Home » RIP Leonard Stern, creator of Mad Libs

Comments

RIP Leonard Stern, creator of Mad Libs — 15 Comments

  1. Loved Mad Libs! It was a favorite to take to summer camp & perfect for rainy days.

    Thank you Leonard Stern. Would have thanked you earlier, but didn’t think of Mad Libs having an inventor –just as Neo.

    Just pictured somewhere in an office of some big company, people sat around a table and wrote these (sort of like I imagine TV scripts — particularly comedy — being written!)

    But then I was about 9 or 10 at the time. What did I know?

  2. I remember having great times with MadLibs when I was a kid, and my own children thoroughly enjoyed them too. Like Neo and csimon, it never occurred to me to wonder who created the things! What a clever mind Leonard Stern had.

  3. My kids LOVED Mad Libs, although I couldn’t quite see the attraction. And I’ve never watched Steve Allen before, having grown up without a TV in England and New Zealand. I love that old music, he was very smooth.

  4. Another zany great was Ernie Kovacs. His skit “The Nairobi Trio” certainly shows how politically incorrect we once were, but we really laughed hard at it.

  5. Since my birthday was during the summer, an inexpensive way to celebrate was to pitch the family tent in the backyard and have a handful of kids sleep over in it. We spent a lot of time doing Mad Libs at those sleep overs.

  6. Lovely writing and trenchant thoughts, Neo. And I quite agree, and recall playing as kid, though MadLibs weren’t popular at camp; comic books were. One might profitably (and humorously) consider a latter-day MadLibs, featuring angry folks on the left, caricatures (of human beings) such as Maxine Waters, Weiner, Al Franken. Not to quibble, but the last part-of-speech in your MadLib should be “adverb” rather than adjective, if I recall my grammar (learned in a public school when they still taught such quaint subjects). An adjective modifies only a noun; an adverb modifies a verb (or adjective). N’est-ce pas?

  7. Bill: I don’t believe adverb would be correct.

    The test sentence I had in mind was, “Did you have a lot of fun playing with Mad Libs when you were young?”

    The word “young” is an adjective modifying the pronoun “you.”

  8. Hmmmm. “Young” modifies “were”, not “you.” “Young” would indeed be an adjective in “young man,” but that’s because it doesn’t modify a verb. But I think we’re both wrong, or both right. That is, folks might reasonably differ, I believe, as to what “young” actually modifies. There’s also the issue of “young”‘s being part of a phrase, which would be an adverbial phrase, I think–that would modify “you”…as an adjective. Rooting around on Google might give the definitive answer, though I now suspect there isn’t one.

  9. Bill: see definition “ii” for adjectives, here.

    In the case we’re talking about, the verb “be” is involved (“were” being the past tense of “to be”).

    See also this:

    Adjectives are used to modify nouns, e.g. The dog is loud. — What is the dog like? — loud

    Adverbs are used to modify verbs, adjectives or other adverbs, e.g. The dog barks loudly. — How does the dog bark? — loudly

  10. Oh Lord – thanks for the Mad Lib at the end. I haven’t even looked at a Mad Lib for at least 35 years, but the old reflexes come back. I immediately started looking for toilet and/or sexual humor. And I thought I was grown up.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>