Categories
Cartoons

Blagojevich Auctions Senate Seat

Blagojevich Auctions Senate Seat Color © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Rod Blagojevich, Illinois, governor, senate, Barack Obama, Ebay, E-Bay, ebay.com, auction, bribe, indictment, indicted, crime

Categories
Cartoons

Obama and Auto Pets

Obama and Auto Pets COLOR © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,General Motors, GM, Ford, Chrysler, big 3, big three, auto makers, car, automobiles, Sasha, Malika, Obama, pet, dog, Barack, president, White House

Categories
Cartoons

Celebrity Fires and the Media

Celebrity Fires and the Media © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Montecito,Malibu,media,television,fire,wildfire,California,Santa Barbara

Categories
Columns

Celebrity Fires Consume the Media

A mandatory evacuation remains in effect for my neighborhood in Montecito after the devastating “Tea Fire” this week. My son and I stayed at my house longer than we should have, filling the cars with keepsakes and watering the place down with a garden hose until the howling winds driving the smoke and embers our way become too much for us.

The fire was churning on all the hills behind my house in wide, glowing swaths — not like the usual thin line of flame we’re used to seeing at the leading edge of a fire. Being in the path of the fire, the wind blew the smoke, soot and embers directly at us making it difficult to see more than a few feet at times, and sometimes clearing to reveal a brightening, eerie, orange glow as the fire drew closer. I was sure the fire was only a couple of houses away when we fled. Firemen were directing traffic and calling on people to evacuate; I didn’t see them doing any fire fighting when we left. The fire was moving too fast for fire fighting and all they could do was focus on people.

I found my way past police barricades the next morning to see that my house survived, along with all the houses on my street. I live adjacent to Westmont College, which lost a half dozen buildings, and the next street over from mine, Westmont Road, lost a number of homes. The hills all around are barren and charred. The last report I saw estimated 150 homes lost.

I know how my neighbors feel. I was a college student, living with my mother in the same spot, when the 1977 Sycamore Canyon fire destroyed our home and about 250 others. Both fires started in the exact, same location and burned much the same area.

I also get a sense of deja vu from the media coverage of the fire. Reports from around the world have focused on celebrities who live in town. The news leads with quotes from Oprah Winfrey (her house is fine; she was out of town at the time) and actor Rob Lowe (whose house was undamaged). We see lists of celebrities with recognizable names who live in town. Actor Christopher Lloyd was out of town as his caretaker fled his house, which was “valued last year at $11.3 million.” Crazy prices of local mansions are listed. We read about how many acres there are on Oprah’s estate. Readers love stories about rich, beautiful, powerful celebrities who are made to suffer. Schadenfreude sells. Supermarket tabloids delight us with one celebrity hardship after another.

American celebrity suffering is even more titillating to audiences around the world. I was in London some years ago when there was a fire in Malibu, and I witnessed firsthand the delight screaming from tabloid headlines. I remember watching the puppet show, “Spitting Image,” the number-one show on British TV at the time; the audience roared in laughter as puppet caricatures of celebrities ran this way and that, chased by fire. A screaming, flaming Sylvester Stallone puppet yelled, “Yo! Yo! Yo!”

The media’s celebrity obsession has little to do with actual events on the ground. Most of the homes that were lost belong to regular folks. I inherited my house from my mother who spent her career working for the local school district. The homes of 14 teachers at Westmont College were lost. I don’t know where those celebrities live.

In 1977 the media’s trivial obsessions had a tangible effect. President Jimmy Carter refused to declare a federal disaster area, noting that the people here are wealthy and can take care of themselves. A disaster declaration would have meant that my mother and I could have lived in a FEMA trailer for a year, while our house was being re-built.

A few months later there was a similar fire in Malibu; for some reason, the media didn’t focus on celebrities that time and Carter declared a disaster area, even though the average income of the Malibu fire victims was higher than the income of victims of my fire. Media coverage made the difference.

President Carter’s smarmy, hypocritical response turned me into a Republican.

Daryl Cagle is a political cartoonist and blogger for MSNBC.com; he is a past president of the National Cartoonists Society and his cartoons are syndicated to more than 850 newspapers, including the paper you are reading. Daryl runs the most popular cartoon site on the Web at Cagle.msnbc.com. His book “The BIG Book of Campaign 2008 Political Cartoons,” is available in bookstores now, and he has a new book coming out before Christmas, “The Best Political Cartoons of the Year, 2009 Edition.” See Daryl’s cartoons and columns at www.caglepost.com.

Categories
Cartoons

Sarah Palin Portrait

Sarah Palin Portrait Color © Daryl Cagle,Today in English,Sarah Palin

Categories
Cartoons

Obama Wins Game

Obama Wins Game Color © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Barack Obama, presidential campaign,John McCain,Senator

Categories
Cartoons

Obama Defeats McCain

Obama Defeats McCain © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Barack Obama, presidential campaign,John McCain,Senator

Categories
Cartoons

McCain Palin Republican Happy Face

McCain Palin Republican Happy Face © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,McCain Palin Republican Happy Face, senator, president, campaign

Categories
Cartoons

Obama McCain and the Economy

Obama McCain and the Economy COLOR © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Barack Obama, John McCain, Senator, president, republican, democrat, graph, economy, stock market, concussion

Categories
Columns

See Me at the University of Virginia

I’ll give a speech, show a lot of cartoons
and answer questions at the University of Virginia on October
22nd in Charlottesville, Virginia. It is a rare opportunity to
see me, since I’m such a recluse. Here is what the University
has announced …

The daily editorial cartoonist for MSNBC.com,
Daryl Cagle, will discuss with words and artwork the sometimes
seemingly irreverent and provocative role of editorial cartoonists
in capturing and dissecting issues and events in politics. Mr.
Cagle’s recently published Big Book of Campaign 2008 Cartoons
will be available for sale at the event and he will sign books
following his presentation. The event is free and open to the
public, but advance registration
is required.

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Drawing Politics
is part of the University of Virginia Center for Politics National
Symposium Series of 2008, titled Not Taboo at Our Table! Race,
Religion and Gender in American Politics
. The Center for
Politics launched the National Symposium Series in 1999 to explore
current and relevant issues in American politics. For questions,
contact Megan Davis at [email protected]
or 434-243-3539.

This event is co-sponsored by the University
of Virginia Center for Politics

and the University
of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs
.

Categories
Columns

Our New Campaign Book is in Stores Now!

Our big collection
of cartoons covering the presidential campaign is out in bookstores
a month before election day!

We’ve got the best of the campaign from
start to almost-finish, with Obama, McCain, Sarah Palin, the
convention, Hillary Clinton and all those wonderful memories,
like 3:00am phone calls, super-delegates and crazy preachers!
We even have a chapter on John Edwards’ affair!

This book is a must have for every political
wonk! And you must have it now, while we’re still obsessed with
the campaign!



Click here to order The BIG Book of Campaign
2008 Political Cartoons, from Amazon.com at a nice discount

I have to thank our editor, Laura Norman,
at Que Publishing, division of Pearson, for being so fast getting
the book published and shipped to stores. We closed the book
after we had a whole lot of cartoons for a chapter on Sarah Pain
and her pregnant daughter, and we have the book in stores a month
later, which is amazing for book distribution. Still, everyone
is better off ordering from Amazon.com, where it is cheaper.
You can even search inside the book on Amazon.com, which is pretty
cool.

Right now we’re busy working on our regular,
annual Best Political Cartoons of the Year book, which is due
at the printer on the day after election day, and should be in
stores the first week of December. These deadlines are why I’m
not drawing as many cartoons as I should be right now. Sorry
about that.

Categories
Columns

Two of our Favorite Cartoonists Retire









I’m sorry to
write that two of my favorite political cartoonists have retired
from our tiny profession.



Sandy Huffaker is one my cartoon heroes.
When I was in college I was a big fan of his cartoons that were
running every week in Time Magazine. Sandy worked as a regular
editorial cartoonist for a newspaper when he was young, then
spent his career as a cartoon illustrator. Now he spends
most of his time at his ranch in Virginia doing paintings. He
had been drawing editorial cartoons regularly for our syndicate
for the past few years.

Sandy called me a couple of months ago
to say he was tired of the daily editorial cartooning grind.
He is an Obama supporter, he thinks Obama will win and prospect
of losing President Bush makes him lose his anger and passion.
I encouraged Sandy to draw whenever the inspiration hits him,
and last week he sent us this portrait of McCain and baby Palin
(right).

If any of our readers are Huffaker fans,
as I am, and are sorry to see him go, send
Sandy an e-mail
and tell him he is missed!

The other cartoonist we’re losing is M.e. Cohen, a freelancer with a wild style
from New Jersey. M.e. is retiring from editorial cartooning because
of a detached retina. He plans to keep doing illustrations, but the daily, freelance political
cartoons were just too much. I’m also hopeful that M.e. will
come back; it is tragic to see him leave us.

See more cartoons by M.e.
here
. That is one of his samples
below. Click here to send
M.e. an e-mail
and let him know he is also missed.