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MAY 19, 2004

FISCHETTI AWARD

Our own John Cole of the Durham Herald-Sun won this year's Fischetti Award with the cartoon below. He sent us these comments. E-mail John at jcole@heraldsun.com.

Here's the Fischetti winner, about Thurmond's dalliance with a household servant in light of his segregationist politics. I nearly didn't submit the cartoon for judging because it concerned something that was done 70-odd years ago by a guy who's now dead. There were other cartoons I was equally fond of that addressed issues and individuals still fresh and current. But the reaction I got to this particular 'toon was sufficient for its inclusion in the contest portfolio.

That's the thing to remember when entering contests: It's the readers, stupid.

BTW, a writer for a right-wing website called the Washington Dispatch used my and Steve Sack's winning cartoons to make the case that conservative cartoonists are being black-balled by the craft at large and contests in particular. The fact that he called me a liberal proves he didn't do any homework for the piece; but then, the thing is so devoid of critical thought that this laziness isn't surprising.

--John Cole




MAY 15, 2004

On Saturday May 29, the National Cartoonists Society (NCS) will hold their annual, gala, black tie celebration in Kansas City, hosted by Universal Press Syndicate and Hallmark. The Reuben Award will be bestowed upon the cartoonist who was voted the best of the year, by his professional colleagues. The nominees are Pat Brady, who draws the comic strip, Rose is Rose; Greg Evans, who draws the comic strip, Luann; and Dan Piraro, who draws the cartoon panel, Bizarro. I'll be at the convention and I'll give a report on the festivities here in the blog.

At the right is the original drawing for the bronze, Reuben Award trophy, by cartoonist Rube Goldberg, the founder of the NCS; the award is named after him. The statue features a "pyramid" of naked, male Arabs, forced into a homoerotic pose. Clearly, Goldberg would not have chosen to force the characters into such a horrible, disgusting, degrading pose. The decision to depict the Arabs in such ghastly, sick, sexual depravity must come from someone higher up in the NCS chain of command. It simply isn't possible that one cartoonist could come up with this perversion on his own. This homosexual, Arab pyramid thing is sick, sick, sick. It makes me so angry! It is worse than torture.

The NCS is better than that and the world should know it. We will punish those responsible.



MAY 8, 2004

MAIL BAG!

Most of our recent mail has been in response to my cartoon contrasting the different reactions to the abuse of Iraqi prisoners and the murders of American civilian workers in Iraq.

As usual, readers either love or hate the cartoon. Many of those who were outraged by the cartoon wrote long emails condemning American aggression in Iraq, without reference to the cartoon. Here is a sampling from the Cagle mail bag ...

Subject: today's cartoon
Good to see that someone sees the big picture.
Don Huebsch



From: Shad Loftus
News flash for Daryl:

The U.S. is the aggressor in Iraq. We're the invaders, the occupiers. We're the ones who are purportedly teaching the world about human dignity, civility and democracy.

We're the ones who are supposedly setting the standards by which others should live - which is why we should punish the soldiers responsible for the abuse of Iraqi prisoners. Even our dimwitted president grasps that.

It's a pity you don't. Humor is much stronger when it is based on truth. You're cute little drawings don't compensate for your a lack of understanding.


From: Hotham, Eileen
Subject: 5/4/04 Cartoon

Dear Mr. Cagle:

I am writing in response to the above referenced cartoon.

I can only infer that you believe that the torture of Iraqi prisoners is not that big a deal because a mob in Fallujah got away with heinous acts towards four private contractors.

According to Al-Jezeera:

In Baghdad an aide to a member of the interim Governing Council said on Friday more than 400 Iraqis had been killed and 1000 wounded in a six-day US offensive against insurgents in Falluja.  "To this day, more than 400 Iraqis have been killed and more than 1,000 others wounded in Falluja," said Hatim al-Husayni, an aide to council member Muhsin Abd Al-Hamid from the Iraqi Islamic Party.

Hardly an unbiased source, but how many people in Fallujah *were* killed or maimed or displaced by coalition forces in retaliation for the mob's heinous acts?  Also, exactly how many Iraqis should we sodomize with broom handles before the scales are balanced?

Sincerely,
Eileen Hotham



From: Scott, Iain S
Subject: re Consequences
So what your saying is that if you randomly encarcerate a bunch of Republicans, blidfold them, wire them up, and tell them that your going to cook them, then that's OK? How about if you stick them in ovens?

From: lindsay
Subject: Cartoon Consequences

Daryl, why aren't more people speaking out about the burning and dragging of bodies in Iraq? The Administration must keep a low profile,but listen to some of our own politicians calling for resignations. Ask them which would they prefer burned & dead or naked with a full belly.They are a sickening embarrassment to fellow Americans.

Lindsay
Augusta,GA



From: Université
Subject: the cartoon


yes happy iraqis in falloujah who didnt suffer 20 days of gunship bombardement and 1000 deaths for the death of 4 us contractors...

and poor poor american soldiers who got released from the army with a dishonorable discharge and blame, and will probably never face criminal charges because of the murkiness of military tribunals , but will instead live happily back home, without any gunships...

whats that...its the tought that counts? I would really hate your presents...

nick hajjar


From: Dan Gilkison
Subject: Thanks for the even-handed view in your cartoons.


Mr. Cagle -

I just wanted to say thank you for reminding everyone of the horrible murder and mutilation of our citizens while they're all so distracted with the "torture" of "innocent" prisoners in Iraq. As an American soldier myself who recently served in the Middle East, I am disgusted and angry at the handful of my fellow soldiers who committed these abuses at Abu Ghraib. But when I see the hundreds of cartoons showing how "utterly horrible" these abuses are and listen to countless discussions about the US losing it's moral high ground and comparing us with Saddam and his injustices, I try to remind people of the relatively small ripple the murders and mutilations made a few weeks ago in the world community. 

Thanks once again for continuing to depict a common-sense, grounded point of view. I, for one, am grateful.

Dan Gilkison, US Army


Subject: Consequences
From: meadow
Once again Daryl Cagle completely misses the point.

The "consequences" for the people of Fallujah for the actions of a few was that their city was closed off by the Americans and bombed. Half the people killed were women and children. Approx. 300 women and children blown to bits and buried in the rubble of their homes. Isn't that consequences enough for ya??

What is going to happen to the American war criminals? They're going to lose their jobs? waaaaaah! Get a slap on the wrist? waaaaaaah!

Daryl, taking pictures is not torture. Sexual abuse, humiliation, degredation and mock executions constitutes torture in any civilized society. And if you are not civilized enough to agree, then there is plenty of evidence of physical brutality, sleep deprivation of prisoners and deaths in custody being perpetrated by your boys in Iraq.




MAY 7, 2004

STEVE KELLEY ON THE TONIGHT SHOW

When I listen to comedians on TV I often notice that they seem to be lifting their jokes from the cartoons on our site --or at least there are a lot of coincidences. Steve Kelley, of the New Orleans Times Picayune, sent me this note for the blog ...

I had an interesting little incident take place.

Walt Handelsman told me that Jay Leno had pinched one of my cartoons and used it as a joke on one of his monologues, several days after the cartoon had appeared in print and on your site. It was a cartoon about the high price of gasoline. I thought the point of the cartoon was far too specific to have generated parallel thought with any of Jay's writers.

Having seen such cartoon-jacking before, I decided to call the producers of The Tonight Show and let them have a piece of my mind. The woman to whom I spoke asked that I send the cartoon and that she would review the situation. She called back within five minutes of my emailing it to let me know that Jay had indeed used the joke on the night in question. He had also used it on a show two years ago, and on another night five years ago, and on another night eight years ago.

She promised not to prosecute me for "ripping off" one of The Tonight Show's jokes.

Steve Kelley


COLLEGE CARTOON CONTROVERSY

At the recent editorial cartoonists convention it was my pleasure to meet Deana Sobel, the political cartoonist for the student newspaper at the University of California at Berkeley. A controversy about one of Deana's cartoons made national news. I asked her to write a few paragraphs about her experience for the blog. E-mail Deanna at deanas@sbcglobal.net

Editorial cartoons by their very nature invite controversy. My career as editorial cartoonist at UC Berkeley's Daily Californian is evidence of that. Students here are passionate about their beliefs and eager to engage in political debate. Unfortunately, not everyone at Berkeley agrees to disagree.

Last May, my cartoon about Kim Jong-Il, autocratic leader of North Korea, drew fire from a number of students and faculty at several California universities. A petition was written accusing me and our student newspaper, The Daily Cal, of perpetuating anti-Asian stereotypes. The petition demanded an apology and a revised standard of publication for our newspaper. It claimed that my cartoon harkened back to racist anti-Japanese caricatures of World War II. Emails agreeing with the accusations flooded our inboxes.

Coincidentally, that same week, the Daily Cal faced additional controversy. A news report about a student athlete's recent arrest at a frat party led to allegations of racism. In response, the Daily Cal published an editorial refusing to apologize for either my cartoon or its reporting. Protestors attempted to storm the Daily Cal office and about 2,400 newspapers were stolen from the stands.

Some of the feedback for my cartoon was positive and very supportive, particularly from Asian American students. A USC student wrote, "As an Asian student, I was not in any way offended. . . . To give a public apology is to say that you will limit the artistic ability of artists working for your newspaper. Such limitation means that the artists will have to be unnecessarily and excessively careful not to offend the unnecessarily and extraordinarily racially sensitive people."

I still stand by my cartoon. As anyone who's ever taken a look at the guy can imagine, Kim Jong-Il's caricature really just draws itself.

--Deana Sobel


Copyright 2004, The Daily Californian, Reprinted with permission



May 6, 2004

Here's an interesting interview with our own Lalo Alcaraz whose editorial cartoons appear in the LA Weekly and are nationally syndicated. Lalo also draws a comic strip called La Cucaracha. Lalo was presented with a Latino Spirit Award at the California state capitol, given by the legislature's Latino Caucus. E-mail Lalo. Visit Lalo's cartoons.

Latino Editorial Cartoonist Takes His Message Mainstream With 'La Cucaracha'

Q&A, Marcelo Ballve,
Pacific News Service, May 05, 2004

Q: During California's recall last year, your cartoons were very critical of Gov. Schwarzenegger. How do you think he feels about you receiving the award?

A: I asked, has he read my cartoons, does he know who I am? And they said: "Oh yes, he does! But this is meant to be a fun day ... a fun, nonpartisan day." I'm just a little fly, so I think he's taking it all in stride.

Your "Mexterminator" cartoon showed Schwarzenegger in "Terminator" gear, armed to the teeth, as Latinos run scared. The caption was "Hasta la vista, Latinos!" Did your recall cartoons generate hate mail?

Actually, no. Except for one in particular. The character in "La Cucaracha" said he was surprised that the Republican Party was embracing immigrants like Arnold ... but that it didn't hurt that his daddy was a Nazi. Oh man, I got into a lot of trouble! A couple of papers apologized and said it was a mistake and all this B.S. But it's not like I made that up! His father was a Nazi. So maybe it was rude of me to bring it up, but I wasn't making stuff up.

Another recall issue was Proposition 187. Former Gov. Pete Wilson, one of Schwarzenegger's election advisors, was the main proponent of that 1994 ballot initiative to deny public services to undocumented immigrants. Are California Latinos still intimidated by 187's legacy, even though the courts scrapped it?

I think it's the opposite. Whatever small power we have, we have Pete Wilson and 187 to thank. I sort of became known for those cartoons that I would do against Wilson. Some of my satire was born because of 187 and all that hatred. We created media hoaxes, like a group called "Hispanics for Wilson," which was a fake self-deportationist group of Republican Latinos who were going to deport themselves once Pete Wilson won. We made it fun; we flipped it over. But we are still in the shadow of that anti-immigrant kind of hysteria that pops up its ugly head all the time.

Has the media done an adequate job covering post-9/11 anti-immigrant feelings and racial profiling?

Spanish-language media does a great job, but how much does that affect the mainstream -- sometimes not a lot. I try to put that pro-immigrant message and the interests of immigrants and non-white people in the center. My battle is with the mainstream society, to make that message acceptable and not have people roll their eyes when they hear we're complaining about this or that.

During the lead-up to the Iraq war you penned a cartoon in which Bush was running around with a missile between his legs. Did you imagine editors might have problems running that?

(Laughs) I drew that for the L.A. weekly. I can't get away with it anywhere else. I can't get away with it in my syndicated editorial cartoon. But I still think it's funny.

You're not worried about the FCC or someone coming after you for obscenity?

No, no. I'd like to see them write that law.

Harvard University's Samuel P. Huntington argues in new book that Latino immigration is a threat to the nation. Why is he setting the agenda for discussions of Latino identity?

That's the privilege of the white mainstream -- setting the agenda. We're constantly in reactionary mode. That's why art is important. It's not exactly public policy but it's all we've got to strike out with, like President Bush's pre-emptive strategy.

A lot of coverage now seems to focus on the demographic aspect, on how the Latino population seems to be growing everywhere.

We're coming out of the trees... (laughs)

Is that bad or good?

I guess if one falls on your head, that's not too good!

I mean the belated media attention on Latinos, and particularly their population growth.

I've detected evidence of this as early as the 1970s. National Geographic did this Mexican American issue. It's like they went to the Amazon and discovered Chicanos. It's really exotic. It kind of started back then. Then pretty soon they started with the old cliché of the Decade of the Hispanic, which was every decade. They keep trotting it out. It's ridiculous. They still act like they're in "Leave it to Beaver" days.

Is it any different on the comics pages?

There's a glaring lack of diversity on the comics page. Even though Aaron McGruder (creator of "The Boondocks," an African American comic strip) gets a lot of attention and I'm starting to get a little bit, it's still pretty bad. There are a lot of ancient strips.

Alcaraz was interviewed by Marcelo Ballvé, a PNS editor.



May 5, 2004

I'm happy to recommend a new contest for editorial cartoonists!

National Population Cartoon Contest
Grand Prize $7,000

Population Media Center is holding its first annual National Population Cartoon Contest. The organization will give away $10,000 in prizes, including a grand prize of $7,000, to those cartoonists who can best portray the relationship between human population growth and issues affecting the quality of life. These issues can include environmental degradation, poverty, biodiversity, urban migration, food and water supply, energy, maternal and child health, status of women, and national conflicts. The grand prize winner will also receive an all-expense paid trip to New York City to attend the awards event!

ß Entries must have been published in a reputable publication in the United States by September 10, 2004.
ß Entries must have been published after January 1, 2000.
ß Applicants must be U.S. residents.
ß Entries must be received by Friday, September 10, 2004.

Send to:
Cartoon Contest
Population Media Center, Inc.
P.O. Box 547
Shelburne, VT 05482-0547 - USA

Late entries will not be accepted. PMC is not responsible for entries lost in the mail.
ß Limit entry to 12 cartoons. Please mount cartoon(s) securely in a folder or binder. Please, no entries larger than 11" x 14".
ß A copy of the official entry form must accompany each item. Photocopied entry forms are acceptable. Find the form at: http://www.populationmedia.org/cartooncontest/entryform.html

ß One clean photocopy of each cartoon is required, along with a tearsheet of each cartoon as it appeared in the publication.
ß Internet entries must include one hard copy of the cartoon and a copy of the web layout as it appears on the Internet. This should include the name of the website, the publication date, your name and the cartoon. The URL address should be available for judges viewing at the time of award selection (September - October 2004). Entries will not be returned.

Questions regarding eligibility should be directed to: cartooncontest@populationmedia.org
For more information, visit: http://www.populationmedia.org/cartooncontest/index.html






DOONESBURY AND IRAQ
Thanks to Dr. Chris Lamb, for giving us permission to post this article that he wrote for the Atlanta Journal Constitution. Chris is a professor at the College of Charleston; he specializes in the study of editorial cartoons and is the author of Drawn to Extremes: The Use and Abuse of Editorial Cartoons in the United States, which will be published by Columbia University Press this fall. His e-mail is lambc@cofc.edu. Doonesbury is my neighbor on Slate, visit Doonesbury here.

B.D., one of the main characters in the long-running "Doonesbury" strip, lost his leg last week while fighting as an Army soldier in Iraq, bringing a sense of reality to newspapers that made both editors and readers squirm. As a satirist, "Doonesbury" creator Garry Trudeau understands that his job is to hold a mirror to society and show us not as we want to be but as we are. He reveals truths that we prefer not to think about it.

Trudeau explained that he wanted to illustrate the sacrifices that American soldiers are making. "We are at war, and we can't lose sight of the hardships war inflicts on individual lives," he said, adding that B.D. would deal with his injury "probably the same way so many wounded vets seem to ­ with gratitude for having had one's life spared, empathy and respect for those who have suffered worse, and a grim sense of humor indispensable to fending off despair."

When B.D.'s doctor told him that amputees often go through a grieving process that starts with denial and is then followed by anger, B.D skips the denial phase and proceeds directly to anger, screaming out an obscenity. "I wanted to show the process of rehabilitation and recovery . . . and the impact on family and friends. B.D.'s life will never be the same," Trudeau said at American Association of Editorial Cartoonists convention last week. "That's why I took his helmet off after 34 years. He's moving on to a different part of his life."

Ralph Waldo Emerson once called caricatures "the truest history of our times." No American satirist has captured our society as truthfully as Trudeau, in part because he has remarkably succeeded at something as ephemeral as satire since 1970. His success lies in his sense of observation and his ability to create distinct characters, adapt to a changing America, and capture its headlines, zeitgeist, and idioms.

Unlike other comic strips, where characters live forever as 7 year olds or as one-dimensional adults, their lines continually recycled, Trudeau's characters change with the times and stay true to character. They grow up, go to college, find jobs, lose jobs, get married, get divorced, struggle with middle and older age, and even suffer, like Congresswomen Lacey Davenport, from Alzheimer's Disease. When Andy Lippincott developed AIDS, readers complained and a number of newspapers dropped the strip. But other readers ­ those who had the disease or knew someone who did ­ welcomed it. "The epidemic does have a funny side," one AIDS sufferer said. In one of the most poignant "Doonesbury" strips, Lippincott succumbs to AIDS while the Beach Boys' "Wouldn't It Be Nice" plays in the background.

Trudeau has thus far shunted mean-spiritness, the occupational hazard that has been the downfall of other satirists, including other comic strip artists like Walt Kelly of "Pogo" and Al Capp of "Lil' Abner," who lost their way after they became swallowed up by their own pretense or indignation. Aaron McGruder, who draws "Boondocks," appears to be falling into this trap.

In addition, Trudeau may be shaped by his liberal politics he is not blinded by them. After a promising beginning, Bruce Tinsley's "Mallard Fillmore," the conservative "Doonesbury" as it's marketed, has become a one-trick pony who nips at the same standard liberal issues over and over, causing some readers to laugh because, while it lacks surprise, if offers the comfort of an old joke between friends.

As a satirist, Trudeau is truer to his satire than to his politics. He also doesn't take himself too seriously, preferring to respond to his critics with nothing more than a bemused smile and a shrug. His influence can be measured, in some part, by the reactions of his critics. Nothing incenses them more than Trudeau using their own words to reduce them to the foolish mortals they are. Writer Clark Hendley compared the satire of Trudeau with the Greek Horace, "who wanted to tell the truth laughing." Hendley wrote that "just as Horace minutely examined the society of his own day, Trudeau forces us to look at ourselves not as we would like to be but as are."





May 4, 2004

Here is Matt Davies' response to Jimmy Margulies' commentary below.

Jimmy raises a good point. Although I'll make it clear that I did accept the role as a judge, rather than the judge. The Herblock Foundation felt strongly that a cartoonist on the judging panel would keep the other non-cartooning judges in line as far as what actually constitutes a proper editorial cartoon. I think the ultimate fear was that say, "Garfield" might win a Herblock Prize.

As far as putting me in an uncomfortable position with regard to other cartoonists -other than the usual discomfort associated with being around them - let me just say that, to the best of my knowledge, I've never gone duck hunting with any cartoonists and as such, I am (mostly) beyond reproach ethically on this matter.

Hope this alleviates any lingering fears on the part of all aspiring cartoon contest participants.

Thanks,
-Matt




May 1, 2004

CARTOONISTS AS CONTEST JUDGES
Today we have a commentary by New Jersey Record cartoonist, Jimmy Margulies.

In recent years , editorial cartoonists have served as judges for The Pulitzer Prize, and this year it was announced that the winner of the Herblock Award would be one of the judges for next year's competition.

On the surface this sounds pretty reasonable. Who better to judge the cartoon entries than those who do the job daily and are intimately familiar with what it takes. Additionally, cartoonists want to be taken seriously as journalists, and including them among the editors and columnists who make up the bulk of prestigious contest judges is definitely a mark of respect.

But I believe the reasons for editorial cartoonists not to be judges far outweigh the positives.

Just as a panel of jurors in a courtroom are vetted for anything in their background which might prevent them from being totally open minded, contest judges should also be free of any sort of bias or conflict.

Among editorial cartoonists this is impossible. The field is so small that most of us know one another either very well, or at least a bit.

In addition, cartoonists are not only opiniated about the public officials and issues we cover, but also about the work of our colleagues. We know whose work we admire, and whose we may not think as highly of.

Having strong feelings and being passionate about what we think is good work makes for lively discussion when cartoonists get together, but such views cannot be easily left behind when it becomes time to judge the work of others.

I have had the experience of judging smaller scale contests than the Pulitzer, and I recently spoke with another cartoonist who also judged something on this order. We both agreed how awkward it was to have to judge the work of people with whom we are friendly.

Particularly unfortunate in my view was the announcement in advance of next year's contest that Matt Davies, winner of the Herblock Award, will be a judge for next year. That puts Matt in a very uncomfortable postion amidst his peers.

While a panel of editors judging cartoons may not be the absolute ideal, I still feel it is superior to the possibility of cartoonists who are not totally free of complications doing the judging.

Jimmy Margulies



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