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Big Bird the Media & Binders Full of Women

Big Bird  the Media & Binders Full of Women © Daryl Cagle,CagleCartoons.com,Mit Romney,Barack Obama,presidential debates,binders full of women,media,television,Big Bird,Sesame Street,PBS

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Interview With Conservative Cartoonist Eric Allie

eric allie Interview With Conservative Cartoonist Eric Allie cartoonsRecently, I traveled to France to attend the St. Just le Martel editorial cartoon festival. I brought with me our brilliant, knuckle-dragging conservative cartoonist Eric Allie, who seemed like a strange, wild beast to the mostly-lefty French cartoonists.

I had the chance to sit down and interview Eric about his cartooning style and ideas, and I poked and prodded him about all those crazy conservative tropes he enjoys using in his cartoons, like labeling the media the MSM (I actually had to Google it to find out what it meant because I wasn’t living in the right-wing bubble):

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Presidential Debate Number Two Open Thread

Since we have so many devoted readers with as many opinions about politics as our cartoonists (and since it went so well during the first Presidential Debate), here’s an open thread for all of you to have at it LIVE during tonight’s Vice Presidential debate between Joe Biden and Paul Ryan.

To start the discussion, here’s a funny pre-debate cartoon by Nate Beeler of the Columbus Dispatch (check out all our cool Debate cartoons here).

120496 600 Presidential Debate Number Two Open Thread cartoons

Who do you think will win? Are you rooting for anyone? What do you hope they discuss? Will Biden say something crazy? Comment away below!

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Farewell to NBCNews.com/msnbc.com

For the past six years we’ve enjoyed a partnership with msnbc.com (which recently changed its name to NBCNews.com) and for six years before that, with Slate.com when it was part of the Microsoft Network – all in all, twelve years with Microsoft and MSN.com.  I regret to write that our partnership has come to an end.

nbcnews Farewell to NBCNews.com/msnbc.com   cartoonsI was the official “editorial cartoonist” for Slate.com, msnbc.com and NBCNews.com.  Of-course, all of the cartoonists that work with us through our Cagle Cartoons syndicate and Politicalcartoons.com were featured on the MSN.com sites, including slide shows on news topics of the day on msnbc.com, the Today Show site and NBC Sports; we did a cartoon week in review and maintained a “CartoonBlog.”

Recently, msnbc.com changed ownership to be run by NBC, and NBC itself recently changed ownership.  It isn’t usual these days for cartoons to be cut to save costs, but we were cut for editorial reasons. The reason I was given for our departure was “the new management wants nothing to do with cartoons.” Msnbc.com/NBCNews.com has never had an opinion section, or other opinion content, so it is disappointing, but not entirely unexpected.

Readers of our Cagle.com site will see very few changes – the NBCNews.com logo is gone from our header and will be gone from my attribution in my future cartoons.  Our site will look the same as always; we’ll continue our syndication business as always at CagleCartoons.com and Politicalcartoons.com.

Our editors at MSN/Slate/msnbc/NBCNews were wonderful to work with all these years; I’ve appreciated their support for our cartoonists and our art form.  They loved what we did, let us do what we wanted and were happy with what we wanted to do – the perfect editors!  They were great.  I miss them already.

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De Rosier’s Final Cartoon For The Albany Times Union

Today on his blog, Albany Times-Union cartoonist John de Rosier filed his final cartoon for the paper. de Rosier was notified earlier this week that he was being laid off due to budget cuts, along with full-time photographer Phil Kamrass. At least the paper let him go out in style, unlike Clay Jones, whose final cartoon was killed by his editor at the Free Lance Star.

john de rosier cartoon De Rosiers Final Cartoon For The Albany Times Union cartoons

Tim O’Brien, the president of the Albany Newspaper Guild, has a nice blog post up about the lost of de Rosier’s cartooning job at the Times-Union, and its larger implications to a newspaper that just earned a Newspaper of Distinction Award from the Associated Press:

A distinctive art form is being steadily destroyed by people who look purely at revenue. It’s hard to say that an editorial cartoonist generates a certain amount of income for the newspaper, just as it is hard to say how much any single reporter or photographer does. But eliminating the cartoonist sends a message to readers: We are taking away something you value, something that makes your newspaper distinctive, something you cannot get anywhere else. We value your newspaper less, and you should too.

It’s a terrible message, and it comes at a price that may not be immediately apparent but will cost newspapers dearly in the long run.

“We know staff cuts can hurt our product,” wrote Times Union editor Rex Smith in an email to employees, “but we also know that we’re working smarter and more efficiently than we ever have before, and we recognize the promise of journalism in the digital age.

It’s a shame Smith doesn’t recognize the importance and promise political cartoons can offer to newspapers online in the digital age.

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European Cartoonists React to Unexpected Nobel Win

In a surprise move, this year’s Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to the European Union for their role in promoting peace and democracy over the last sixty years. But given the current state of Europe’s economy, many across the continent think the timing of this award couldn’t be worse.

We have lots of European cartoonists that contribute to our site, so I thought I’d turn it over to them to get their thoughts about the EU winning the award…

Christo Komarnitski / Bulgaria (click to view more cartoons by Christo)
Martin Sutovec / Slovakia (click to view more cartoons by Sutovec)

Patrick Chappatte / International Herald Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Chappatte)

Joep Bertrams / The Netherlands (click to view more cartoons by Bertrams)

Frederick Deligne / France (click to view more cartoons by Deligne)

Meanwhile, as this terrific cartoon by Kap illustrates, some EU countries are doing better than others…

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Best Cartoons of the Week

Every Friday, we collect the best political cartoons of the week and stuff them into one big, glorious collection.

So just relax and catch up on a week’s worth of news with our Best Cartoons of the Week collection.

Joe Heller / Green Bay Press-Gazette (click to launch collection)
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Vice Presidential Debate Open Thread

Since we have so many devoted readers with as many opinions about politics as our cartoonists (and since it went so well during the first Presidential Debate), here’s an open thread for all of you to have at it LIVE during tonight’s Vice Presidential debate between Joe Biden and Paul Ryan.

To start the discussion, here’s a funny pre-debate cartoon by The Hill’s Chris Weyant (don’t miss all our great Vice Presidential Debate Cartoons):

Who do you think will win? Are you rooting for anyone? What do you hope they discuss? Will Biden say something crazy? Comment away below!

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Cartoons from the 2008 VP Debate

We have an extensive archive of cartoons here on Cagle.com. From time to time, I think it’s fun to take a look back at how our cartoonists covered events in the past.

RELATED: 2012 VP Debate Prep Cartoons 

As we await the start of tonight’s highly-anticipated Vice Presidential Debate between Joe Biden and Paul Ryan, here are five funny cartoons about the Vice Presidential Debate in 2008 between Biden and former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin.

John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to view more cartoons by Cole)
Nate Beeler / Columbus Dispatch (click to view more cartoons by Beeler)
Mike Keefe / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Keefe)
David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view more cartoons by Fitzsimmons)
Mike Keefe / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Keefe)
Bob Englehart / Hartford Courant (click to view more cartoons by Englehart)
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New York Loses Two Editorial Cartoonists

As readers here a quite aware, times are tough for political cartoonists. As print media continues its slow decline and newspapers continue to cut back, staff cartoonists are often caught in the budgetary cross-hairs. In the past week alone, two staff cartoonists, both from New York, were the latest to receive their pink slips.

Today, John de Rosier, the staff cartoonist at the Albany Times Union, was notified he was among the newspaper’s layoffs.  de Rosier has been the paper’s editorial cartoonist since 1999. A staff photographer was also laid-off.

“Currently, the Times Union is building a new press, so I think many employees were thinking that, although finances are tight – as they are with the entire industry, perhaps the worst was behind us, especially following a much larger layoff several years ago,” de Rosier said. “Now it’s time for new directions, and I really do see that for the huge opportunity that it is. I am confident that great things await.”

Interestingly, de Rosier enjoys metalworking, and has produced some impressive jewelry. Check out his Web site here.

Just last week, Syracuse Post-Standard editorial cartoonist Frank Cammuso found out he was among 115 employees who won’t have a job after January 31, when the paper adopts the three-times-a-week schedule other Newshouse papers have moved to in an attempt to lower costs and bolster their digital offerings.

“Unfortunately for political cartoonists, the writing has been on the wall for a while,” Cammuso said. “Luckily, I have been preparing for this day. I’ve been writing and drawing graphic novels for last ten years. It’s time now to do it full time.”

Check out Frank’s cartoons and his graphic novels at his terrific Web site.

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Conservative Cartoonists Weigh in on 'Occupy Sesame Street'

The battle over Sesame Street continues to be waged on the battlefield of TV news. The President has heightened his rhetoric following last week’s debate about Romney wanting to defund PBS, and Republicans have responded by playing a clip of Obama during 2008 when he said, “If you don’t have a record to run on… you make a big election about small things.”

We’ve had a lot of cartoons come in over the past week about Romney trying to kill Big Bird, so in order to prove not all cartoonists think alike, here are a handful of cartoons about the effort to defund PBS from our more conservative cartoonists. 

Eric Allie thinks President Obama might have the wrong priorities…

While Augusta Chronicle cartoonist Rick McKee thinks Big Bird’s argument might be mistimed…

Columbus Dispatch cartoonist Nate Beeler finds the one Muppet that doesn’t support the President…

Beeler also introduces us to this Christmas season’s hottest toy…

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review cartoonist Randy Bish thinks the argument boils down to simple math…

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White House Dog Bo Turns Four

First lady Michelle Obama had a personal tweet about Bo, the White House dog, who turns four today:

 

 

Here are five cartoons from our archives about Bo, the Portuguese Water Dog that was a gift  from the late Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) and wife Vicki. At the time, the Obama administration was caught up in a scandal of several staffers owing hundreds of thousands of dollars in back taxes, so you see that cropping up in a couple of the cartoons:

Daryl Cagle / NBCNews.com (click to view more cartoons by Cagle)
Jeff Parker / Florida Today (click to view more cartoons by Parker)
Joe Heller / Green Bay Press-Gazette (click to view more cartoons by Heller)
Jimmy Margulies / The Record (click to view more cartoons by Margulies)
Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com (click to view more cartoons by Granlund)