Yesterday I was looking at some old Mad Magazine parodies (from the book Mad About the Eighties), and there's a few things that struck me as odd.
In the Taxi parody "Taxing", at the end Louie tells the cabbies he wants them to give some people free rides, and they object at first (Bobby particularly seems annoyed by the prospect, saying "we don't give free rides!"). But normally, Louie wouldn't want to give free rides, and the others would probably be more willing to do it.
And I wonder how long it usually takes for Mad to spoof a TV show after its begun. The Taxi parody appeared in a 1980 issue, after being on the air for two and a half seasons, and yet this parody does not fetaure Reverend Jim but does feature first season character John Burns, his appearance here played straight as opposed to being a gag appearance. And interestingly, it seems the Mad writers must have had as much trouble with the character as the actual Taxi writers did, as he isn't even given a parody name (he's not mentioned by name at all).
And the Alf parody "ARFul" features depictions of a number of real people and characters from other franchises, and not just as background or gag appearances, but actually involved in the plot a little. But one thing I noticed is that, in regards to non-Alf characters depicted, some of them are referred to by their actual name and others referred to by parody names, regardless of whether its a real person or not. E.T., Chewbacca, and Richard Dreyfus (I would have called him Richard Doofus) are all referred to by their actual names, while Dr. Ruth and some Star Trek characters are referred to by parody names.
I have a number of Mad compilation books (the real big-sized ones that have been out since the 1980s), and what's the deal with some of them having list of content pages and some not? It seems the main ones without content listings are the decades collections. And those content listings list what issues the comics were originally featured in.