally on Wednesday calling him “Boot edge edge.”
“He
has a great chance, don't he? He will be great,” Trump said
sarcastically. “Representing us against President Xi of China, that will
be great. That will be great. I want to be in that room and I want to
watch that one.”
But Trump was far from finished with the young
Dem. The president, who has repeatedly assigned unflattering nicknames
to political foes, dug into Mad magazine history to find an apt one for
the 37-year-old Buttigieg.
On Friday, in an interview with Politico, Trump declared that "Alfred E. Neuman cannot become president of the United States.”
Alfred E. Neuman has been the official cartoon face of Mad since 1956.
Neuman is the cartoon mascot and cover boy of the
magazine, known for his red hair, the gap in his teeth and the
catchphrase "What, me worry?"
But Mad dates back to the 1950s, and
Buttigieg, the youngest candidate in the 2020 race, responded by saying
he didn't really get Trump’s reference. (The character became a magazine icon under editor and publisher Al Feldstein, who was in charge of Mad from 1955-1984.)
“I’ll be honest, I had to Google that,” Buttigieg told Politico on Friday. “I guess it’s just a generational thing. I didn’t get the reference. It’s kind of funny, I guess.
"But
he’s also the president of the United States and I’m surprised he’s not
spending more time trying to salvage this China deal,” he said. That
was a pointed reference to economic talks with Beijing that ended Friday
without reaching a conclusive deal.
For its part, Mad couldn't
resist adding its own voice to the political back-and-forth with a tweet
about Buttigieg's lack of knowledge about Alfred E.: “Who’s Pete
Buttigieg? Must be a generational thing.”
About Neuman:
"I want a definitive portrait of this kid,” Feldstein recalled in a 2007 interview with AV/TV Club.
“I don't want him to look like an idiot — I want him to be loveable and
have an intelligence behind his eyes. But I want him to have this
devil-may-care attitude, someone who can maintain a sense of humor while
the world is collapsing around him."
As for Buttigieg, though he
was the butt of a Trump joke that may have eluded him because of his
age, he has consistently polled higher than other,
better-known Democratic contenders, including Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J.,
and former Texas congressman Beto O’Rourke, making him a promising pick
for the 2020 elections and raising the specter of future references to
Mad's gap-toothed mascot.
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