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Cell Phones Cause Cancer Cartoons

The World Health Organization research institute recently announced that using a cell phone over a prolonged period could lead to brain cancer. Too bad people were too busy texting their friends and playing Angry Birds on their smart-phones to see the report.

Are cartoonists the only ones that saw the news? Click here to view our Cell Phones Cause Cancer cartoon collection to see what they think, if you can pull yourself away from Facebook for that long.

cell phone cancer cartoons
Mike Keefe / Denver Post (click to view collection
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Cartoon Week in Review

Don’t miss our big Week in Review cartoon slideshow! This week, we had a lot of cartoonable news items, like Mitt Romney running for President, Sarah Palin touring the Northeast, cell phones causing cancer – and even a Weiner or two. You don’t want to miss it!

Click here to view our Week in Review cartoon slideshow.

Nate Beeler / Washington Examiner (click to view slideshow)

 

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Weinergate

It’s been an odd spectacle watching news coverage of New York Rep. Anthony Weiner, as he fields questions about a lewd photograph that was sent from his Twitter account to a 21-year-old college student. Weiner claims his Twitter account was hacked, but when asked directly whether the bulging boxers in question were his, Weiner said that he couldn’t say “with certitude” that it wasn’t.

A politician with the last name Weiner unable to deny a lewd photo was him? That’s all cartoonists need to run away with the story.

Here’s my take…

I thought it was particularly funny that St. Louis Post-Dispatch cartoonist R.J. Matson would drag the Oscar Mayer Wienermobile into this…

Taylor Jones‘ caricature of Weiner’s misplaced briefs made me laugh…

As did this cartoon by Eric Allie showcasing Weiner as an “unintentional” flasher…

Unfortunately, as Washington Examiner cartoonist Nate Beeler notes, Weiner can’t say a lot “with certitude” these days…

Meanwhile, the tune Joe Heller of the Green Bay Press-Gazette came up with is bound to get stuck in your head…

Pittsburgh Times-Tribune cartoonist Randy Bish helps keep our lunch meats separate…

Sadly, Weiner is only the latest in a long line of Congressmen that have over-exposed themselves, as Adam Zyglis of the Buffalo News notes…

They may all be “Congressional Weenies,” but he’s still the only true Weiner in Congress.

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Oprah Cartoons

Oprah Winfrey ended her popular talk show last week after 25 years, outlasting Phil Donahue, Sally Jesse Rafael, Jerry Springer and nearly every other daytime TV challenger to come along.

The nation’s cartoonists have drawn lots of great cartoons about Oprah over the years. Come check out our best in our new Oprah Legacy cartoon collection.

Oprah
Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen (click to view Oprah cartoon slideshow)
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Cartoon Week in Review

We just posted our big Week in Review slideshow, with cartoons on the terrible tornados that struck the Midwest, The (non) Rapture and Obama’s attempt to restart peace negotiations in the Middle East.

Click here to view our Week in Review cartoon slideshow

Bob Englehart / Hartford Courant (click to view Week in Review slideshow)
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Tornado Turmoil Cartoons

The savage tornado outbreak that killed 117 people and injured over 500 in Joplin, Missouri could just be the start of a greater threat to the Midwest. According to msnbc.com, forecasters warn that a vast swath of the United States could be hit by severe thunderstorms, with a high risk of tornadoes in Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Arkansas and Missouri.

Click here to view our Tornado Turmoil cartoon collection.

Midwest Joplin Tornado
J.D. Crowe / Mobiel Register (click to view cartoon collection)

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Arab Spring

Popular revolts in the Middle East and North Africa, known as the “Arab Spring,” have already knocked out dictatorships in Tunisia and Egypt, triggered a civil war in Libya and prompted widespread and deadly demonstrations in Syria and Yemen. How this sudden change will play out, and what effect it will have on Israel, remains to be seen.

Come see how cartoonists have responded to these events with our new Arab Spring cartoon co0llection.

Arab Spring cartoons Israel
John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to view cartoon collection)
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Dominique Strauss-Kahn-Le Pew


My only exposure to French culture as a child was Looney Tunes cartoons featuring the lecherous skunk, Pepé Le Pew. When I grew up, my views of France changed, and I thought of the French as romantic, a view that seems to contrast with Dominique Strauss-Kahn, whose alleged sexual assault on a hotel maid is remarkably similar to Pepé Le Pew’s antics. Maybe Warner Brothers got it right.

I recently visited France where I learned that the French were also raised with Looney Tunes characters from an early age, and they are all familiar with Pepé Le Pew.  In France, the cartoons are dubbed into French and Le Pew loses his French accent; it isn’t widely known that he is supposed to be French. One French lady I spoke with told me,

“We never knew Pepé Le Pew was French – I didn’t learn that until I grew up – and I was shocked. We thought he was just a jerk.”

As a flood of news of past liaisons pour in, everyone now agrees that Strauss-Kahn is a jerk. This is the season for political-Le Pews, with Euro-Le Pews Schwarzenegger and Burlusconi joining our own chorus of American-Le Pew oldies: Clinton, Gingrich, Spitzer, Sanford, Vitter, Ensign, Edwards and more. It is a parade of schadenfreude delights for editorial cartoonists.

The French are remarkably tolerant of their leaders’ sexual indiscretions, and I was interested to see the America-bashing that accompanied the Strauss-Kahn news, as the French press was eager to bash the American legal system for allowing images of Strauss-Kahn in handcuffs to be published. The American press wouldn’t publish the name of Strauss-Kahn’s victim – not so in France where the victim’s name was broadcast widely.

I wondered what the French thought of sexy maids, and I just did a Google search – ou la la! It seems that every aspect of the Strauss-Kahn story reinforces our stereotyped images of the French. I suspect the same is true on the other side of the Atlantic as the French roll their eyes at puritanical Americans with their backward legal system.

I once got a job from a French magazine whose editors asked me to draw the archetypal American; they gave me a list of American attributes to incorporate into the image; they wanted an overweight man with a: cowboy hat, hamburger, soda, jeans, sneakers and iPod. Hamburgers are an international cartoon symbol for America, understood worldwide, except in America.

Superman is another international cartoon symbol of America, a fact that may have recently led Warner Brothers to have Superman renounce his American citizenship. I hate to think that Warner Brothers might do the same with Pepé Le Pew.  Without his French citizenship, Le Pew would be as pointless for us as he is in France.

 

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The Rapture Cartoons

Well, May 21st has come and gone, and it looks like we’re all still here. According to Alan Boyle at the Cosmic Log, at least one good thing may come out of today’s non-Rapture: More folks are likely to realize that there’s nothing to numerological mumbo-jumbo.

The other good thing were all the great cartoons drawn about today’s non-event. Check them out in our new Doomsday cartoon collection.

Pat Bagley / Salt Lake Tribune (click to view cartoon collection)

 

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Mitt Romney's "Garments"

Editorial cartoonists have a tradition of drawing politicians in their underwear.  President Clinton is often drawn with his pants around his ankles and boxer shorts with a pattern of little hearts.  The same treatment is due for serial adulterer politicians like Newt Gingrich, Arnold Schwarzenegger and too many members of congress to list. Even Batman and Superman wear their underwear on top of their tights.  As an editorial cartoonist, I cherish my right to draw anyone I want in their underwear.

Mitt Romney is a little different. He doesn’t seem to be an adulterer, and is certainly no superhero. As a devout Mormon, Romney is supposed to wear religious “garments” as his underwear, and I assume he does although he refuses to answer questions about his underwear. If Romney would talk about his underwear, I would be less motivated to draw him in his underwear; Romney’s “garment” silence interests me.  Here are a couple of sample of cartoons with Romney wearing his Mormon “garments.” I have gotten a bit of flack from readers about drawing the mysterious underwear on Romney, but not as much as I expected, and I’ll keep drawing him this way at least until he talks about his underwear. Poor Bill Clinton will continue to be drawn in his underwear whether he talks about it or not.

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Cartoon Week in Review

The story of Arnold Schwarzenegger and his “love child” dominated a busy news week. Check out our big Week in Political Cartoons slideshow to get caught up the country’s best political cartoonists think about everything from Newt Gingrich’s implosion to Donald Trump’s decision not to run for President.

Arnold Schwarzenneger Newt Gingrich Donald Trump cartoons
David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to view slideshow)
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Grover Cleveland's Love Child

Grover Cleveland Love Child Arnold Schwarzenegger
Classic Grover Cleveland political cartoon by New York illustrator Frank Beard from The Judge magazine.

Arnold Schwarzenegger may be bearing the brunt of our 24-7 news cycle with the revelation that he fathered a “love child” with a former household staffer 10 years ago, but he’s hardly the first politician to admit to such a scandal. From Jesse Jackson to John Edwards, numerous politicians have fallen victim to their own selfish urges.

And some have even survived politically.

During the 1884 presidential election, then New York governor Grover Cleveland admitted that he had fathered a child with a store clerk while unmarried. Frank Beard, a widely known cartoonist at the time, drew this infamous cartoon of a baby crying, “I want my Pa!” on the cover of The Judge magazine.  Quickly, Cleveland’s opponents took up the cry and started bringing children to Cleveland’s rallies to chant: “Ma, ma, where’s my pa?”

However, Cleveland went on to win the Presidency, and following the electoral victory, the “Ma, Ma …” attack phrase was countered with the slogan, “Gone to the White House. Ha! Ha! Ha!”

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Schwarzenegger Love Child Cartoons

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