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December 27, 2003
HELP
SAVE MULLETS!
Today I'm asking for your help
to save a comic strip that may die a quick and untimely death.
To have any chance of
success, any new comic strip needs a little bit of luck. Unfortunately,
that's the one thing that seems to be in short supply where "Mullets,"
the new daily strip by Rick Stromoski and Steve McGarry, is concerned.
"No sooner had our press
kits and promotional material been printed" groans Steve "than the UPN network
launched the most awful, critically-panned, universally-derided
sitcom in TV history, which just happened to have an uncomfortably
similar premise and an almost identical title. It was that bad,
it was canned within a month, but the stench of death has inevitably
wafted in our direction. And then Berkeley Breathed decided to
rise from the grave ... by launching "Opus" the day
before "Mullets." Rather than buying new features,
editors have been canning or shrinking existing strips to make
room for his space demands. In the middle of one of the most
atrocious syndication markets in recent memory, when newspapers
are actually cancelling existing features to make room for the
one thing (Opus) that is actually selling, with the grim specter
of that short-lived, hideous sitcom still looming ominously over
us, we unveiled our new baby."
The adventures of likeable losers
Kevin and Scab, "Mullets" is centered around Mildew's
Hardware Store (where the hapless duo work for Kevin's dad
) and the Yewtopia Trailer Park (home to Scab's dilapidated
Airstream.) It's wonderfully drawn, laugh-out-loud funny
and we think it deserves to succeed. If you agree, drop your
local paper a line telling them that you love "Mullets"
and want to see it in your newspaper each day. If we lobby newspaper
editors strongly enough, hopefully "Mullets" will pick
up enough client newspapers to survive!
Please e-mail your comments
to the "Mullets" crew here (don't forget to
include the name of the city where you live) and they will
make sure that your message reaches your local newspaper editor.
Let's Save Mullets! Click here
to visit our collection of Mullets strips.

December 20, 2003
WHY ARE THERE FEWER AND FEWER EDITORIAL CARTOONISTS?
Cartoonists typically
blame syndication for the loss in jobs in our profession. When
an editor can buy cheap, timely cartoons from the best cartoonists
in the country, why should he pay a salary to a staff cartoonist?
Some cartoonists argue that having a staff cartoonist is important
because it is the only way a newspaper can address local issues
--with local cartoons --but local cartoons are the ones that
draw the most negative response from readers, and cause the most
headaches for editors. When I was working as a cartoonist in
Honolulu, I was told not to draw cartoons about local businesses
that could be advertisers in the paper, and told not to draw
cartoons that criticized the governor, as the paper had pending
legislation that it wanted to governor to sign. Some of my cartoons
about the governor were killed, and cartoons about local businesses
were killed or changed to refer to fictional business names.
Local cartoons cause the most trouble; it is hard to imagine
that overworked editors are eager to add a new headache to their
workload.
Cheap, syndicated cartoons have been around for a long time.
Twenty years ago a newspaper might have paid $20/week for a syndicated
cartoonist; the same paper might now be paying $7/week for the
same cartoonist. That is a big drop for the syndicated cartoonist,
but that $13 in savings is a tiny, inconsequential matter to
a manager who is deciding whether or not to pay a full time salary
to a staff cartoonist. I don't think job losses can be blamed
on syndication now, any more than twenty or fifty years ago.
Recent losses in cartoonists'
jobs come from a change in attitude at newspapers that have been
cutting back on all of their staff. When I look at newspapers
now I see less and less original content and local coverage,
along with fewer staffers that are each burdened with a bigger
work load than their predecessors. Yesterday's article by Michael
Miner, and the mention of the current number of editorial cartoonists
jobs, prompted the response below by Cullum Rogers. Cullum is
the treasurer of the Association
of American Editorial Cartoonists (AAEC), he draws local
editorial cartoons part time, so he wouldn't count himself as
one of the "jobs." Cullum also works as a cartoon illustrator.
--Daryl Cagle
HOW MANY EDITORIAL
CARTOONISTS HAVE LOST THEIR JOBS? --By Cullum
Rogers
My friend Barbara
Semonche, who used to run the library at the Durham Morning Herald,
once made a statement I have come to call the Semonche Rule:
"When a quotation in a newspaper contains three or more
numbers, at least one of them is wrong."
For years, we cartoonists have
been saying there was a time in the not-so-distant past when
there were 200 full-time editorial cartoon jobs in the U.S. (This
time is usually given as "a decade ago," which right
now would mean 1993. I was on the scene in 1993, and at that
time we were all comparing our sorry state to the glory days
of the early 1980s.)
Bruce Plante
quoted the 200 figure this summer to Howard Finberg, who was
writing an article
for the Poynter Institute website. When Finberg asked where
the number came from, Bruce referred him to me, and I did a little
research. My apologies to those of you who've already seen this,
but here it is again:
The fact is, almost all figures
on the number of staff cartoonists past or present are very rough
estimates, because there's no way to tell, except by contacting
newspapers individually, whether a cartoon for a given paper
was drawn by (1) a full-time staffer whose only job is editorial
cartooning, (2) an art-department staffer for whom editorial
cartooning is only one part of the job (or just a hobby the paper
indulges as long as it doesn't interfere with "real"
work), or (3) a freelancer who might draw one picture a week,
if that.
In his 1956 anthology "The
People's Choice," Pierce Fredericks of the New York Times
said that there were "something like" 275 political
cartoonists in the country, a claim he repeated in a Saturday
Review article the next year (November 23, 1957). But, like everyone
else who's written on the subject, he didn't say where his number
came from -- or what kind of working arrangement those cartoonists
had with their papers.
When
the AAEC was founded in 1957, it had 84 charter members, working
for 76 newspapers, three newspaper chains, and three syndicates.
(Unlike today, there were no student, associate or retired members.)
This wasn't the total number of cartoonists in the country, as
several big names, including Herblock and Bill Mauldin, were
absent, and who knows how many lesser ones.
[Digression: Of those 76 newspapers,
25 have folded, two have merged with another paper on the list
(taking a job with them), and 15 are still around but no longer
have staff cartoonists. If the founders of the AAEC were to take
a time machine to the year 2003, over half of them would find
their jobs no longer existed.]
In a July 21, 1961, cover story
on Bill Mauldin, Time magazine said that "after the 20th
century began, U.S. political cartooning entered its golden age.
At a time when there were some 500 more daily papers than today,
most of them had staff cartoonists." Later in the same article,
Time said, "only 119 men now work at the art, one for every
15 daily newspapers."
[Digression 2: If Time's numbers
are right, there were 2,185 daily papers during the "golden
age" (15x119+500). If "most of them" had staff
cartoonists, there were at least 1,093 jobs. Somehow, I doubt
all these folks were full-time editorial cartoonists.]
In 1962, cartoonist John Chase
of the New Orleans States-Item edited an anthology, "Today's
Cartoon," that devoted two pages to every full-time U.S.
editorial cartoonist he could persuade to participate, including
such usual holdouts as Herblock and Mauldin. It featured work
by 140 artists, and I haven't noticed any significant omissions.
Some of those 140 were recently retired or working in Canada,
and another dozen or so were contributing to weeklies or specialized
publications, so the total number of active daily newspaper cartoonists
in the U.S. was probably around 110 to 120.
In an October 11, 1980, cover
story on Jeff MacNelly, Newsweek said that the number of cartoonists
had "increased by nearly half in the last decade, to an
estimated population of 170." Again, no source was cited.
In 1997, I set out to determine
exactly how many editorial-cartoon positions there were at U.S.
newspapers by asking folks on the AAEC-L (a cartoonist e-mail
forum --ed) to list all the jobs they knew of in their own
areas, and checking the results through the E&P Yearbook,
Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year volumes, and, in a few cases,
phone calls to the papers themselves. Lucy Caswell, curator of
the Ohio State State University, Cartoon Research Library, later
said that, to her knowledge, it was the first time anyone had
attempted a survey of that sort. The results were published in
the Fall 1997 issue of the AAEC Notebook and -- after the inevitable
corrections came pouring in -- the Spring 1998 issue of Hogan's
Alley magazine.
My
survey found that there were at least 131, and maybe as many
as 154, newspapers in the United States that (a) had a full-time
staffer who (b) regularly drew editorial cartoons. I'd say at
least a quarter of them were not solely editorial cartoonists,
but had other duties ranging from drawing the occasional op-ed
caricature to running the paper's art department.
Which raises the question: At
what point does a person cease being an editorial cartoonist
and become a staff artist who draws editorial cartoons? Based
on the info I gathered in 1997 and the stories I've heard at
AAEC conventions, I'd say that as of 2003 there are at most 100
"pure" full-time editorial cartooning jobs at U.S.
newspapers, and only a handful outside them (such as Pat Oliphant,
who makes a living solely from syndication). As for the "impure"
editorial-cartoon jobs -- my categories (2) and (3) -- who knows?
Like Time magazine, I suspect
the heyday of editorial cartoon jobs was the early 20th century
-- after daily newspapers became the chief venue for political
cartoons, but before syndication made hiring your own cartoonist
unnecessary. The numbers probably started declining in the 1910s
or shortly thereafter, and didn't go up again until the 1970s,
when a bunch of us former youngsters entered the field under
the varied influences of Mad magazine, Oliphant and MacNelly,
the Vietnam War and Watergate.
The total number *may* have touched
200 for a nanosecond sometime in the early 1980s, if you allow
a fairly generous definition of "full-time." But if
you eliminate the folks (like me) who also had to do maps and
charts and food-section illustrations as part of their job, I
suspect the number would be closer to 150, at most.
To sum up: All of us believe
that the job situation for editorial cartoonists is worse now
than it was several decades ago, and a lot worse than it was
in the early 20th Century. As near as I can tell, that belief
is accurate, but anybody who thinks he can tie it to specific
numbers is kidding himself. Further research is called for, as
they say in the grant proposals.
--Cullum
Rogers
December
19, 2003
Thank you to Michael Miner
and the Chicago Reader,
for allowing us to reprint this interesting article about John Sherffius,
who recently resigned as the cartoonist for the St. Louis Post
Dispatch. Mr. Miner and the Chicago
Reader have done an excellent, ongoing, job of covering events
in the editorial cartooning profession. The Chicago Reader is
in the backyard of the Chicago Tribune, which is notorious for
not hiring an editorial cartoonist, and Michael Miner does an
excellent job of pointing out the Tribune's embarassing situation.
Another One Bites the Dust,
By Michael Miner
Something shocking happened last
week in the small world of editorial cartooning. A cartoonist
quit. John
Sherffius of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch suddenly
resigned, though he had no place better to go. Predecessors Daniel
Fitzpatrick and Bill Mauldin had won Pulitzers during the 1950s
and rank among the greatest cartoonists of the last century.
Five years ago, after a blue-ribbon committee made a nationwide
search, Sherffius was hired to do their job.
The liberal Post-Dispatch
of Fitzpatrick and Mauldin exists today mostly as legacy.
For most of the 20th century conservative readers -- who abound
in Saint Louis -- had other daily papers to turn to. Those papers
are history; the Post-Dispatch survives as a sort of utility,
a local monopoly that must try to have something for everyone.
In the eyes of readers and staff, if not her own, editor Ellen
Soeteber has been moving her editorial page toward the center
and prodding Sherffius to follow along.
"I love the rumor that John
was too liberal for the Post-Dispatch editorial page,"
Soeteber says. "That's like being too communist for Fidel.
We're the only metropolitan-wide paper. We do have a special
responsibility to serve up a menu of ideas. But I would never
presume to alter the 125-year -- as of today -- tradition of
what I call the progressivism of the Post-Dispatch. I
was deputy editorial-page editor of the Chicago Tribune for
three years. You can't be making U-turns all the time."
But "progressivism"
can mean whatever a newspaper wants it to, and a U-turn isn't
the same as a slow but steady change of course. About a year
ago, coworkers say, Sherffius's bosses started getting after
him to tone down his more liberal cartoons. "Everybody improves
by editing," says Soeteber. "I would put [cartoonists]
in the same category as columnists -- nobody is 100 percent sacrosanct.
I don't believe in messing [with cartoons] except in the most
extreme circumstances, but I think we all get better by giving
and taking."
On
Monday, December 8, Sherffius had the idea of drawing elephants
whooping it up. They wore party hats and lamp shades, lugged
bags stuffed with swag, and waved champagne bottles and fistfuls
of cash. The caption: "The party of fiscal discipline."
Sherffius was told the cartoon
was unbalanced. "We had some disagreement,"says Soeteber,
"about whether the cartoon captured what was going on in
Congress." So Sherffius added a donkey. It's hard to say
what this donkey was supposed to signify about the Democrats.
An elephant was riding it, but there was a cigar in its mouth.
"An editorial cartoon is
sort of a creative bubble," says Matt
Davies, cartoonist at the Journal News in Westchester,
New York. "It takes hours to build, and if it's right, it's
a perfect bubble. It's unlike a column. A column you can tweak
and mess with. In the ten years I've been doing this I've seen
maybe three cartoons that could have been tweaked. 'The party
of fiscal restraint.' Everybody knows that's supposed to be the
Republicans. If you put a Democrat in there you negate it. As
soon as you try to dumb the thing down for the reader you kill
it."
Sherffius's changes didn't ruin
his cartoon -- the original idea was strong enough to survive
the incongruity. But he told Soeteber and the editorial-page
editor how upset he was, and before the day was over he resigned.
He says, "I felt that ultimately my cartoons were not a
good fit for the page."
Davies, who's president elect
of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, can't think
of another cartoonist who walked out the way Sherffius did. "It
takes a lot of courage," he says. "It takes a lot more
courage to quit your job than to put out a cartoon that gets
you in a lot of trouble."
Soeteber posted a statement online
praising Sherffius's work and wishing him well. But among cartoonists,
the most important thing the statement said was said in passing:
"Until we complete a search for his replacement, the newspaper
will run a number of syndicated cartoons."
It's no longer a given at American
newspapers that a departed cartoonist will be replaced at all,
not even at papers with the traditions of the Post-Dispatch.
Cartoonists at the Buffalo News have won two Pulitzers,
but when one of them, Tom Toles, moved to the Washington Post
last year the News decided not to replace him. Steve
Breen won a Pulitzer at the Asbury Park Press in New Jersey
in 1998, and when he left for the San Diego Union-Tribune
three years later he wasn't replaced. The New York Daily
News lost its cartoonist two years ago, began carrying syndicated
cartoons, and recently redesigned its editorial page so that
there's no need to run a cartoon at all.
And of course the Chicago
Tribune's still looking for a successor to Jeff MacNelly,
a three-time Pulitzer winner. MacNelly died three and a half
years ago, during the Clinton presidency.
"With the job outlook as
thin as it is," says Davies, "the idea that you would
be so unhappy with overt editorial control that you would be
willing to subject yourself to the unhappiness of unemployment
-- to me that says a lot about the value of editorial freedom.
And maybe that's why the Chicago Tribune doesn't want
to hire a cartoonist. They might understand that."
Davies is suggesting that the
most important reason the Tribune hasn't replaced MacNelly
isn't budgetary. "A big salary for a cartoonist is a rounding
error for a paper like the Tribune," he maintains.
It's that a cartoonist worthy of the Tribune would demand
more freedom than the Tribune might be willing to give.
"Do they really want to deal with that?" he says.
"I want somebody who really
provokes people," Soeteber says. "A cartoonist should
be provocative. He should make you laugh, make you cry, make
you think. I'm more concerned about that than the politics."
That said, before she can replace Sherffius she has to define
the job she needs to fill, and she volunteers that she's not
sure how she'll do it. "One, you say it's their viewpoint,
and you label it as such. Two, some newspapers take the stance
that the cartoonist should be an extension of the editorial page
and their positions should match. I'm not sure where I land on
that."
Either way, an editor is asking
for trouble. A cartoonist who brings many more readers to the
editorial page than will ever read the editorials hijacks the
page. Even if he's not, he's assumed to be speaking for the paper
that's given him such a conspicuous platform -- why else would
he have it? As for the cartoonist who'll take his cue from the
editorials -- advertise the job that way and take your pick of
mediocrities.
"I don't want to say anything
that will deter really talented cartoonists from applying here,"
says Soeteber. "I'm pointing out the philosophy out there
at some papers."
I asked Bruce Dold, editor of
the Tribune editorial page, his concept of the job his
paper's been in no hurry to fill.
He e-mailed me: "I would
expect a cartoonist to live with the same kind of scrutiny as
a columnist, but I don't expect columnists to follow the Tribune
editorial line. They are entirely free to disagree with the
editorial views of the paper. . . . The op-ed page, though, presents
a clash of columnists. There is only one cartoon. So I would
like a cartoonist to be a good fit philosophically with the Tribune,
as Jeff was. By a good fit, I mean a cartoonist who disagrees
on some issues with the editorial page, but who is not constantly
at war with the editorial page."
Robert Ariail
of the State newspaper in South Carolina thinks he'd be
a good fit with the Tribune. Six months ago he talked
to Dold and got the idea Dold was very interested. But instead
of an offer, silence followed. Other cartoonists before Ariail
who thought they were close to a job experienced the same thing.
Ariail has the impression that
it's people above Dold who won't let him act. "I have spoken
to Bruce as recently as last week," Ariail told me a few
days ago. "I had sent him a cartoon for his eyes only kind
of gibing them -- just as a release for me. He called me back.
I think he's interested in me. But I say that and I don't really
know."
Ariail wanted to hear about Sherffius.
When I said why he'd quit, Ariail responded, "Well, good
for him." Ariail has a properly gloomy outlook on the trade
he's in. "A decade ago there were 200 full-time editorial
cartoonists," he said. "Now there are only 100. Make
it 99."
-- Michael Miner
Posted with permission. Many
thanks to Mr. Miner and the
Chicago Reader..
December 16, 2003
WHY ARE THERE SO FEW WOMEN WHO ARE EDITORIAL CARTOONISTS?
Every week I get at least one e-mail complaining that
there are few women who are editorial cartoonists. It appears
that some students at Florida International University were given
this issue as a class assignment. Recently, the college students
have been sending lots of e-mails to me and to the few female
cartoonists, asking for the reasons why.
The low proportion of female
editorial cartoonists is much the same as the low proportion
of women in other areas of cartooning, including comics strips,
comic books and animation. It is even rare to see a female caricature
artist at a theme park. When I go to a comics convention I notice
that there are few women fans in attendance. Most of the working
cartoonists learned to draw by being comic book fans as kids.
It is unusual to find a girl who collects comics books. Comic
books that are specially written for a female audience have a
history of failing.
There are only four women
who draw cartoons on our site. I asked each of them to write
a short piece for the blog about why they think there are so
few women editorial cartoonists. Today I have two very different
responses; the first is from Jen Sorenson, who draws the alternative
weekly editorial cartoon, SLOWPOKE. The second is from Sepideh
Anjomrooz who draws cartoons in Iran, where the barriers to women
entering any profession must be terrible.
JEN SORENSEN, SLOWPOKE
From a very early age, boys learn to achieve status among their
peers by cultivating a strong personality and ability to wisecrack,
in addition to other attributes like being good at sports. Generally-speaking,
our culture encourages girls to achieve acceptance through appearance,
sense of style, and friendliness. I think this cultural difference
results in more males having the confidence to comically entertain
an audience, be it through writing, stand-up comedy, or cartooning.
Political cartooning is probably
an extreme case, because the treatment of subject matter is often
not exactly nice. Also, there are likely some lingering beliefs
about politics being a man's field, the treatment of Hillary
Clinton being a case in point. Again, I'm speaking broadly --
heaven knows there are plenty of women out there who are into
politics and would not hesitate to skewer the powerful in print.
Thankfully, a greater precedent of funny females in the media
is now being established, which may lead to more women cartoonists...
and more competition for me.
SEPIDEH
ANJOMROOZ, TEHRAN,
IRAN
To answer the question, "Why aren't there more women editorial
cartoonists?" I can think of a few reasons. Cartoons are
a conceptual art. They require a special talent. The cartoonist
has to be able to take an event and put it into a visual image.
Most women prefer arts like painting and coloring because that
is what people are accustomed to seeing them do. Even in comic
books, the female cartoonists use more color and draw their pictures
based on a story. Women tend to draw with color and editoral
cartoons are generally black and white. This can lead women away
from editoral cartoons and into more expressive art.
In my country, male cartoonists
get paid very little for their drawings. They must work for a
minimum of four to five newspapers or magazines just to make
a living. Their cartoons are published based on their relationship
with the editor and not based on the quality of their work. This
is discouraging to women. It is more difficult for us to build
these relationships so we must be brave and continue to do what
we love despite these obstacles. Hopefully, our work will then
speak for itself.
Cartoons in our newspapers are
scrutinized closely. Cartoonists must stay away from "the
red line." Cartoons that cross "the red line"
will encounter some problems. Two topics that cross the red line
are: cultural beliefs that are different from ours, and problems
with the government. We are asked to honor these restrictions
and not write or illustrate about cultural beliefs or government
problems. All of these issues combine to make it much more difficult
for women to become editorial cartoonists.
December 15, 2003
This morning I was awakened to the news that Saddam had been
captured. Sunday is a slow day for editorial cartoons, the syndicates
are closed --but lots of cartoonists e-mailed their cartoons
to me and I was able
to post a nice topical collection. I'll add to the Saddam
cartoons as the week goes by --everyone will want a piece of
this one!
MARGULIES ON ANTI-SEMITIC CARTOONS
Our own Jimmy
Margulies, of the New Jersey Record, wrote the following
piece for our blog, in response to the many recent controversies
about anti-Semitic cartoons.
The first cartoon, at the right, by Antonio,
matches a cartoon by Ares that
we discussed earlier in the blog. The second cartoon, by
Dick Locher,
was the subject of a heated controversy earlier this year (this
was before I started the blog; I reported on the brouhaha in
our newsletter). The third cartoon, by Michael
Ramirez, is here because Jimmy mentions it.
Over the past year, several cartoons on the conflict in the
Mideast have been called antisemitic because they have been sharply
critical of policies carried out by Israel's current prime minister,
Ariel Sharon.
Whatever standing being a cartoonist who is Jewish gives me,
I have some thoughts on this I wanted to contribute.
Putting forth the charge of antisemitism is very serious, and
in many cases, I believe, have been unfair in characterizing
cartoons which are merely anti-Sharon. Israel itself is bitterly
divided over a number of issues, and as a democracy its citizens
and newspapers vigorously debate the issues. Member s of the
press elsewhere, including cartoonists ,must not be inhibited
from doing the same by shrill voices who cannot distinguish between
legitimate criticism and genuine hate-filled material. There
are cartoons, of course, in the Arab media which are clearly
antisemitic, but these are not the ones in question.
I, too have been subject to spurious criticism, when I have drawn
cartoons which did not toe the Israeli government line, so this
is something I have experienced first hand.
That being said,
some of the cartoons which are critical of Sharon and current
Israeli policy, do bring a bit of trouble upon themselves in
ways which can be avoided without diluting the impact of the
cartoon.
Number one is using the Star of David as a symbol of Israel.
Yes, it does appear on the flag of Israel, but the Star of David
by itself is a symbol of all of Judaism. Better to either put
the label Israel where appropriate, or use the Israeli flag in
its entirety. No need to give ammunition to those who are ready
to pounce on anything which disagrees with their view of the
situation.
The second problem I see is that some of the caricatures of Sharon
have given him a big nose. That feeds into the stereotype of
all Jews having hook noses. Some Jews do have large noses, as
do members of other ethnic groups, but not all.And in the case
of Ariel Sharon it is just plain inaccurate as a way to caricature
him.
A cartoon I drew of Alan Greenspan, who does have a big nose,
was called antisemitic because I exaggerated his nose, although
it had nothing to do with Israel. It was simply because it was
critical of Greenspan who happens to be Jewish.
Dick Locher
explained that he put a big nose on Sharon because he put one
on Arafat in the same drawing. Well, Arafat does have big nose,and
to caricature him correctly that is one element.
But Sharon does not have a particularly big nose, so unless there
is a reason to give him one in the cartoon, that is a poor formula
for lampooning him. Sharon's obvious girth, as well as his militaristic,
inflexible views provide plenty to work with in shaping an unflattering
caricature of him.
Another more recent
cartoon by Mike
Ramirez shows Sharon with a Settlements label looking in
the mirror at a reflection of Arafat with a Terrorism label,
blaming them both for the stalemate. Sharon is depicted with
a very large nose, as is Arafat. This again makes the Sharon
likeness not a great one. So the only justification I can see
for giving Sharon the big nose is to create the mirror image
metaphor in the cartoon. In my opinion the other elements in
the cartoon convey the message effectively enough without Sharon
having a big nose.
People who disagree with cartoons critical of Israeli policy
will continue to do so. But just as a writer is on solid ground
by getting his or her facts and sources as accurate as possible,
cartoonists can still offer strong commentary, without being
inflammatory in ways which do not help the central point of the
cartoon.
Jimmy Margulies
December 14, 2003
A couple of weeks ago I wrote about a cartoon, by cartoonist,
Dave Brown, which was given the "Political Cartoon of the
Year, 2003" award by a vote of the British Political Cartoon
Society. The cartoonists voted to award the "Gillray"
Goblet to Brown, from London's Independent newspaper,
for the "excellence" of the cartoon, which depicts
a naked Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon eating a Palestinian
child. The cartoon, and the British cartoonists who voted it
the best of the year, have been widely condemned as anti-Semitic.
An interesting post on the Association
of American Editorial Cartoonists bulletin board by Tim
Benson notes that other cartoonists who submitted work to
be considered for the award included our own, Martyn
Turner, Peter
Schrank and Jeff
Danziger.
Benson posts this quote from Brown discussing his award winning,
controversial cartoon ...
"On Sunday morning, as I
listened to radio and TV news bulletins and leafed through the
papers, one story stood out as a subject for the next day"s
cartoon: Ariel Sharon"s attack on Gaza City. It was not
the first time I had been prompted to criticise Sharon. But what
stood out was the timing the thought that the assault was not
unconnected with the approaching Israeli election. The task was
to create an image illustrating that, although the missiles had
been targeted at Gaza, the message was aimed squarely at the
Israeli electorate.
My starting-point was the newsreel
pictures of helicopter gunships over the rubble of a Palestinian
town. The first associated image that sprang to mind was of the
helicopters and their blaring loudspeakers in Apocalypse Now.
To me, the message they would be broadcasting was: "Vote
Sharon". There was clearly a gulf between our mundane experience
and this more macabre form of electioneering, which could be
exploited in a cartoon. The image of an estate car plastered
in stickers, a loudhailer taped to the roof, supplanted these
sinister aircraft. But one thing stood out that already had stock
comic potential, the politician kissing babies. I wanted to find
a darker equivalent to that.
My first idea was of Sharon puckering
up to a child, revealing missile-like fangs. Then my thoughts
progressed from biting to eating children, and immediately Goya"s
painting Saturn Devouring One of His Sons came to mind. Goya"s
picture has the power to shock that I thought the situation merited.
By borrowing the image, I hoped to benefit from its associations;
those who knew the classical myth of the Titan driven, by his
fear of being supplanted by his children, to the insanity of
devouring them, might draw some parallels. Do I believe, or was
I trying to suggest, that Sharon actually eats babies? Of course
not one of the other benefits of the borrowed image was that
it was sited squarely in the field of allegory. My cartoon was
intended as a caricature of a specific person, Sharon, in the
guise of a figure from classical myth who, I hoped, couldn"t
be farther from any Jewish stereotype. I also omitted certain
things. I might have drawn Israeli insignia on the tank or helicopter
to set the scene. But not only did I have no intention of being
anti-Semitic; I had no desire to make an anti-Israel comment.
At a time when the Israeli Labour party was offering the choice
of a settlement, I sought only to target a man and a party I
consider to be actively working against peace." Dave Brown
And I have to laugh. In an earlier
post I linked an image of the winning/offending cartoon on another
web site. The owner of the other site seems to have noticed the
increase in traffic to this image, and he added an ad for his
own cartoons at the top of the image. Sometimes I forget that
this blog gets a lot of traffic and can be viewed as a publicity
opportunity. I have to appreciate his entrepreneurship. See the
winning/offending
cartoon cartoon here, below the ad for "Eric M's Fetus-X
Political Horror Comix."
December
12, 2003
The Columbia
Journalism Review has an interesting article by Tallahassee
Democrat cartoonist, Doug
Marlette, detailing hate campaigns conducted against him
by CAIR (the Council of American-Islamic
Relations), protesting the cartoon at the right. Doug's experience
reminded me of our own saga as CAIR targetted us for hate mail
and spam to protest a Sandy
Huffaker cartoon. Here
is an interesting example of the nutty thinking that fueled
the campaign against Doug.
Below are some excerpts from Doug's long article, which is, in
turn exerpted from Doug's Plan
Nine Publishing book, "What Would Marlette Drive?"
Can you say "fatwa"?
My newspaper, The Tallahassee Democrat, and I received more than
20,000 e-mails demanding an apology for misrepresenting the peace-loving
religion of the Prophet Mohammed - or else. Some spelled out
the "else": death, mutilation, Internet spam. "I
will cut your fingers and put them in your mother's ass."
"What you did, Mr. Dog, will cost you your life. Soon you
will join the dogs . . . hahaha in hell." "Just wait
. . . we will see you in hell with all jews . . . ." The
onslaught was orchestrated by an organization called the Council
on American-Islamic Relations. CAIR bills itself as an "advocacy
group." I was to discover that among the followers of Islam
it advocated for were the men convicted of the 1993 bombing of
the World Trade Center. At any rate, its campaign against me
included flash-floods of e-mail intended to shut down servers
at my newspaper and my syndicate, as well as viruses aimed at
my home computer. The controversy became a subject of newspaper
editorials, columns, Web logs, talk radio, and CNN. I was condemned
on the front page of the Saudi publication Arab News by the secretary
general of the Muslim World League.
Until "What Would Mohammed
Drive?" most of the flak I caught was from the other side
of the Middle East conflict. Jewish groups complained that my
cartoons critical of Israel's invasion of Lebanon were anti-Semitic
because I had drawn Prime Minister Menachem Begin with a big
nose. My editors took the strategic position that I drew everyone's
nose big. At one point, editorial pages were spread out on the
floor for editors to measure with a ruler the noses of various
Jewish and non-Jewish figures in my cartoons.
After I moved to the Northeast,
it was Catholics I offended. At New York Newsday, I drew a close-up
of the pope wearing a button that read "No Women Priests."
There was an arrow pointing to his forehead and the inscription
from Matthew 16:18: "Upon This Rock I Will Build My Church."
The Newsday switchboard lit up like a Vegas wedding chapel. Newsday
ran an apology for the cartoon, a first in my career, and offered
me a chance to respond in a column. The result - though the paper
published it in full - got me put on probation for a year by
the publisher.
The censors no longer come to
us in jackboots with torches and baying dogs in the middle of
the night. They arrive now in broad daylight with marketing surveys
and focus-group findings. They come as teams, not armies, trained
in effectiveness, certified in sensitivity, and wielding degrees
from the Columbia journalism school. They're known not for their
bravery but for their efficiency. They show gallantry only when
they genuflect to apologize.
The most disturbing thing about
the "Mohammed" experience was that a laptop Luftwaffe
was able to blitz editors into not running the cartoon in my
own newspaper. "WWMD" ran briefly on the Tallahassee
Democrat Web site, but once an outcry was raised, the editors
pulled it and banned it from the newspaper altogether.
SHERFFIUS RESIGNS FROM THE ST LOUIS POST
DISPATCH
This morning I was shocked to learn that John
Sherffius has resigned as the editorial cartoonist for the
St. Louis Post Dispatch. Read
the notice from John's editor. I'll post more news on this
when it comes in.
John's liberal leaning cartoons
have a distinctive graphic style. He is known for often using
logos and graphic symbols in stark, wordless cartoons, like the
one at the right. See
an archive of John's work here.
The Post Dispatch has a great tradition of editorial cartoonists,
including the legendary Bill Mauldin. Five years ago, they conducted
a national search for a new cartoonist, with a committee of Pulitzer
winning cartoonists picking a winner from what must have been
hundreds of entries. This was a job search that was conducted
like an award jury.
John previously worked as the editorial cartoonist for the Ventura
County Star (CA) where Steve
Greenberg now draws. We love to show cartoons where the cartoonist
departs from his usual format. The cartoon below is a special
one that Steve drew for Hanukkah.
December 9, 2003
This week's anti-Semitic cartoon scandal comes from a website
called "Indymedia Israel" which is being investigated
by Israeli police for "incitement." They have received
death threats, their web site was shut down and they are looking
for another server outside of Israel. Read
their story here. Here
is the offending cartoon, which depicts Prime Minister Sharon
kissing Adolph Hitler. Thanks to the Comics
Journal Blog for finding this one.
December 4, 2003
I like to see editorial cartoonists try new things that are interesting
and unusual --particularly when the new thing involves the cartoon
claiming more space on the page. A couple of months ago we ran
David Horsey's grand opus on the Bush administration, "Empire Rising,"
today we have another interesting depature, from Joe
Heller of the Green Bay Press Gazette, along with some comments
from Joe.
Occasionally, I like to break
away from the traditional editorial cartooning themes. It loosens
up the brain cells to think in different ways. My usual position
at this time of year would be to take a swipe at the NRA.
A little background on the theme
of this poster ...
Wisconsin has a long standing tradition of hunting. Nothing epitomizes
this more than the annual deer hunting season, which occurs for
nine days around Thanksgiving. Nearly 645,000 hunters head for
the woods "harvesting" more than 240,000 white tail
deer. Think of it, that's probably more people with guns out
in the bush than at any time during the Vietnam War. It sounds
crazy, but it's a necessary evil in the North. There are so many
deer in this great state that one-out-of-five auto accidents
are deer related. Now, I'm no hunter, (except in the cartooning
sense), and the challenge to me was to capture this unique regional
event without actually shooting anything. I based it on "'Twas
the night before..." and used the vernacular of the region
(we kinda talk like da folks in da "Fargo" movie 'round
here dere once.) My paper printed a few thousand of these posters
and, if interested, you can purchase one for $5 plus $2 S&H
by phone 920-431-8200. No animals were harmed in making this
product, although I did lose a few brain cells.
-Joe Heller

December 3, 2003
This week's anti-Semitic cartoon scandal comes to us from Britain.
Read
a rant about it (and another
rant) and take
a look at the offending cartoon. The British Political Cartoon
Society chose this cartoon by Dave Brown, that ran in the London's
Independent, as their first place winner as best British
editorial cartoon of the year. The cartoon shows a naked Prime
Minister Sharon eating a Palestinian baby, presumably modeled
after Goya's painting, "Saturn Devouring His Son."
Oh, those Brits!
The Telegraph ran this comment:
... the British cartoon-of-the-year
prize (was awarded) to an illustration from the Independent that
could happily have graced the pages of Der Sturmer: a vicious
caricature of the Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, naked,
eating a Palestinian infant. One cannot imagine a British newspaper
running a similar caricature of Yasser Arafat or, indeed, his
supporter, European Commission president Romano Prodi, even though
their money funds some of today's most murderous terrorists.
Here is an article where the president of the Political Cartoons
Society defends the award. Thanks again to the Comics
Journal Blog for finding this one. I'm sure we'll have another
one next week.
 December 1, 2003
We have lots of cool new features on the site ...
Our Holiday
Cartoon Shopathon is an after-Thanksgiving cartoon shopping
frenzy. We have a new collection of cartoons about America
getting fat. Every couple of months there is another study
that tells us that we are fat and cartoonists draw a few more
cartoons. Enough months have passed for us to gather a fat collection.
We have a batch of cartoons on the Medicare
drug subsidy plan that the Republicans successfully championed
in Congress. Take a look at Forever
Dada; we add another animated editorial cartoon each week.
This week's cartoon, "Furrin'
Relations" is especially good.
We also a have great bunch of cartoons about Michael
Jackson. We've received some interesting e-mail from Jacko
fans who object to the cartoonists' assumption that Jackson is
guilty. The fans rant that Jacko is "innocent until proven
guilty." That would be true in a court of law, but not in
the court of the Cartoonists Index. Here, if they look guilty,
that's how we draw ... and quarter them.
Our regular
updating daily cartoons section has been growing lately.
One new cartoonist arrival is Javad, an award winning cartoonist
from Iran. There is a great tradition of cartooning in Iran,
even though there is no tradition of press freedom there. One
of the biggest international cartoon competitions is held each
year in Iran, but don't expect to see cartoons by American cartoonists
there. I'm told that the Iranian authorities keep a close eye
on our site, to see what their cartoonists are showing to the
world. Javad drew the cartoon above.
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