I read that you went to Harvard and wrote for the lampoon there, but how did you break into professional comedy?
His first day back at the lampoon, he showed a copy of it to Beard.
"He didn't respect his talent," says Michael Gross, the former lampoon art director, who saw him frequently in California.
When he arrived, carrying nothing but a knapsack, he retrieved his lampoon credit card from his wallet and broke it in two.
The lampoon was more than a magazine now; it was a cultural phenomenon.
These were choice morsels from the lampoon of the notary Danckaerts.
Pope and Johnson alike lent their pens to lampoon the minister.
A lampoon in such an edition and given away by a newsman who knew him!
You lie in your throat; there is no one dares make a lampoon about Arne of Guldvik.
When expletives occur they are generally in the spirit of derision and lampoon.
1650s, from lampoon (n.), or else from French lamponner, from the Middle French noun. Related: Lampooned; lampooning.