Most of this blog's audience is too young to know, first-hand, that the societal conditions shown on Cybrinia were, in fact, the way society in most of America was structured up to the mid-1960s.
(And there are aspects that continue to this day!)
This really made ‘em go bananas in the Code czar’s office.“Judge [Charles] Murphy was off his nut. He was really out to get us”, recalls [EC editor Al] Feldstein. “I went in there with this story and Murphy says, “It can’t be a Black man”.But … but that’s the whole point of the story!” Feldstein sputtered.When Murphy continued to insist that the Black man had to go, Feldstein put it on the line.“Listen”, he told Murphy, “you’ve been riding us and making it impossible to put out anything at all because you guys just want us out of business”.[Feldstein] reported the results of his audience with the czar to [EC publisher Bill] Gaines, who was furious [and] immediately picked up the phone and called Murphy.“This is ridiculous!” he bellowed.“I’m going to call a press conference on this. You have no grounds, no basis, to do this. I’ll sue you”.Murphy made what he surely thought was a gracious concession.“All right. Just take off the beads of sweat”.At that, Gaines and Feldstein both went ballistic.“Fuck you!” they shouted into the telephone in unison.Murphy hung up on them, but the story ran in its original form.
...in Tales of the Incredible (1965). were published in standard paperback format by Ballantine Books also exempting them from the Code.
EC tried a line of four magazine-sized b/w titles known as "Picto-Fiction" with a more adult approach to storytelling, like pulp magazines, but with more illustrations.
Like MAD, their magazine format bypassed the Code's restrictions, but none of them got past the second issues.