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Daryl Cagle's Cartoon Web Log!
Click here to comment. CURRENT - JAN/APRIL'08 - SEP/OCT/NOV/DEC'07 - JULY/AUG'07 - MAY/JUNE'07 - MAR/APR'07 - JAN/FEB'07 - NOV/DEC'06 - SEPT/OCT'06 - JULY/AUG'06 - JUNE'06 - APR/MAY'06 - MAR'06 - FEB'06 - JAN'06- DEC'05 - NOV'05 - OCT''05 - SEPT''05 - JULY-AUG'05 - JUNE''05 - MAY'05 - FEB'05 - APR'05 - MAR'05 - FEB'05 - DEC'04/JAN'05 - NOV'04 - SEP/OCT'04 - AUGUST'04 - JULY'04 - JUNE'04 - MAY'04 - APR'04 - MAR''04 -FEB'04 - JAN''04 - DEC'03 - NOV''03 - OCT'03- SEPT'03- AUG'03 - JULY'03


April 27, 2008

Response to My "Best Cartoon in the World" Rant

Irish cartoonist Martyn Turner e-mailed me to take issue with my screed below:

Dear Daryl,

Interesting, and almost amusing though your blog on Portugal's world press cartoon contest was, I think it a little misguided to discourage American participation.

This year's choices may have been a tad more obscure than usual but they can only judge what is in front of them.The organisers, as far as I know, make sure that at least one of the 5 judges every year is from North America. Ann Telnaes and Guy Badeaux have been judges recently and so have I. And I'm not exactly a stranger to American political cartooning. Your pal, buddy, Mexican cartoonist, Angel Boligan, for example has featured in the prize winners more than once. I think he got first the year I was the judge...

The lack of captions in most of the prizes is sort of obvious, aint it..with all those countries and all those languages Visual becomes the lingua franca. One reason why I will never win the thing is that I'm not able to speak Visual. I can barely manage Metaphor......

But having seen the set up in Portugal and having appreciated the dedication and enthusiasm the organisers have for all cartooning, American and otherwise, I think it is something that should be supported. Encourage your fellow Americans to engage with strange foreigners. You never know they may get something out of it and for our part we usually welcome cultural invasions by America, it's only the military sort that really gets us mad....

Best wishes,

Martyn Turner
The Irish Times

And from a reader ...

From: "harley cahen"
Subject: Re: Ugly American?

All the work you do on behalf of cartoonists and cartooning is very important. But your commentary on the WPC contest winner sounded a wrong note. Surely you are not actually proud of being unfamiliar with the original Breughel paintings? Or, for that matter, proud of coming from a nation that finds the top world soccer players to be incomprehensibly obscure? 
Harley Cahen
Hyattsville MD


Not much different than if there was a contest in the USA that picked the bast cartoon in the world as being about baseball - or calling the the World Series "the World Series," huh?
Thanks,
Daryl

You make a good point. Europeans could stand to be less parochial, too.
Harley


April 26, 2008

The Best Cartoon of the Year - in the Whole World!

When American cartoonists look around the world at other cartoonists, we see strange cartoons and an even stranger business. While American cartoonists are most concerned about building a list of publications that print our cartoons, in much of the world cartoonists are motivated to build their CV's (or resumes) by entering contests. For foreign cartoonists who live in countries where it is impossible to make a living selling cartoons for publication, it makes perfect sense to make a living doing something else while chalking up cartooning successes in contests.

The foreign cartoonists, and the people who run these worldwide contests often wonder why American cartoonists don't participate. Some feel slighted that "arrogant and elitist" American cartoonists show no interest in their contests. For our part, these contests often include rules that American cartoonists find daunting. The winning cartoons often seem to us to be incomprehensibly foreign.

The winning cartoons typically have no words; the foreign cartoonists see the cartoons as simple and elegant where the American cartoonists often see them as unsophisticated. Winning international cartoons often depict dark scenes, like prison, or unrequited love, or torture, or frustration with authority or bureaucracy. American cartoonists call typical world contest winners "daisies in the gun barrels" cartoons. With recent winners we're seeing more of the contrast between the human condition and new technology or bureaucracy.

One of the biggest contests, the World Press Cartoon (WPC) contest in Portugal, has been making a special effort to get American cartoonists to submit entries. They have three categories: gag, caricature and editorial cartoons, each with a 5,000 Euro prize. One of the three category winners brings home the grand prize, a whopping 20,000 Euros (or $31,400.00). WPC just announced their winners for this year which fall squarely into the "strange" and "incomprehensible" category.

The Grand Prize winning cartoon is by German cartoonist, Rainer Ehrt, whose big win can be seen in excited announcements on dozens of web sites, none of which are in English. All the winning cartoons can be seen on the WPC web site at worldpresscartoon.com.

The Grand Prize winning cartoon is a lovely rendering but I didn't get it. A bunch of guys are sitting in a pile of desks, each with a European Union flag; more desks are being added, and one desk is smoking. I know, it's a Euro-thing and my mind isn't running in Euro-mode. I wrote to the WPC people, asked them what the cartoon means and I got this reply:

The Grand Prix, Rainer Ehrt cartoon is based on a Brueghel painting. He uses the idea of a Babel Tower applied on an endless enlargement of Europe with its multiple languages and differences, and also, with a threatening dark clown above the Tower that give us an idea of an uncertain future...

OK. I don't see a threatening clown, but maybe they mean "cloud." Nothing was really on fire. That's not smoke. It's a cloud. I'm good. Big European bureaucracy. Too many desks. Dark cloud. It's an allusion to a painting I don't know. I get it now.

The winner of the caricature category is a by Italian cartoonist Achille Superbi. I couldn't tell who was depicted in this caricature, so I asked. I was told it is "Michael Ballack." I had no idea who "Michael Ballack" is, so I Googled him and learned that he is a German soccer player with a big Wickipedia page. For me "Michael Ballack" is an incomprehensibly obscure guy - but they love their soccer in Europe. OK.

I couldn't tell who the second and third place caricatures were either. I'm told that the second place one is Elvis Presley (looks like Elvis would make a lovely lamp) and the third place one is Manuel Noriega (I thought it was Robert Mugabe).

The winner in the gag cartoon category is by Iranian cartoonist Hassan Karimzadeh, showing a framed, green guy, whose mouth is "loading" like a computer slowly downloading a file. Maybe we're all becoming like computers, or you can't eat information, or well I don't know. But for the worldwide contest folks, this one is a knee slapper.

I like seeing big contests for cartoons, with big cash prizes, but I think I may not be sending in an entry to the World Press Cartoons contest again next year.


April 25, 2008

Congratulations are due

Congratulations to Nate Beeler on his new son, 8 pound five ounce Maxwell Owen Beeler.

Also, congrats to my Greek cartoonist buddy, Michael Kountouris, on his new web site, www.michaelkountouris.com. Also, congratulations to my buddy, Mexican cartoonist, Angel Boligan, for his new site at boligan.com.

April 24, 2008

My Cartoon Error

Cartoons about Israel and the Palestinians always brings in the mail, with questions like those from the reader below. After I drew and sent out this cartoon I was shocked to realize my error - I had drawn two sets of ears on each dog - both human ears and doggy ears. Yipes! I'm just so used to drawing ears on human heads, and my drawing hand was running on automatic, I didn't even think that I was giving out surplus ears. Oooh! Sometimes my cartoons about the Middle East are so wrooong!

From: Jake Barlow
Subject: regarding your Carter/Hamas cartoon

Question, Daryl: When was the last time you were in Israel, and/or the occupied territories? And as a follow up, do you have a well informed opinion on what the situation truly is in the region of Palestine from an eye-witness account, or do you form your opinions based on what you read in the papers?

Second question: How do you justify the cartoon you drew of Carter being a dog pissing on Israel? Who were you personally showing solidarity with, and why? Or are you simply a hack who was trying to capitalize on well-worn bigotries that the US media has been reinforcing through propaganda? Follow up: Why are you so disingenuous?

Regards,
Jake

Visit our collection of cartoons about President Carter's visit with Hamas.


April 21, 2008

Top College Cartoonist Wins the Top Scholarship from the Top Cartoonists Organization

The National Cartoonists Society Foundation (NCSF) announced the winner of the first annual Jay Kennedy Memorial Scholarship, Juana Medina, a sophomore at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). She was chosen by a jury of ten of the nation's top cartoonists, including Michael Ramirez, this year's Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist, Rick Kirkman who draws "Baby Blues," Mad Magazine's Tom Richmond, greeting card artist Sandra Boynton and other 'toon luminaries. I'm the president of the NCSF, and I have to say that is fun giving out scholarships.

Juana Medina was born and raised in Bogotá, Colombia. She completed high school in 1998 then moved to the U.S.A. where she has lived ever since. For two years, she studied at the Corcoran College of Art & Design in Washington, D.C.; she is now majoring in Graphic Design at RISD. She is a regular contributor to the College Hill Independent, a weekly magazine produced by students at Brown University and RISD. Her work has appeared in publications in South America and has been part of collective exhibitions in Colombia and Mexico.

In her application for the award, Medina wrote:

" I grew up in a country where war has been a constant since long before I was born. Our voices have been quieted by terrorist acts and constant threats from both governmental and clandestine groups, up to a point where the smell of gunpowder and the countless bomb threats became a part of our daily life ... I found situations where there is little I can do to change reality but I have found in cartooning a voice that strongly reflects my feelings and intentions. I have found a way to raise consciousness without scolding, fuming or losing my stomach to an ulcer."

Medina will receive her award, and a $5,000 scholarship, and will meet the professional cartoonists who selected her at the National Cartoonists Society's Annual Reuben Awards banquet in New Orleans on May 24th. The Scholarship was created to honor Jay Kennedy, a beloved comics editor at King Features Syndicate, which endowed the scholarship. This is the first year for the scholarship and we got more than 200 submissions ­ which amounted to a huge stack of stuff. I expect it will be an even bigger stack next year. Two samples of Juana's work are below.



April 7, 2008

This column is posted courtesy of my buddy, Dave Astor, at Editor & Publisher.

PULITZER WINNER: Ramirez Hopes His Award Illustrates the Need for 'Substantive' Cartoons
By Dave Astor

Published: April 07, 2008 5:05 PM ET
NEW YORK Last year, the buzzword in the Pulitzer Prize editorial cartooning category was "animation." This year, winner Michael Ramirez hopes the buzzword is "substantive."

"My approach is to have a powerful image along with a significant statement," said the Investor's Business Daily (IBD) cartoonist, when reached by phone this afternoon. "It's great to be funny, too, but the most important element is the message -- to have an impact and make people think."

Ramirez added: "Editorial cartooning is an extension of journalism, not just entertainment."

Some editorial cartoonists -- whether on their own volition or because of pressure from controversy-averse papers -- rely a lot on gags these days.

Ramirez, who now has two Pulitzers, said cartoonists trying to make substantive statements "have to do their homework." He's helped in this respect by being part of the team running the IBD editorial page -- a level of responsibility few other staff cartoonists have at their newspapers.

"It gives me a better perspective on the news," he explained.

Ramirez, 46, joined IBD in early 2006 -- soon after being forced out of the Los Angeles Times. When asked if winning the Pulitzer was especially satisfying after that experience, he took the high road.

"I'm very grateful for the time I spent at the Times," Ramirez said. "There were some wonderful people there. They gave me a great deal of creative freedom, and were very supportive until the last one-and-a-half years. I'm sad I wasn't able to win a Pulitzer for them."

But Ramirez said he's thrilled to win for his current paper. "It's fantastic to bring one home for IBD," he said.

Ramirez previously won the Pulitzer in 1994 for The Commercial Appeal of Memphis, for which he worked from 1990 until joining the Times in 1997.

Cartoons in Ramirez's Pulitzer portfolio this year included ones that commented on the vagueness of some of Barack Obama's stands, on the troubled U.S. economy, on the use of corn to make ethanol rather than as food, and on other topics. Ramirez is considered a conservative cartoonist, but said he tries to approach every issue with an open mind. Sometimes, he noted, conservatives criticize his work.

Last year, all three cartoon finalists did some animation in addition to print work, and observers wondered if this was the shape of things to come for the Pulitzer. But Ramirez doesn't do animation.

The California resident did say he likes some of the animation out there, and may try it himself at some point. But Ramirez reiterated that the most important thing about a cartoon is the message -- whether it's conveyed in a black-and-white print cartoon, in a color print cartoon, or in an animation.

Ramirez's work is syndicated by Copley News Service.

When reached by E&P, Copley Vice President/Editor Glenda Winders said: "We are thrilled and so proud of Michael. He is the master of integrating art and idea, and he richly deserves this second Pulitzer. It's a happy day here at CNS!"

Dave Astor (dastor@editorandpublisher.com) is a senior editor at E&P.


April 2, 2008

Cagle's New Newsletter Top Ten

Visit our newsletter sign-up page and subscribe to your favorite cartoonists and columnists. We've had free e-mail newsletters for a few months now, we're seeing some new trends in subscriptions and I thought I would post a new "Top Ten" list now that we have a much bigger list of subscribers. My own name in the top spot is an aberration, because this is my own site and I'm probably the most recognizable name on the list.

1. Daryl Cagle

2. Eric Allie

3. Pat Bagley

4. Brian Fairrington

5. Monte Wolverton

6. Andy Singer

7. Matt Bors

8. Shannon Wheeler

9. Chuck Asay

10. Kirk Anderson

The most interesting change is Kirk Anderson's climb to number 10 on the list - since Kirk hasn't submitted a new cartoon for four months! Maybe this just shows that Kirk has fans who are frustrated by his hiatus. I e-mailed Kirk and asked him what's happening with his 'toon drought", and he tells me he will be drawing more and wants to keep his stale slot on the site, so I share the frustration of our readers. That Kirk can gather hundreds of new subscribers while he draws no new cartoons is truly amazing.

The other newcomer to the newsletter top ten is Christian-conservative cartoonist Chuck Asay, who draws in a multi-panel format. I remain impressed with the popularity of altie cartoonists Matt Bors, Shannon Wheeler and Andy Singer. Jen Sorensen was on our top ten list last November, and she dropped to number 11. Lloyd Dangle is number 13. These are alternative cartoonists who don't get a lot of ink in mainstream, daily newspapers and it is instructive to me to see their popularity on our site over many of the stars of traditional editorial cartooning.

March 30, 2008

Fine-tooning the Planet

My buddy, Steve Greenberg has a new book out. called Fine-Tooning the Problem, available here from his web site. I asked Steve to send me a cartoon that caused him some trouble, and that's his trouble making cartoon below, along with Steve's comments. See Steve's online archive here. E-mail Steve.

I definitely get grief when I do cartoons sympathetic to Israel, like the recent one about the endless rocket attacks on the town of Sderot, near the Gaza border. I got snarling diatribes about "U.S. sponsored terrorism" and massacres of civilians and even a brutal Arab cartoon of an Israeli soldier mowing down bottle-fed tots who were merely throwing paper airplanes. But those aren't paper airplanes being hurled at Israel, they are rockets, and although crude, have killed and injured many people, destroyed buildings, and left civilian populations living in fear at all moments.

Hamas supporters are shooting 50 to 100 or more rockets at Israeli civilians, aiming indiscriminately, and doing so every day. The Israeli response has been to try to take out the attackers, which is a far cry from Hamas specifically targeting civilians, but the rocket launchers are deliberately mixed among civilian structures in Gaza. For Hamas, a non-response from Israel is a win, but a response that kills bystanders and generates sympathy is a win too.

I've done cartoons critical of Israel, which sometimes draws mild rebukes from Jewish readers. But do a cartoon sympathetic to Israel nowadays, and screaming vitiol and sometimes blatantly anti-Semitic remarks start coming in. The only comparable responses are from cartoons relating to abortion. -Steve Greenberg


March 29, 2008

Dodging Sniper Bullets ...

The columnists and cartoonists have been focusing on Hillary Clinton's goofy claims to have dodged sniper fire on a visit to Bosnia with her daughter, Chelsea and comedian, Sinbad.

As he often does, comedian Bill Maher stole from the week's political cartoons for his monologue, including the Bagley cartoon at the right, for his joke about Hillary claiming to raise the flag at Iwo Jima. See our Hillary Under Fire collection here.

Here are some interesting columns on Hillary's travels and bullet dodging experience, by Michael Reagan, Leonard Pitts and Michelle Malkin. Bill Maher railed about this interesting Pat Buchanan column on his weekly show. Visit our sites each week and you can write a TV show just like Bill Maher!


March 19, 2008

YAHTZEE FEST

I used to be more assertive about posting "Yahtzees" (my term for when five or more cartoonists draw matching cartoons). Some of the most Yahtzee-prone cartoonists got their noses out of joint by my pointing out their similaries, and they chose to leave the site. I'm a bit less motivated to rub the noses of our loyal contributors in their similar cartoons now that some of the worst offenders escape criticism by bailing out. That said, our readers love the Yahtzees, and I get e-mails asking whether I've noticed this Yahtzee or that Yahtzee - and why don't I post them?! OK, I won't post them all, but here are some representatives from three big, recent Yahtzees.

The Olympics logo as the wheels on a tank is a mega-Yahtzee that we see each time the Olympics come around, particularly among the international cartoonists who prefer cartoons without words and who like to use logos and flags to complain about militarism. I must have seen a couple of dozen of these logo-tank cartoons, here are some recent ones from Julius Hansen (Denmark), Martin Sutovek (Slovakia) and Frederick Deligne (France). I've included three oldies from Dick Wright, Bob Gorrell and Patrick Chappatte.







Faucet and Pills Yahtzee

We got a lot of pills coming out of the water faucet in response to the news that traces of drugs were found in municipal water supplies. These are from John Sherffius, Gordon Campbell, Robert Ariail and Nate Beeler.







Castro Cigar Yahtzee

Here are a few from the Castro Cigar Mega-Yahtzee. These are from Michael Ramirez, John Deering, Gary Brookins, Arcadio Esquivel (Costa Rica) and Christo Komarnitski (Bulgaria).







That's all for now.



March 18, 2008

Welcome Gordon Campbell

Today we're adding cartoonist Gordon Campbell to our site. This is ironic, because Gordon is the latest casualty in the parade of cartoonist job layoffs. Even without a job (at the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin), Gordon will continue to draw cartoons regularly as a freelancer - a fate that seems to be in the future for every cartoonist. See Gordon's cartoon archive. E-mail Gordon. I asked Gordon to tell us a bit about his situation.

And the year started out so promising, too! For over six months a full-blown, knock-down, drag-out political war has been going on over who would be every editorial cartoonist's favorite target over the next four years. Maybe I was energized by the smell of metaphorical cordite and sulfur, but I'll be damned if my cartoons weren't getting better and better as the conflict raged. But, like the theme in Les Miserables, there was an ominous soundtrack playing in the background, increasing in volume, that I was desperate not to hear! This tune, signaling the post-journalistic revolution, was accompanied by another, grating rasp like the sound of hardwood rolling on cobble. The guillotine was wheeling into the newsroom!

Our paper had gone through a lot of down-sizing, right-sizing, cut-backs, re-organizations, re-tooling, ill-conceived projects that begat other ill-conceived projects etc. over the past few years and of course the whole "dead tree biz has been in the gravity of the black hole of "Alternative Media Sources for sometime. On top of all that, Media News had bit off a whole lot more than it could chew when they picked up the northern Cal properties just before the property bubblewell, you all know the tune. Every paper in America has a similar sad song to sing these days.

To "burrow myself in," so to speak, in 2003 I had begun offering my work to the other papers in the chain por nada. As company papers in our area were functionally merged, my work appeared in all those papers every day as well. I was also the highest "hit man in the on-line editions, a top priority endeavor according to management, so I felt somewhat safe. A week before my papers executions the Daily News of Los Angeles had a similar layoff and cartoonist Patrick O,Connor survived that round. Surely, I thought, I'm in no immediate danger. Ha!

So now I'm free. All my toonist buddies tell me so. They say I just have to see this as an opportunity to soar above the turkeys and fly up to the highest peaks of graphic commentary. I know I should feel liberated but it still seems like part of me is rolling around in a basket on Bastille Day!

Gordon Campbell






March 10, 2008

The Seven Deadly Offset Credits

The Vatican just announced a brand new, modern set of seven deadly sins to supplant the old seven sins which have grown pretty tired through the years. The old seven deadly sins: lust, wrath, gluttony, sloth, greed, pride, and envy were proclaimed by a sixth century pope and were made famous by Dante in his "Divine Comedy" and by Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman in the movie "Seven," which was a pretty darn scary movie.

The new sins are:

1. Genetic engineering

2. Drug abuse

3. The disparity between the very rich and the very poor

4. Pollution

5. Abortion

6. Pedophilia

7. Causing social injustice

The church describes the new sins as social in nature and "a corollary of the unstoppable process of globalization." Societies have experience regulating social issues, like pollution, and that experience gives us a great leg up on regulating the other sins.

California's Governor Schwarzenegger likes to fly his jet home, from Sacramento to Los Angeles, each night after work, so he can spend time with his family. Schwarzenegger creates a lot of pollution in his daily commute, but the governor buys carbon-offset credits from businesses that are more environmentally friendly than they need to be, selling their eco-surplus back to the governor. Al Gore does the same thing, reducing his big carbon footprint from his private flights and his big houses by buying carbon-offset credits. It's cool. Offsets work. It's the free-market solution and the system works for other sins too.

"The disparity between the very rich and the very poor" is another great sin for offset credits. Very poor people could sell their "poor-people-offset credits" to very rich people who need to relieve their guilt about being rich and reduce the size of their very rich footprint. "Poor-people-offset credits" would create a free market of guilt-reduction exchanged for income redistribution that would work every bit as well as the carbon-offset credits work to reduce the guilt of polluters.

In fact, the system applies to all of the deadly sins. This afternoon I watched New York Governor Eliot Spitzer squirm, under the glare of his dowdy wife, at a one-minute press conference about his being caught as the customer of a high-priced hooker. I've never used the services of a prostitute myself, and I think I deserve some credit for that ­ credits that I should be able to sell to Governor Spitzer at a time when he really needs the "hooker-offsets."

In fact, I personally fare much better with this new set of seven deadly sins than I did with the first set. As an editorial cartoonist, I create very little pollution ­ I even use those curly light bulbs. Given the number of pencils I use, I probably haven't killed any more than one tree in my whole career. Two at the most. Not counting the paper.

I don't cause social injustice (not much anyway); I'm not a pedophile; I don't have abortions; I don't abuse drugs or do any genetic engineering. I score so well on the new sins test that I should be awarded plenty of offsets that I could sell back to the Vatican to offset their pedophile priest problem.

I'll be rich! (But not "very rich," because that would be a sin.)



March 8, 2008

Ette Hulme

I thought I'd take some time out to highlight Etta Hulme, a cartoonist who should get more attention here. Click on the image at the right to watch an interview with Emma. She's the most widely read woman cartoonist in America, with hundreds of newspapers running her syndicated cartoons. Etta is a charming, talented, grandmotherly character and her cartoons are just as warm and charming - in sharp contrast to the harsh, younger cartoonists.

Thanks to Dr. Elaine K. Miller, a college professor who specializes in the study of editorial cartoons and who produced the documentary on Etta that the clip is taken from. I hope to see it on TV! E-mail Dr. Miller. See Etta's cartoon archive. See the Etta interview clip.


Visit Etta Hulme's cartoons.


March 6, 2008

Thin Skinned Editorial Cartoonists

Our readers never miss an opportunity to let me know when my productivity drops off. I had the flu last week and I haven't been writing and drawing as much as I should. A few days ago, as I was recovering from my viral stupor, the editorial cartoonist community was agitated into an online kafuffle by an anonymous critic on the web. I was surprised by the overblown reaction from my peers, who posted to chat boards, e-mailed me and e-mailed each other in a thin-skinned conniption fit.

The anonymous guy ranted mostly about cartoons that he thought were lousy, but he saved some of his venom for me. He doesn't like my web site which he thinks looks like "vomitus." He was also bothered by the ads on my site, complaining that I'm greedy, cheap and fat. The guy showed particular interest in my "fat ass."

All in all, the anonymous "Bad Cartoonist" sounds like most of my daily e-mail. My cartooning colleagues need to understand that the internet is built upon a foundation of rude, anonymous jerks and get back to their job of being graphically rude on the editorial pages.

Cuban Cartoon Debate

A couple of weeks ago I posted Cuban cartoonist Ares' take on the change in Cuba as Fidel Castro turned the presidency over to his brother, Raul Castro (left). Cuban ex-patriot cartoonists Alen Lauzan, from Argentina, and Osmani Simanca from Brazil, drew a cartoon rebuttal to Ares' cartoon (right) and I thought it was fun, so I post it here. Click on the cartoon to see an enlarged version, and you'll see that they "flopped" Ares' signature.

Cartoonists don't often carry on cartoon arguments with each other ­ when they do, I point it out!

Check out our Fidel Quits cartoons.


March 4, 2008

How to Draw Hillary

As a cartoon character, Hillary is definitely the best choice for president and her dive in the polls has some editorial cartoonists sweating. She's barely holding on after her win tonight in Ohio, I haven't heard the results in Texas, and I'm one of the cartoonists who's sweating.

As an editorial cartoonist I don't make up my own characters; the world provides me with characters. Great characters. Better characters than I could ever make up. I sit around at my desk all day, watching Fox News and MSNBC. I get angry and I think of cartoons. It's the good life.

Compared to a comic strip cartoonist, I've got it easy. Comic strip artists spend their whole careers developing characters in tiny, daily increments. It takes years and years of strips before readers know just what is in Lucy's mind when she holds the football for Charlie Brown - that kind of intimate knowledge of character gives cartoons wonderful depth. When our readers know our characters, we can draw cartoons that are rewarding just because we see the character acting as we already know he will. A subtle bit of body language can be a punch line when readers really know the characters, and it is the best kind of humor when the gag was years in the making.

Hillary Clinton is a cartoon character that has taken many years to develop and every editorial cartoonist can claim her as his own. We know Bill Clinton as intimately as we know Charlie Brown. We know Hillary as intimately as we know Lucy. They are an editorial cartoonist's treasure.

I drew a cartoon with Bill and Hillary that was probably my most reprinted, most popular cartoon ever. They were on a book tour, and I drew Bill and Hillary at a table together, signing books. Bill had his book open with a Playboy style fold-out dropping out of the book, and Hillary whacked Bill on the side of his head her book. There were no words, just facial expressions and body language. My readers loved it! Oh! The mail I got on that one!

As Hillary's campaign prospects fade I'm seeing my best characters fade away. Obama is easy to draw, but there's nothing behind the long face ­ no pain we all shared, no national embarrassment, no anger, no crazy, complex, cheating spouse. For all the excitement of his supporters, Obama is dull. He's a straight man, commenting on the events around him, or riding the crest of a wave, or driving a steamroller over Hillary. There isn't any facial expression I can put on Obama that will make the readers say, "I know just what he's thinking!" The guy is a cartoon disaster.

John McCain isn't much better. The term of art for McCain is "pudding-face." In fact, McCain is more like tapioca, with a lumpy face that looks like he has his cheeks filled with marbles; that doesn't help me much. McCain has a reputation for a hot temper, which is fun for a cartoonist, but we haven't seen enough of his temper to expect it in a cartoon. Al Gore and John Kerry were stiff, dull and just as bad for cartoonists.

When President Bush ran against Sen. Kerry in 2004, there was no doubt that the best choice for the cartooning business was Bush. In the past eight years we've had great material for cartoons. We've had wars, terrorist attacks and some ugly times in Washington, but there have been some great cartoons during the Bush administration. Tough times make for good cartoons too. In fact, I'll bet my cartoons would look better if I knocked my head against the wall a few times. I'll try that when Hillary drops out of the race.


February 21, 2008

Another Cartooning Job Loss - As a Whole Newspaper Sinks

I've written here about quite a few cartoonists who have lost their jobs to newspaper cutbacks - but this is the first time I can remember that I've written about a cartoonist losing his job because his newspaper shut down. My buddy, star Canadian cartoonist Michael de Adder, finds himself out of a job as his newspaper bites the dust. I put up a special section of Michael's great work and asked him to give me a few comments below. E-mail Michael at: deadder@hfx.eastlink.ca and see his best cartoons here.

It is with a sad heart that the Daily News (Halifax) folded and then was replaced by a free newspaper called the Metro. The Metro does not run editorial cartoons. In fact there is no opinion what-so-ever in Halifax's free Daily. So when the Daily News folded, so did my job as editorial cartoonist.

It was done quickly and quietly.

On Monday, Feb 10, 2008, we came into work like we do every Monday morning. Chatted, set up our computers for the day's work, read Monday's newspaper and a mass email came through telling us there was a meeting at 10:00am. The strange thing was it was 10:15am. Management always gave us at least a few hours notice before scheduling a meeting.

About a minute after the email came through, management came through herding people to the meeting area. Our marketing director told somebody in the middle of a phone interview to hang up the phone and come to the meeting. I had never seen somebody interrupt a phone interview before so it seemed quite urgent.

When we were in place there was a hushed silence as more people came gathered. For a long time there had been rumours that the whole office was moving from its downtown Halifax location to save money. Thinking this was that announcement, I asked, " Are we moving?" to the senior person beside me loud enough for everybody near us to hear. When I got no reply, I said jokingly, is the Daily News folding? Still I got nothing. My heart sank.

About a minute later Marc-Noel Ouellette, senior vice-president of the Transcontinental's newspaper group told us as of today the Halifax Daily News has folded. There will be no newspaper the next day. He proceeded to tell us that a new free daily called the metro would take its place. Some people would find employment with the news paper but the vast majority would not.

That was it. It was like a hurricane came in and destroyed our home.

I worked at the Daily News for seven and a half years. It was a good environment to draw editorial cartoons. Editors let me do my work and wanted me to cause a stir each day. They encouraged hard hitting, opinionated work. A rarity at today's newspapers.

I did land on my feet quickly. I've had calls from a number of news sources asking me about my cartoons, mostly local publications outside Halifax. And as much as I feel lucky, I can't help but mourn the loss of what was one of the best work environments for an editorial cartoonist in North America.

-Michael de Adder


February 21, 2008

Sherrifius Wins Herblock Award

My buddy John Sherffius just e-mailed to tell me he won the Herblock Award for Editorial Cartoons. We've put up a special section showing the twelve cartoons that won the prize for John. Want to e-mail your congratulations - or complaints to John? He's at: jsherffius@aol.com. And see John's editorial cartoon archive here.

Castro Resigns
The future of Cuba without Fidel is generating lots of cartoons. On the left, Cuban cartoonist, Ares, who lives in Cuba, has a very different view of the Cuban future than Alen Lauzan, a Cuban who left Cuba for Chilé.

The Ares cartoon on the left is the only drawing of Fidel I've ever seen by a Cuban cartoonist in Cuba. Cartoons of Fidel are a taboo in Cuba - although in this case, Ares is making the point that nothing will change; maybe that makes this Fidel drawing go down more smoothly with the communists.

Check out our Fidel Quits cartoons.



February 12, 2008

Oh! The mail on my cartoon ...

From: John Evans
Subject: Why

So you characterize me as a "Monkey" because I don't like someone's political beliefs. How disgusting of you.

Typical Liberal Democrat - It's ok to insult someone as long as they are not a Minority. It's still an insult and you should apologize.

You are a racist, just because we are conservative and not agree with you, you make us into Monkeys????

What's wrong with you, where is your open mind, where is your compasion and caring for others?

John
(Phone number deleted)

Why don't you call my number and call me a Monkey to my face, don't you believe in what you do?


I wouldn't say the conservative character in my cartoon is a "monkey" - I'd say he is "evolutionally challenged." --Daryl

Comment on the cartoon here.


Thanks to our friends at Editor & Publisher for permission to post this story.

Denmark Police Arrest Several in Cartoonist Plot

COPENHAGEN, Denmark
Danish police said Tuesday they have arrested several people suspected of plotting to kill one of the 12 cartoonists behind the Prophet Muhammad drawings that sparked a deadly uproar in the Muslim world two years ago.

The arrests were made in pre-dawn raids in Aarhus, western Denmark, "to prevent a terror-related murder," the police intelligence agency said. It did not say how many people were arrested nor did it mention which cartoonist was targeted.

However, according to Jyllands-Posten, the Danish newspaper that first published the drawings on Sept. 30, 2005, the suspects were planning to kill its cartoonist Kurt Westergaard. It said those arrested included both Danish and foreign citizens.

"There were very concrete murder plans against Kurt Westergaard," said Carsten Juste, the paper's editor-in-chief.

The cartoons were later reprinted by a range of Western publications, and they sparked deadly protests in parts of the Muslim world.

Islamic law generally opposes any depiction of the prophet, even favorable, for fear it could lead to idolatry.

Westergaard, 73, and his wife Gitte, 66, had been living under police protection because of the murder plans, Jyllands-Posten reported.

"Of course I fear for my life when the police intelligence service say that some people have concrete plans to kill me. But I have turned fear into anger and resentment," Westergaard said in a statement published on Jyllands-Posten's Web site.

PET, the police intelligence service, called the action "preventive," saying it decided to strike "at an early phase to stop the planning and the carrying out of the murder."

In the uproar that followed the publishing of the cartoons, Danes watched in disbelief as angry mobs burned the Danish flag and attacked the country's embassies in Muslim countries including Syria, Iran and Lebanon.

Jyllands-Posten was evacuated several times because of threats and posted security guards at its office outside Aarhus and in Copenhagen.

The paper initially refused to apologize for the cartoons, which it said were published in reaction to a perceived self-censorship among artists dealing with Islamic issues, but later said it regretted that the cartoons had offended Muslims.

The Danish government also expressed regrets to Muslims, but noted that it could not interfere with the freedom of the press.

Kasem Ahmad, a spokesman for the Copenhagen-based Islamic Faith Community, a network of Muslim groups that spearheaded protests against the cartoons in Denmark, said he hoped Tuesday's arrests would not rekindle the uproar.

"We urge Muslims to take it calmly," he told the TV2 News network.

The rage over the caricatures resonated beyond Denmark. In Germany, two men were accused of planting bombs aboard a pair of German commuter trains in 2006 that failed to explode.

One of the men, Youssef Mohammed el-Hajdib, a Lebanese citizen, is on trial in Duesseldorf. The second man, Jihad Hamad, was convicted in December in Lebanon and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

El-Hajdib told the court last week that Hamad planned the attacks as revenge after some German newspapers reprinted the Muhammad caricatures.

Hamad, however, testified at his trial in Lebanon that el-Hajdib was the initiator of the failed plot. He said el-Hajdib brainwashed him and exposed him to extremist videos and propaganda.


February 11, 2008

 We have a new site! The Cagle Post!

Our new site, CaglePost.com, is born out of years of my frustration with editors who can't see that cartoons are as powerful, or more powerful, than words. We've gathered most of the top newspaper columnists, along with our great selection of top editorial cartoonists, and we mix them together in a continuous, chronological flow, with the new cartoons and columns appearing as soon as they are released. ­ and with cartoons getting equal play on the site with the columns. I think it is already the best news/opinion site on the web.

On The Cagle Post front page the newest columns show up at the top of the middle of the page. In the left column we have a list of each columnist with their most recent column along with archives and RSS feeds for each columnist. At the right we have topics, where you can see a mix of columns and cartoons by topic, and subscribe to a topical RSS feed.

We've been beta testing the new Cagle Post site for a couple of months with our newsletter audience and we've gotten lots of good advice and ideas from our readers. One thing readers wanted to do was leave comments with each cartoon, and we have some active discussions going for both the columns and cartoons. The most recent comments can be seen on the front page, click on a comment to go to the cartoon or column that is the subject of debate.

We also have a great new slate of free e-mail newsletters, where our readers can subscribe to any or all of the Cagle.msnbc.com cartoonists and their favorite columnists.

Our Cagle.msnbc.com site is growing old; it is still a collection of separate html files that is managed the same way we did it ten years ago. The new Cagle Post site is database driven and gives us a path to upgrade and modernize the Cagle.msnbc.com site. We may combine the two sites in the future, or The Cagle Post may go its separate way, we're not quite sure, but for now, The Cagle Post is a separate site.

We've gotten some complaints from readers who don't like the one cartoon per column and thumbnail displays on The Cagle Post; they prefer the way we show the cartoons now, by artist, with many cartoons on each page. Don't worry, our current site and multi-cartoon layout are here to stay; when we upgrade, we won't be changing the layout you are comfortable with. The Cagle Post site just provides different ways to see the cartoons.

Part of the reason for the redesign was the "Search for a Cartoon" link in the left column here on Cagle.msnbc.com - we haven't had a good search function for cartoons here because of our archaic setup; the link used to go to our online store at Politicalcartoons.com where we had a nice search script. What happened was, over time, more and more readers found Politicalcartoons.com through this link and preferred the Politicalcartoons.com format for browsing the most recent cartoons. Over time the traffic on Politicalcartoons.com grew to millions of page views and it became clear that people didn't really want a store - they really just wanted to look at and search for the cartoons in the thumnail, dated format of our store. In fact, the audience on Politicalcartoons.com has grown to the point where it is about the same size as our huge audience on Cagle.msnbc.com - we knew we had to make a change, and that's why the Cartoon Ticker page on The Cagle Post looks and works just like Politicalcartoons.com.

As time goes by, we'll be gently nudging our readers to do their pleasure reading on The Cagle Post ticker page, to move them out of our Politicalcartoons.com store and into a different reading room. Don't worry, any changes to Cagle.msnbc.com will not disrupt your daily routines and will not change the look and feel of our site.

Give The Cagle Post a try - unlike other opinion sites like Townhall.com, our site has no political agenda. We have liberals and conservatives together on the same topics. And we have the best cartoons presented in the way that many of you prefer. Come! Look! Be angry and leave a comment! And subscribe to our new newsletters and RSS feeds!

There's nothing else like it!

Click here to comment!

Our Cagle Post Front page ...


Our Cagle Post Cartoon Ticker/Search Page ...

February 5, 2008

Introducing Taylor Jones

I'm delighted to add Taylor Jones to our site. I think Taylor is the most brilliant caricature artist working today; his caricatures are widely syndicated to newspapers around the world, but what most people don't know is that Taylor, who lives in Staten Island, NY, is also the editorial cartoonist for the El Nuevo Dia newspaper in Puerto Rico. That's one of Taylor's Puerto Rican cartoons below - about Super Tuesday. (Be sure to visit our great SUPER TUESDAY cartoon collection!) E-mail a welcome to Taylor Jones. See Taylor's archive.


February 4, 2008

Complaints about the relative sizes of fish

I knew this would happen - I'm getting complaints about the relative sizes of the fish in my Google/Yahoo/Microsoft cartoon. Here is an example:

From: Parker, David
Subject: cartoon for 2/2/08

Good day,
I think you have a minor error with the cartoon for 2/2/08.

If you're picking the fish size based on search market share, then the Microsoft fish should actually be smaller than the Yahoo fish ... if you're sizing them based on Revenue, then the Microsoft fish should be much larger than all the others!

MS revenue: $51.2B
Google revenue: $16.6B
Yahoo revenue: $6.7B

Food for thought

I get a whole lot of e-mail every day reminding me that size DOES matter. In this case, I'm referring to the relative share of the online search market, where Google controls about 75% of the business. Here the fish are drawn with correct relative volumes - the Microsoft and Yahoo! fish are roughly spherical and the Google fish is flat, viewed from the side. Our readers need to think in three dimensions.

Click here to comment on my fish.


January 20, 2008

Huge, Crazy Reaction to Girl Scout Cookies Column

We've been getting a crazy reaction to a recent column we syndicated by Tom Purcell. Stark raving crazy readers have been flooding us with email and phone calls complaining about the column below, which makes a tongue-in-cheek argument that Girl Scout Cookies should be banned. We've learned that you don't joke about little girls. If you want to comment on the column, click here.

Considering the flood of e-mail from shallow readers, I asked Tom for a comment:

I'd like to say I was surprised by some of the responses I got to a satirical column that calls for a ban on Girl Scout cookies, but the truth is I wasn't surprised at all.

The idea in the column below was to poke fun at some of the stridency we see on op/ed pages by folks who lecture the rest of us on what we must do to save the world. You might think it obvious that readers would see the gag -- what kind of nut would attack Girl Scouts and demand that their cookie sale be banned to save the environment and protect us from a host of other ills -- but a number of readers didn't see the gag.

Some of the early mail I got came from folks on the left who praised me for being anti-capitalist. Much of the mail came from Girl Scout moms who thought I was dead serious. Some of these folks actually called the editors at their local paper to complain; others called Cagle Cartoons directly. They were mighty angry at this writer and responded to my "attack" on the Girl Scouts point by point. Interestingly, the later mail has come from people who saw the real point of the column and got a kick out of it.

In any event, Cagle's Cari Dawson-Bartley has a theory as to why many folks missed the gag. Though it's true readers have misunderstood satirical pieces in their local newspaper in the past -- think Mike Royko and Art Buchwald -- could it be that these days it's hard to tell the difference between satire and columnists who really mean what they are writing -- who really don't see the silliness in their point of view and the demands that they're making on the rest of us? -Tom Purcell

Here is the offending column:

Why Girl Scout Cookies Must Be Banned
By Tom Purcell

The Girl Scout cookie season is upon us. That means one thing. The annual cookie sale must be banned.

How can we allow anyone, in these progressive times, to inflict empty calories on an already obese public?

How can we be so inconsiderate to diabetics and others who are unable to consume sugar?

How can we allow any organization, regardless of its cause, to use children to pimp products loaded with trans fat, the partially hydrogenated oil that Americans fear more than communism?

It is true that the Girl Scouts organization was founded in 1912 to help girls develop physically, mentally and spiritually. I know the annual cookie sale has become a tasty part of American culture since it originated in 1917.

But the fact is this: The annual sale is teaching girls TERRIBLE values.

It is teaching them raw capitalism -- how to exploit the weak and the helpless. My own niece, an otherwise sweet and lovely child, knows I can't help but eat shortbread cookies by the row. I eat Thin Mints as though they were Tic Tacs. I down Peanut Butter Patties the way grizzlies dine on wild salmon.

I'm addicted. But rather than protect me from my addiction, she preys on me. She calls or visits just before dinner -- when I am at my most hungry and vulnerable. She tells me about her troop's good deeds and how my order will fund even more.

The clever little manipulator always walks away with a sizable order.

All Girl Scouts do. They probably meet in private to laugh about the helplessness of their victims -- they laugh about the strong-arm techniques they use to part friends, family and neighbors from their hard-earned dough.

In the process, they are destroying our environment. More than 200 million boxes of Girl Scout cookies are sold every year -- that's $700 million in annual revenue. Precious trees must be felled to farm the grains and sugars needed to produce them -- trees that are essential to dissipating carbon dioxide.

What's worse, as those cookies are manufactured, packaged and shipped, more carbon dioxide is pumped into the air. That's right, the Girl Scouts are causing the Arctic ice cap to melt. The next time you dip a shortbread cookie into a cup of milk, the least you can do is remember the starving polar bears stranded on hideously small ice floes.

That's why the annual Girl Scout cookie sale must end.

Look, if the Girl Scouts want to teach girls how to market products and manage inventory and money, can't they be more socially responsible? Instead of selling cookies, why not sell low-energy-consumption light bulbs? Why not sell something that makes the girls aware of man's thoughtless destruction of our fragile ecosystems?

Better yet, instead of teaching the girls the principles of capitalism, why not teach them how to be government bureaucrats instead? America is moving toward European-style socialism. The careers of the future will be in government, not the private sector. Why not have the government produce a pamphlet on the harmful effects of cookies, then mandate that the girls develop a program to distribute it?

Sure, I know some people will criticize me for demanding an end to the cookie sale. They'll say that it really does teach girls useful business skills. They'll say that it's as much a part of American culture as baseball and apple pie -- that we should celebrate it and enjoy it. They'll say that America has real problems and that I ought to focus on those rather than something as harmless as a lousy cookie sale.

Well, nuts to that. I urge you to write your senator and congressperson. If the Girl Scouts won't willingly stop foisting their cookie pox on the rest of us, we must use the might of the federal government to mandate a ban on their annual sale.

I hope the ban goes into effect before my niece talks me into placing another order.

If you want to comment on Tom's offensive column, click here

Here is some cartoon supporting evidence for Tom's position:


Cartoon by M. e. Cohen, Comment on this cartoon.


Cartoon by Mike Lester of the Rome (GA) News-Tribune, Comment on this cartoon.


Cartoon by Joe Heller of the Green Bay Press-Gazette, Comment on this cartoon.


January 16, 2008

This is in from our buddy, Dave Astor at E&P, posted with permission:

A Cartoon Flip-Flop After New Hampshire's Primary
By Dave Astor, Published: January 16, 2008 11:25 AM ET

NEW YORK Hillary Clinton may have turned the Democratic presidential race upside down when she won last week's New Hampshire primary. Meanwhile, editorial cartoonist Bob Englehart definitely turned New Hampshire upside down.

Englehart, of The Hartford (Conn.) Courant and the Cagle Cartoons syndicate, did a four-panel drawing last week about Clinton's victory. In the last panel, the "Live Free or Die" state was flipped.

When contacted by E&P, Englehart replied: "Hah! I made a mistake. I was so focused on making a vertical state fit a horizontal space that I didn't even notice I had made it upside down! Most people didn't even notice."

And he quipped: "I hear New Hampshire is changing its slogan to 'Live Right Side Up, Or Die.'"

Click here to comment on Bob's upside down state cartoon.


January 13, 2008

Three New Cartoonists are Added to our Site!

I'm pleased to add three new foreign cartoonists to our site today. Jens Hage is an award winning 'toon talent from Denmark, he is a freelancer for the Danish national newspaper "BerlingskeTidende" (the world's oldest newspaper) and works on the staff for the annual Danish satirical book "Blæksprutten" (the Octopus), which has been published for 116 years. E-mail Jens. Click here to see Jens' new archive on our site.
Jeremy Nell's cartoons, titled "Ditwits," appear on the front page of one of the largest daily, national newspapers in South Africa, "The Times." Visit Jeremy's site. E-mail Jeremy. Visit Jeremy's archive on our site.

This cartoon is about South Africa's ruling party, the ANC, and its new leader, Jacob Zuma, who is facing corruption charges and has a colorful (and ugly) history.

Yes, it takes some obscure knowledge of foreign affairs to understand the work of most foreign cartoonists, which makes the selection of cartoonists for our site a little tough sometimes. We like for the foreign cartoonists to draw about international issues that an American audience will readily understand, and most of them do - but we also want to present a real picture of what is going on around the world in cartoons. So, suffer and learn about Jacob Zuma.
Our third new cartoonist is Khalil Rahman who is the staff cartoonist for the Bengali newspaper, the Daily Naya Diganta in Dhaka, Bangladesh. E-mail Khalil. Visit Khalil's cartoon archive.


January 7, 2008

Quotes Quotes Quotes

My friend, professor Chris Lamb, who usually writes about editorial cartoons, has written a book about famous quotes. The book is called, "I'll be Sober in the Morning." The title is culled from a famous Winston Churchill quote. The book is great fun and Chris sent me a collection of his favorite quotes from the book that I am including below. E-mail Chris.

British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had been drinking heavily at a party and bumped into Bessie Braddock, a Socialist parliament member.
"Mr. Churchill, you are drunk," Braddock said harshly.
"And Bessie, you are ugly. You are very ugly," Churchill snapped and then after a pause, added: "I'll be sober in the morning."

John Wilkes, the eighteenth-century British political reformer, was debating John Montagu, the Fourth Earl of Sandwich, in the House of Parliament. As the exchange went on, the tone grew more and more personal. Montagu finally shouted at Wilkes that he would either die on the gallows or of venereal disease. To which Wilkes responded, "That, sir, depends on whether I first embrace your Lordship's principles or your Lordship's mistresses."

During one of the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates, U.S. Sen. Stephen Douglas told his conservative audience that he had once seen his opponent selling whiskey.
When it was his turn to speak, Lincoln made no attempt to dispute the charge. He agreed that he had once worked as a bartender.
"I was on one side of the bar serving drinks," he said, "and Douglas was on the other side, drinking them."

When Woodrow Wilson was governor of New Jersey, he was informed that one of the state's U.S. senators had died and it would therefore be up to Wilson to appoint a successor. Shortly thereafter, a state politician called Wilson and said, "Mr. Governor, I'd like to take the senator's place."
"It's okay with me," Wilson replied, "if it's okay with the undertaker."

One evening a nervous soprano struggled hopelessly before President Calvin Coolidge at a White House recital.
"What do you think of the singer's execution?" one of the guests asked Coolidge.
Coolidge paused and then quietly answered, "I'm all for it."

Former Georgia Governor Herman Talmadge was asked what would be the effect of all the people moving from Georgia to Florida.
"I am sure it will enhance the level of intelligence of both states," Talmadge said.

During an exchange in Parliament, Lady Nancy Astor snarled at Winston Churchill and said: "If you were my husband, I would poison your coffee." Churchill replied: "If you were my wife, Nancy, I'd drink it."
September 4, 2007

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Artwork © each artist. The Professional Cartoonists Index is ©Daryl Cagle. All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.