Mad Magazine, the iconic satirical magazine, will cease publication this year after 67 years.

The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed that after issue 9, Mad will no longer appear on newsstands, and will solely be available through specialised comic stores and mail out subscriptions. After issue 10, the magazine will no longer produce new content and will only feature previously archival content.

Mad cartoonists David DeGrand and Evan Dorkin took to Twitter on Wednesday night to confirm the closure of the magazine. This followed writer Dan Telfer’s tweet earlier this week confirming that he had been laid off as senior editor.

Mad was founded in 1952, the magazine originally launched as a comic book published by EC comics. in 1955, Mad transitioned into a monthly satire magazine where it produced eight issues annually.

Many of the most influential names in media and entertainment have taken to social media to share their devastation over the news that the magazine was ceasing publication.

Weird Al Yankovic, who was the magazine’s first ever guest editor in 2015, took to Twitter to pay respect to the publication. “I am profoundly sad to hear that after 67 years, MAD Magazine is ceasing publication,” he wrote. “I can’t begin to describe the impact it had on me as a young kid – it’s pretty much the reason I turned out weird. Goodbye to one of the all-time greatest American institutions.”

The Lego Movie director Chris Miller touched on his time as an intern at the magazine in 1964. “I had no apt in NY so I kept my belongings in the archives & took a daypack & crashed on couches for 3 months. In the writers room they had a drum kit to do rim shots on bad jokes. Great memories. I’ll miss it.”