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TikTok and CHINA!

We’ve got a great new Caglecast/podcast about TikTok and China where you can meet our cartoonists Patrick Chappatte, Jimmy Margulies and Dave Whamond. We also have our syndicated columnist, Jase Graves, who tells me that looks like a portrait of his daughter in the Chappatte cartoon below.

I hope you’ll watch our video on YouTube below and subscribe at YouTube.com/@caglecast! It really helps us if you subscribe, and we’ve been kind of disappointed at how few of our fans have been watching or subscribing to the podcast. One of my goals with the podcast is to get readers and especially editors to get to know the cartoonists as real people. Editors tend to treat editorial cartoons as if they are fungible, just commodities, rather than getting to know the people behind the cartoons, and learning more about the culture of our profession.

Here are some great cartoons from the 40 cartoons discussed in our podcast!

by Bart van Leeuwen
by Dave Whamond
by Patrick Chappatte
by Jimmy Margulies
by Daryl Cagle

I know our readers like to look at the cartoons, and watching (or listening to) a podcast is a different experience, but I hope you’ll give it a try! We’d like for you to get to know the cartoonists and where they are coming from!

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Jimmy Margulies and More Grim Cartoon News

Jimmy%20Margulies Jimmy Margulies and More Grim Cartoon News cartoonsI’m sad to report that one of my favorite cartoonists, Jimmy Margulies, is the latest editorial cartoonist to lose his job. This is a long term trend as less profitable newspapers cut back the ranks of political cartoonists. Jimmy wrote this for us:

After almost 22 and 1/2 years at The Record in northern New Jersey, I became the latest editorial cartoonist to lose a full time staff job at a daily newspaper. Despite having won a few national awards,  syndication and frequent appearances in some high profile places like USA Today, as well as being a popular local speaker and using social media to become one of the most popular features on the paper’s web site, it was not enough to save me from the paper’s decision to trim expenses.

I plan to continue my syndication with King Features as well as self syndicating  my New Jersey cartoons around the state. The Record and I have reached an agreement that I will do a Sunday cartoon for them, as well as possibly be asked to do additional work if a big story happens in the region.

Here are five of my favorite Margulies cartoons.  See Jimmy’s whole archive here.

0127A MARGULIES13 45P Jimmy Margulies and More Grim Cartoon News cartoons

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0201A MARGULIES13 45P Jimmy Margulies and More Grim Cartoon News cartoons

0211A Margulies13 45p Jimmy Margulies and More Grim Cartoon News cartoons

0218A Margulies13 45p Jimmy Margulies and More Grim Cartoon News cartoons

Want to reprint Jimmy’s cartoons? All of his cartoons are searchable by keyword and available in high resolution instantly at Politicalcartoons.com.

 

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Cartoonist Talks About Controversial Chick-fil-A Cartoon

We’ve received a lot of great cartoons about Chick-fil-A from both sides of the argument. Some cartoonists supported the First Amendment rights of a CEO voicing his own personal opinion, while other cartoonists thought spending corporate profits on anti-gay causes was bigotry that deserved to be called out.

The largest response came in reaction to this tough cartoon by Jimmy Margulies of The Record:

I asked Jimmy to comment on the cartoon, and here’s what he wrote:

I received both praise and condemnation for this cartoon. Those who agreed with me seemed to really like it. Those who did not expressed their disagreement in a few different ways. Some took the cartoon literally, suggesting I was saying that Chick-fil-A discriminates against its gay customers. I explained the cartoon was an exaggeration. Others felt that I was supporting the boycott of the restaurant and that I was denying the owner his freedom of speech. I explained that the cartoon took no position on the boycott, and that the owner is free to express his views, as well as give money to fund opposition to same sex marriage, but that I found this position objectionable, so I was using my cartoon to speak out about the injustice on the issue of same sex marriage.

Given the potency of the issue, I was glad my cartoon became part of the debate.

As you can imagine, readers on both sides of the argument weighed in on this polarizing cartoon:

Edward Bartunek: Disguesting and a insult to honest, god fearing, hardworking, Americans!

Teri Lesesne: I elect to boycott companies that spew inaccurate information and use their “fame” as a platform for hate. You are free to support them. That is what freedom is all about. But freedom has to be for everyone.

Kerry Wilson Cook: It doesn’t matter. Us gay people don’t go to chickfila anyway. We are all too health conscious to eat the slop that is fast food!!

Jamie Lockett: I wonder how political cartoonists would feel about mayors banning newspapers that carry their cartoons simply because those mayors didn’t like the content.

Robot Anna: Let’s please not appropriate the civil rights movement, thanks.

Jordan Fouts: I like how the same people who suck the invisible thumb of the free market get so mad about boycotts.

Joyce Linnae Crady: I hate boycotts. They hurt innocent workers & the economy. I vote for religious freedom and freedom of speech. As long as Chick-fil-A doesn’t discriminate in their establishments, they have a constitutional right to their beliefs and a right to express them.

Sunny Arts: This comic is an affront to the efforts of the civil rights movement – when segregation was truly being preached and enforced. Nobody is shoving gays to the ‘back of the bus’.

Steve Paysen: Have you seen the support of Chic Fil A today? I’d say you first of all are wrong in your portrayal, and who are you to take away the right of any man to answer a question with his conscience?

Terry Lee: Talk about rhetoric. Let’s be clear. People aren’t upset or up in arms about a man’s opinion or religious belief. People are boycotting this business because the BUSINESS donates large sums of money to anti-gay political/hate groups. He is free to express his opinion, certainly. I also am free to take my money elsewhere and encourage others to do the same.

What’s your opinion of the cartoon? Comment below, or drop us a note on our Facebook page.