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February 11, 2011

PHILADELPHIA -- There is no doubt that Justin Bieber is everywhere. From the latest Best Buy Super Bowl ad with Ozzy Osbourne to the film "Justin Bieber: Never Say Never" to hit singles online, on the air and everywhere else, the so-called Beliebers have elevated the mop-topped Canadian to dizzying heights of stardom...

By MATT MOORE ~ The Associated Press
In this magazine cover image released by DC Comics, Alfred E. Neuman, the fictional cover boy of "Mad Magazine," is shown sporting a Justin Bieber haircut on the cover of the April 2011 edition, on sale today. (AP Photo/DC Comics)
In this magazine cover image released by DC Comics, Alfred E. Neuman, the fictional cover boy of "Mad Magazine," is shown sporting a Justin Bieber haircut on the cover of the April 2011 edition, on sale today. (AP Photo/DC Comics)

PHILADELPHIA -- There is no doubt that Justin Bieber is everywhere.

From the latest Best Buy Super Bowl ad with Ozzy Osbourne to the film "Justin Bieber: Never Say Never" to hit singles online, on the air and everywhere else, the so-called Beliebers have elevated the mop-topped Canadian to dizzying heights of stardom.

Now, he's about to come back to Earth: MAD magazine's longtime public face, Alfred E. Neuman -- with his big ears and goofy grin -- sports a Bieberesque bowl of hair on the cover of the Feb. 16 issue. The headlines: Justin Bieber. "HIS STUPID HAIR!" "HIS DUMB BOOK!" "HIS TERRIBLE MOVIE!" "HIS AWFUL MUSIC!"

Bieber has already been on the cover of Vanity Fair, certainly no easy accomplishment.

"That was probably the highlight of his career and being on the cover of MAD is the lowlight," John Ficarra, editor-in-chief of MAD, said with a laugh.

But it may also be another step in the singer's saturation of all things media and, of course, making the cover of the long-published magazine that has been pushing humor, pathos and Alfred E. Neuman for nearly six decades is certainly nothing to sneeze at.

Ficarra said it made sense to put the 16-year-old singer on the cover of issue No. 508 and then playfully mock and satirize him within the pages, too.

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"We like to do what we call Zeitgeist covers. When we found that his movie was debuting just about the same time we would be coming with the issue," it all fell into place, Ficarra said. "We knew he'd be all over the place."

The issue is bound to be a best-seller with Bieber on the cover, Ficarra said.

"He'll hate it and buy every copy," he said, "and it will be a sellout. Or, conversely, Bieber won't even notice and "we'll probably sell three copies of the issue."

Regardless, Ficarra said the magazine, published by DC Comics, is ready for the onslaught of reaction from Bieber's so-named Beliebers -- the fans who buy his CDs, download his singles and scream with joy at his every appearance.

"Every time we put one of these young teen stars on the covers -- this goes back to New Kids on the Block -- we do get a ton of mail from prepubescent girls," he said. "The weird thing is I happened to be looking through old issues and we did a piece on Elvis, too."

At the time, the magazine was inundated by letters from Elvis fans decrying the satire.

"So that must be hardwired into the DNA of prepubescent girls. When somebody attacks, they do the same," he said.

As for Bieber's reaction to the cover, he did not immediately answer e-mail requests from The Associated Press for comment.

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