Wednesday, December 12, 2012

NASA Mars Rover Curiosity appears in MAD Magazine

NASA's Mars rover Curiosity appears in the fold-in feature of MAD magazine's 2012 year-end issue, out Dec. 18.

CREDIT: MAD Magazine

NASA's Mars rover Curiosity is exploring some new terrain, the pages of MAD magazine.

The year-end issue of MAD, which is out Dec. 18, spotlights Curiosity in its fold-in, a feature that shifts from an obvious image to a hidden one when the page is folded.

The rover shares space with the so-called "Tan Mom," an American woman who gained notoriety earlier this year for her sun-scorched features and for allegedly taking her five-year-old daughter to a tanning salon.

"The main picture is a picture of the Mars rover, and somehow it magically turns into Tan Mom," said artist Al Jaffee, who has drawn every MAD fold-in since the venerable humor magazine introduced the back-page feature in 1964 — more than 400 in all.

Curiosity's appearance in MAD further demonstrates the popular appeal of the $2.5 billion robot's Red Planet mission, which began with a dramatic and unprecedented sky-crane landing on the night of Aug. 5.

"When we worked on this particular one, the rover was very hot in the news, and so was the person known as Tan Mom," Jaffee reported, stressing that the idea was a team effort. "So we tried to figure out how we could get a funny tie-in between those two elements."

Jaffee thought it was important to render the car-size Curiosity rover fairly accurately, but he added a few creative flourishes here and there.

"It really had to look like a real rover," Jaffee said. "But there are some strange things that people at NASA would find very weird. I had a good time with it."

Curiosity is motoring around Mars' Gale Crater, using 10 different science instruments to determine if the Red Planet could ever have supported microbial life.

Though it's only a few months into its surface mission, the robot has already discovered an ancient streambed where water once flowed for thousands of years at a time.

Jaffee described the mission as a "phenomenal piece of work" and said he was glad he got the chance to draw Curiosity.

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