Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Cracked (Magazine)

 Cracked (Magazine)
type
TVTItem
 Cracked (Magazine)
label
Cracked (Magazine)
 Cracked (Magazine)
page
Cracked
 Cracked (Magazine)
comment
Before it became a humor website, Cracked was a magazine. Specifically, it was a knockoff of MAD (in their own words, their fanbase was "primarily comprised of people who got to the store after MAD sold out"), using a similar formula of movie and television parodies with deconstructive humor and otherwise (ostensibly) humorous articles, as well as its own Ugly Cute "mascot," Sylvester P. Smythe. It was by far the longest-surviving MAD knockoff, lasting in print form from 1958 until 2004, when a great deal of Executive Meddling reduced the mag to an erratic printing schedule and many of the original contributors left. For its last few issues, it was published by Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick. Finally, it was Retooled as a "lad mag." This format didn't last long, and the magazine went under in 2007, only to re-establish itself as a website.Notable artists who have contributed include John Severin, Bill Ward, Don Orehek, Warren Sattler, Mike Ricigliano, Howard Nostrand, Rurik Tyler, Frank Cummings, Pete Fitzgerald, Gary Fields, and Walter James Brogan. Writers have included George Gladir, Joe Catalano, Paul Laikin, Mort Todd (editor in the 80s), Steve Strangio, Dan Fiorella, Andy Simmons (son of National Lampoon's Matty Simmons), Lou Silverstone (formerly of MAD, and also the editor for most of The '90s), and Greg Grabianski (who also cowrote Scary Movie 2 and some episodes of Beavis and Butt-Head).Recurring features: Nanny Dickering: A buxom interviewer who would "interview" all sorts of subjects. "Shut-Ups": A two-panel comic. The first panel presents one person in a scenario, while the second has another person respond with a quip beginning with "Shut up and..." Sagebrush: An Old West-themed comic, created by John Severin. The Cracked Lens: Still shots from various movies and TV shows, with witty captions added by the editors. Spies and Sabs: Miniature drawings of stereotypical "cloak and dagger" type spies; unlike Spy vs. Spy, these were inserted into various situations with witty commentary. Hudd & Dini: A gag comic about two prisoners trying to escape.For tropes related to the website, see Cracked.
 Cracked (Magazine)
fetched
2023-10-09T13:44:06Z
 Cracked (Magazine)
parsed
2023-10-09T13:44:06Z
 Cracked (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to Anime: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 Cracked (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to BeavisAndButtheadDoAmerica: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Cracked (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to HarryPotterAndThePhilosophersStone: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Cracked (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to JamesBond: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Cracked (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to Mad: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Cracked (Magazine)
processingComment
Dropped link to Survivor: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Cracked (Magazine)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1b451dbd
type
No-Dialogue Episode
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1b451dbd
comment
No-Dialogue Episode: "Hudd & Dini" never used any dialogue.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1b451dbd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1b451dbd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_1b451dbd
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1c79ae8c
type
Those Two Guys
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1c79ae8c
comment
Those Two Guys: Mike Ricigliano tended to write most of his stuff with his friend Roger Brown.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1c79ae8c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1c79ae8c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_1c79ae8c
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1f0f3d6f
type
Cute Kitten
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1f0f3d6f
comment
Cute Kitten: John Severin loved to draw Siamese cats in the background of his work.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1f0f3d6f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_1f0f3d6f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_1f0f3d6f
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_28ae9dbf
type
Pen Name
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_28ae9dbf
comment
Pen Name: Bill Ward originally contributed under the name "McCartney". Paul Laikin often padded out the writing credits with pseudonyms (most prominently "Pula Kinlai"). Initially, this was done to hide the fact that he wrote several issues by himself. But upon his short-lived return in the 1980s, it was done to cover up that he was recycling material from other magazines he had worked on and/or was giving kickbacks to friends and family who did not actually contribute. As John Severin was their most common illustrator, he was fond of switching out his signature for something silly, such as "O. O. Severin", "Seneriv", "Nireves", "Le Poer" (the Irish form of his middle name, Powers), "Sigbjorn" (the Swedish form of his last name), etc. MAD and Cracked had a policy that contributors could submit material to both magazines, but had to use a pen name at one of the two. Known examples included Rurik Tyler calling himself "Bo Badman" on his early Cracked work and Greg Theakston crediting himself as "Earl P. Whooton". Greg Grabianski occasionally wrote as "Judd Stomp", most notably on the parody of Beavis and Butt-Head Do America, since he was also a writer on the show. Lou Silverstone sometimes wrote under the names Vic Bianco, Tony Frank, or Linc Pershad. During the Kulpa era, both Barry Dutter and Dick Kulpa were fond of using pseudonyms to cover up that they were doing most of the work themselves.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_28ae9dbf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_28ae9dbf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_28ae9dbf
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2c385759
type
Massive Multiplayer Crossover
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2c385759
comment
Massive Multiplayer Crossover: They tried a Teen People magazine parody called Toon People, which had a large number of cartoon characters. Given the uprise of anime in the earlier half of the 2000s, they tried a story in which Western cartoon characters "attacked" popular anime characters. All of their 'Cracked Movies' were crossovers featuring Cracked's original characters (Sylvester P. Smythe, interviewer Nanny Dickering, cowboy Sagebrush, and the Talking Blob) joining forces, usually to stop some threat to the magazine. Many of them are are at least mildy amusing. The weakest is probably the fifth, where the regular cast gets Demoted to Extra while a bunch of heroes from 80's mystery and crime TV shows take over the action to find out who stole the magazine's logo. The 'Greatest Film Ever Made' involved a crossover between Rocky, Jaws, C-3PO and R2-D2 of Star Wars, the Godfather, and a few other movies that were popular during the late 70's/early 80's. All these characters were gathered together to play a baseball game. They did a parody of Survivor a few months after the first season ended (back when the show was massively popular) using the Cracked roster of characters. Simpy Dumpkins, The World's Most Hated Man was the first to go. Naked Guy (Richard Hatch) ended up winning.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2c385759
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2c385759
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_2c385759
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2f8795ed
type
Inherited Illiteracy Title
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2f8795ed
comment
Inherited Illiteracy Title: It was officially Cracked mazagine.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2f8795ed
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_2f8795ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_2f8795ed
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_325b3b02
type
Caption Humor
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_325b3b02
comment
Caption Humor: The premise of "The Cracked Lens", which applied captions (typically written by Randy Epley) to stock photos or scenes from public-domain movies.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_325b3b02
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_325b3b02
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_325b3b02
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4af55b78
type
Credits Gag
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4af55b78
comment
Credits Gag: Starting in the 1990s, the artist and writer bylines often had funny nicknames pertaining to the theme of the article.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4af55b78
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4af55b78
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_4af55b78
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4f4372e9
type
Early-Installment Weirdness
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4f4372e9
comment
Early-Installment Weirdness: The first ten years or so didn't have movie or TV parodies, and usually relied on short, slapdash gag articles. Other than John Severin, none of the artists were regulars, instead cribbed from comics talents of the day (with only Bill Ward staying for a significant period of time). Features like Hudd & Dini, Ye Hang-Ups, Nanny Dickering, and the parodies didn't come until The '70s.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4f4372e9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_4f4372e9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_4f4372e9
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_52db461d
type
Significant Anagram
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_52db461d
comment
Paul Laikin often padded out the writing credits with pseudonyms (most prominently "Pula Kinlai"). Initially, this was done to hide the fact that he wrote several issues by himself. But upon his short-lived return in the 1980s, it was done to cover up that he was recycling material from other magazines he had worked on and/or was giving kickbacks to friends and family who did not actually contribute.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_52db461d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_52db461d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_52db461d
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_5f8e4390
type
Belly Dancer
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_5f8e4390
comment
Belly Dancer: In issue #126, the "Products◊ and◊ Ads◊ Designed◊ for the Arab Market" comic feature gadgets and tools for Arab sheiks in mind, with many a dancer and harem girl showing off their usefulness.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_5f8e4390
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_5f8e4390
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_5f8e4390
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_66907f54
type
Hourglass Plot
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_66907f54
comment
Hourglass Plot: Real Life example. Cracked started off as a ripoff of MAD Magazine that eventually sputtered out and died...until it went online. Now the ripoff is extremely popular while the original is struggling to stay afloat.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_66907f54
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_66907f54
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_66907f54
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_6eb1268c
type
Extreme Omnivore
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_6eb1268c
comment
Extreme Omnivore: The Talking Blob.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_6eb1268c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_6eb1268c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_6eb1268c
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_70ab07bc
type
Superpowered Date
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_70ab07bc
comment
Superpowered Date: Super People, a superhero parody of People magazine, has an article explaining how to have an exceptionally cheap date using your Flying Brick superpowers. The night starts with using Super-Strength and Super-Speed to break into a theater and repair the damage while your date is distracted. The only expense for the night is bringing your own popcorn and using Eye Beams to cook it in a large garbage can. The popcorn, along with free sodas beaten out of the vending machine, help deceive your date into thinking you're very generous. After the movie, you fly her home to save on gas. Finally, at her doorstep, you use your Super-Breath in reverse to suck out all the local air, causing her to briefly faint and assume you have super-kissing powers.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_70ab07bc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_70ab07bc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_70ab07bc
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_7b21ef92
type
Later-Installment Weirdness
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_7b21ef92
comment
Later-Installment Weirdness: The Dick Kulpa era featured attempts at a much "hipper" writing style, with far more edgy humor than the predecessors, shiny tabloid-esque covers laden with headlines, and frequent use of street slang. The "lad mag" retool was an even further example.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_7b21ef92
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_7b21ef92
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_7b21ef92
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_80204ff5
type
Verbed Title
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_80204ff5
comment
Verbed Title
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_80204ff5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_80204ff5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_80204ff5
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_8b5db38b
type
They Killed Kenny Again
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_8b5db38b
comment
They Killed Kenny Again: During the Kulpa era, one running gag was "Mr. Precious", a cartoon cat created by Ed Steckley, who would meet an untimely death in each installment (such as taking a lawn dart to the head when trying to chase after a frog).
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_8b5db38b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_8b5db38b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_8b5db38b
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_9193cbcb
type
Redundant Parody
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_9193cbcb
comment
Redundant Parody: The mag also had an occasional habit of parodying things that were already parodies. Just how do you do a wacky parody of Hot Shots!, which is a wacky parody of Top Gun?
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_9193cbcb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_9193cbcb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_9193cbcb
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa42306e
type
Totally Radical
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa42306e
comment
Totally Radical: "Phat" showed up as early as the mid-90s, but the use of street slang, hip-hop references, and the like became far more prominent in the Dick Kulpa era.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa42306e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa42306e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa42306e
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa9fcfed
type
Embarrassing Middle Name
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa9fcfed
comment
Embarrassing Middle Name: As determined by a contest in 1998, Sylvester P. Smythe's middle name is "Phooey."
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa9fcfed
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa9fcfed
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_aa9fcfed
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ac7b87df
type
Off-Model
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ac7b87df
comment
Mike Ricigliano was originally tasked to draw "Shut-Ups" in a style imitative of the installment's previous artist, Charles Rodrigues. This resulted in very lumpy, Off-Model looking art. After a short time, he was allowed to divert into his own radically different style which stuck to the very end.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ac7b87df
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ac7b87df
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_ac7b87df
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b01abe4f
type
Catchphrase
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b01abe4f
comment
Catchphrase: The Talking Blob: So Long, Suckers! (prior to his consuming his victim)
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b01abe4f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b01abe4f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_b01abe4f
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b032e4ed
type
Ms. Fanservice
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b032e4ed
comment
Ms. Fanservice: Nanny Dickering, a buxom lady who interviews various famous people or expies thereof, was always drawn to be very attractive.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b032e4ed
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b032e4ed
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_b032e4ed
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b219ac90
type
ReTool
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b219ac90
comment
Retool: For the last few issues, it was remade as a "lad mag" akin to Maxim (i.e., suggestive photographs of females, stories about cars, etc.). Didn't work.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b219ac90
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b219ac90
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_b219ac90
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: Countless attacks at MAD over time, such as a cover gag where Alfred E. Neuman steals the "A" from the Cracked logo, or a column pointing out that both magazines did similar cover art spoofing the front cover of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone only a couple months apart. MAD, being the high-class mag that it is, never once counterattacked. Issue 326's "A TV Commercial We'd Pay to See" is a faithful recreation of Jerry Seinfeld's American Express commercial where he travels through England and experiences its culture to increase his reference pool... except his stand-up routine still bombs the second time around.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b53077b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_b53077b3
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b8e3f20a
type
Demoted to Extra
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b8e3f20a
comment
All of their 'Cracked Movies' were crossovers featuring Cracked's original characters (Sylvester P. Smythe, interviewer Nanny Dickering, cowboy Sagebrush, and the Talking Blob) joining forces, usually to stop some threat to the magazine. Many of them are are at least mildy amusing. The weakest is probably the fifth, where the regular cast gets Demoted to Extra while a bunch of heroes from 80's mystery and crime TV shows take over the action to find out who stole the magazine's logo.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b8e3f20a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_b8e3f20a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_b8e3f20a
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c8c2d4a3
type
Parodies for Dummies
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c8c2d4a3
comment
Parodies for Dummies: Collectors Edition #119 came with an insert titled Star Wars for Dummies.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c8c2d4a3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c8c2d4a3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_c8c2d4a3
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c9597a03
type
Self-Deprecation
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c9597a03
comment
Self-Deprecation: There were plenty of jokes at the magazine's own expense.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c9597a03
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_c9597a03
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_c9597a03
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: At least compared to MAD. Even moreso in the mid-late 80s when the focus became more about doing parodies of pop culture and celebrities, almost all of which were more lighthearted spoofs than satirical jabs.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ce6555f0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ce6555f0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_ce6555f0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d389d581
type
Calculator Spelling
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d389d581
comment
Calculator Spelling: The magazine once had an article that played with this concept. For example — Mary wanted something sweet for her birthday, so John gave her a box of ____ and told her to wait a week. (81 x 81 - 1223). The answer: 5338, or "Bees".
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d389d581
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d389d581
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_d389d581
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d83f3588
type
Depending on the Artist
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d83f3588
comment
Depending on the Artist: Early on, Sylvester P. Smythe was a lot uglier; this was especially true of the covers that Jack Davis drew before he went back to MAD. John Severin refined his character design into a more Ugly Cute appearance, as seen on the page image. Nanny Dickering's appearance also varied greatly from artist to artist.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d83f3588
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_d83f3588
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_d83f3588
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_dfe57573
type
Historical In-Joke
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_dfe57573
comment
Historical In-Joke: Issue #325, the 40th anniversary issue, includes a fictitious guide to collecting Cracked. Included in the guide to said issues are entries reading "Ghost of editor's dead wife hired as art director", "Ghost of editor's dead wife promoted to editor", and "1st appearance of editor's son as cover artist". During his short stint as editor in The '80s, Paul Laikin really did credit his dead wife as art director and editor, and hire his son to draw the covers.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_dfe57573
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_dfe57573
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_dfe57573
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e26f04b4
type
Last of His Kind
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e26f04b4
comment
Last of His Kind: By far the longest-lived of all the MAD knockoffs. For the last two decades of Cracked's print run, only it and MAD itself were still in print.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e26f04b4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e26f04b4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_e26f04b4
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e43c66bd
type
Art Evolution
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e43c66bd
comment
Art Evolution: Mike Ricigliano was originally tasked to draw "Shut-Ups" in a style imitative of the installment's previous artist, Charles Rodrigues. This resulted in very lumpy, Off-Model looking art. After a short time, he was allowed to divert into his own radically different style which stuck to the very end. Walter Brogan's art shifted greatly over the years. His early drawings had a more jagged and pointy appearance. Later issues have the art looking somewhat sloppy, due mainly to him being overworked.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e43c66bd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_e43c66bd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_e43c66bd
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ea2e9f2d
type
No Ending
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ea2e9f2d
comment
No Ending: Their Star Trek: Insurrection parody ended with Ru'afo being revealed to be Captain Kirk, who proceeds to take back the Enterprise. The usual "Th' End" caption is missing.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ea2e9f2d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ea2e9f2d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_ea2e9f2d
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: Absolutely, positively, unquestionably, undeniably, the very very very last of The Cracked Lens (and we really really mean it this time, for sure!), part IX.
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_f9f2c33
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_f9f2c33
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_f9f2c33
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ffad4e9f
type
Shown Their Work
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ffad4e9f
comment
Shown Their Work: Often present during Mort Todd's run as editor. Particularly in anthology issues, he would go out of his way to highlight the talent behind each piece (such as a whole page dedicated to how Nanny Dickering's design shifted with each successive artist).
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ffad4e9f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_ffad4e9f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_ffad4e9f
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_name
comment
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Cracked (Magazine) / int_name
 Cracked (Magazine) / int_name
itemName
Cracked (Magazine)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 CRACKED
sameAs
Cracked (Magazine)
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Art Evolution / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Breast Expansion / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Burn the Orphanage / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Calculator Spelling / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Celebrity Paradox / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Crack is Cheaper / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked
seeAlso
Cracked (Magazine)
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Creator's Culture Carryover / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Credits Gag / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Drop-In Character / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Embarrassing Middle Name / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Forgotten Trope / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Historical In-Joke / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Horror Host / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Inherited Illiteracy Title / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Japanese Ranguage / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Later-Installment Weirdness / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Life Meter / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Mattress-Tag Gag / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Mistaken for Aliens / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Nap-Inducing Speak / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Parodies for Dummies / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Short-Lived, Big Impact / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Spoofed the Ironic Film Seriously / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Superpowered Date / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
The Lopsided Arm of the Law / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Totally Radical / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Verbed Title / int_5d05d4af
 Cracked (Magazine)
hasFeature
Where No Parody Has Gone Before / int_5d05d4af