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Cartoonists are Casualties of War Too

People who like to draw serious political cartoons for a living – people like me – have to be extra careful in these divisive times.

In just the last month three major newspapers – the Washington Post, the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Guardian in Britain – have pulled down or decided not to publish cartoons drawn by the best editorial cartoonists in the world.

Michael Ramirez, Monte Wolverton and Steve Bell each bravely applied their talents and opinions to the brutal war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas that started Oct. 7.

For their troubles, they were charged with being Islamophobic, anti-Semitic or racist by readers, their fellow journalists and editorial boards. Bell was even fired.

The most recent example was at the Washington Post, where my good friend Michael Ramirez ran his caricature of a Hamas spokesman, Ghazi Hamadi, in a suit with five women and children roped to his body.

“How dare Israel attack civilians…” the Hamas spokesman was saying.

You’d think it’d be easy for anyone to get the point Ramirez was making. Many cartoonists have used the same idea of Hamas or Hezbollah wearing children as human shields, including me.

But many readers immediately expressed outrage on social media and bombarded the paper’s comment section from their silos.

Ramirez was charged with excusing Israel’s war crimes and pushing Israeli military talking points and accused of being a racist for his malicious, offensive and “grotesque caricature” of a Palestinian.

The reader outrage was so intense that the boss of the Post’s opinion section, David Shipley, “re-evaluated” his decision.

He didn’t just pull it down from the paper’s web site. He issued an apology for having “missed something profound, and divisive” and published a selection of critical comments by readers.

Ramirez ably defended himself on Michael Smerconish’s Nov. 11 show on CNN.

Calling the charges against him “ridiculous,” he said, “The cartoon was very specific. It pointed out the hypocrisy of an organization that uses civilians as shields” and said his critics “used the race card as a way to eliminate a contrary political opinion they don’t agree with.”

I agree with Ramirez. It was outrageous how quickly – and abjectly — the Post caved to the complaints of its noisiest, most partisan and most sensitive readers.

What happened last month at the Philadelphia Inquirer to my good friend Monte Wolverton was another example of how careful editorial cartoonists have to be today.

My small business represents Wolverton and syndicates his work. His Oct. 18 cartoon showed an oversized Israeli army boot crushing Hamas terrorists.

It ran in many other newspapers without any complaints, but the Inquirer reconsidered and decided to take it down and apologize because its editors thought the cartoon reinforced “pernicious anti-Semitic tropes about Israeli aggression.”

I suggested to Monte that he withdraw the cartoon and apologize for it because I think any big military boot in an editorial cartoon could be seen as a Nazi boot and portraying Jews as Nazis is an anti-Semitic trope.

The most outlandish – and unjustified — case of cartoon cancelling happened to the highly respected Steve Bell of the Guardian newspaper in Britain. He was fired after 40 years at the paper, over a cartoon that was never even published.

His fatal cartoon depicted Benjamin Netanyahu carving the map of Gaza on his bare belly with a scalpel and saying “Residents of Gaza get out now.” The cartoon drew upon a famous photo of Lyndon Johnson, lifting his shirt to show a scar from a recent surgery, which formed the basis for a famous cartoon by David Levine, with LBJ showing a scar shaped like Vietnam on his belly – an image familiar to all cartoonists and a good analogy.  Gaza is Netanyahu’s Vietnam.

Bell quoted his bosses as saying the cartoon could be seen as anti-Semitic because somehow they believed it was playing on the “pound of flesh” line spoken by Shylock, the Jewish moneylender in Shakespeare’s 1596 play The Merchant of Venice.

On my “Caglecast” podcast I asked the top three editorial cartoonists in Israel if Bell’s cartoon qualified as anti-Semitic and they agreed it wasn’t even close. Declaring Bell’s cartoon anti-Semitic was a ridiculous stretch.

But it shows how political cartoonists of today really have to know where to draw their lines.

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Blog Syndicate Top 10 Videos

Impeachment Insanity – Top Ten Cartoons of the Week!

Congress is back in session, and Republicans are focusing their efforts on an impeachment inquiry of President Joe Biden, despite the last of evidence linking him to the business dealings of his son, Hunter.

Complicating matters is the need for Congress to pass a spending bill to prevent a government shutdown, which could happen as soon as the end of next week. It all may be bad for the country, but at least it’s allowing cartoonists to create some funny and pointed work.

Here are our top ten most reprinted cartoons of the week:

#1. Dave Whamond

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#2. Dave Granlund

 

#3. Dave Whamond

 

#4. Jeff Koterba

 

#5. Jeff Koterba

 

#6. Chris Weyant

 

#7. Guy Parsons

 

#8. John Darkow

 

#9. Dave Whamond

 

#10. R.J. Matson

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Blog Syndicate Top 10

Pumpkin Spice – Top Ten Cartoons of the Week!

It’s the middle of September, or as it’s become known across the U.S. – pumpkin spice season.

That’s when everything from coffee to Oreos to scented candles roll out pumpkin spice-flavored versions of their favorite products. At the top of the list is the Pumpkin Spice Latte, which turns 20 this year after being introduced by Starbucks in 2003.

Rick McKee’s cartoon about our obsession with all thinks pumpkin was easily our most reprinted cartoon this week. Here are the rest of our top ten reprinted cartoons of the week:

#1. Rick McKee

See our Caglecast here on YouTube.com/@caglecast and please subscribe and like! 

This is a great Caglecast! Come watch and please subscribe on YouTube.com/@caglecast

#2. Jeff Koterba

 

#3. R.J. Matson

 

#4. John Darkow

 

#5. Rick McKee

 

#6. Pat Byrnes

 

#7. John Cole

 

#8. Dave Granlund

 

#9. Bob Englehart

 

#10. Dave Granlund

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Blog Syndicate Videos

Great Trump Cartoons

Here are the some great Trump cartoons from our brilliant cartoonists Rick McKee, Ed Wexler and Taylor Jones that they show and talk about on our new video CagleCast …

Subscribe to our Caglecast video podcasts on YouTube!

Come watch this and all of our podcasts on YouTube.com/@CagleCast –we’d really appreciate it if you would subscribe and like on YouTube Share with your friends!

Thanks for being a fan of political cartoons and Cagle.com!

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Blog Syndicate Top 10

Computer Drivers: Top Ten Cartoons of the Week

With all the talk of automation and A.I., it’s funny to think that driverless cars have been zipping around San Francisco for the last few years.

Last week, the California Public Utilities Commission voted to give the two companies who run the automated cars permission to offer rides throughout San Francisco anytime during the day.

That doesn’t mean the technology is perfect. Just this week, an autonomous vehicles drove into wet cement at a city paving project, making Dave Whamond’s cartoon about driverless cars and traffic lights oddly prophetic.

Here are our top ten most reprinted cartoons of the week:

#1. Dave Whamond

Left vs Right Cartoons - Political Cartoonists Bump Heads!
Left vs Right Cartoons – Political Cartoonists Bump Heads! Watch our new podcast!

Don’t miss our great new Caglecast video podcast with Daryl debating our conservative cartoonist Rivers, who wants the US to drop support for Ukraine –along with Rivers’ great Ukraine cartoons.

See the Caglecast here on YouTube.com/@caglecast and please subscribe and like. We really appreciate your support. Building an audience on YouTube is a mountain to climb!

#2. Pat Bagley

#3. Frank Hansen

#4. Dave Whamond

#5. Pat Bagley

#6. Gary McCoy

#7. Gary McCoy

#8. Rick McKee

#9. Dave Granlund

#10. Dave Granlund

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Blog Syndicate Top 10

Polls! Top Ten Cartoons of the Week!

The first Republican presidential debate of the 2024 election cycle is later this month, and not a day goes by without the release of a new poll. Donald Trump has a wide lead over his fellow Republicans, Ron DeSantis continues to shed support, Mike Pence… well, the less said about his poll numbers, the better.

Bob Englehart had our most popular cartoon this week, a funny jab at the omnipresence of polling data as we crawl towards the election. It’s only going to get worse from here. –And WOW– Dave Whamond, Jeff Koterba and John Darkow each have THREE cartoons in the Top Ten, I can’t remember it ever happening that the Top Ten has only four cartoonists!

Here they are –the ones that newspaper editors liked best:

#1. Bob Englehart

See: Support Ukraine or Not? YouTube.com/@Caglecast Episode #22
See: Support Ukraine or Not? YouTube.com/@Caglecast Episode #22 with our anonymous, conservative cartoonist, Rivers, who doesn’t want the USA to support Ukraine.

Don’t miss our great new Caglecast video podcast with Daryl debating our conservative cartoonist Rivers, who wants the US to drop support for Ukraine –along with Rivers’ great Ukraine cartoons.

See the Caglecast here on YouTube.com/@caglecast and please subscribe and like. We really appreciate your support. Building an audience on YouTube is a mountain to climb!

#2. Jeff Koterba

 

#3. Dave Whamond

 

#4. Dave Whamond

 

#5. Jeff Koterba

 

#6. Jeff Koterba

 

#7. John Darkow

 

#8. Dave Whamond

 

#9. John Darkow

 

#10. John Darkow

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Blog Syndicate Top 10 Videos

Top Ten Cartoons of the Week!

Here are the editorial cartoons that editors chose to print in the past week!  Congratulations to Dave Whamond for drawing the most popular cartoon; and to Jeff Koterba for having three cartoons in the Top Ten; and to John Darkow for having two cartoons in the Top Ten!

#1. DaveWhamond

 

#2. Chris Weyant

Don’t miss our great new video, cartoon Caglecast about Ukraine, bird cartoons, our crazy political cartooning profession, and much more!See our Caglecast video at: https://youtu.be/YqFjFqf2SrUSee the Caglecast here!

 

#3. Jeff Koterba

 

#4. Jeff Koterba

 

#5. Guy Parsons

 

#6. John Darkow

 

#7. Jeff Koterba

 

#8. John Darkow

 

#9. Adam Zyglis

 

#10. Dick Wright

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Blog Newsletter Syndicate Top 10

DEBT DEAL: TOP TEN CARTOONS OF THE WEEK

After months of brinksmanship, House Republicans and President Joe Biden came together raise the debt ceiling and avert an economic calamity. Republicans got some of the cuts they wanted, Biden kept most of his economic policies intact, and editors got a flood of debt ceiling cartoons.

The bad news? Cartoonists will be back drawing more debt ceiling cartoons in 2025… unless we’re all replaced by AI.

Here are our top ten most reprinted cartoons of the week:

#1. Jeff Koterba

We have a great new Caglecast about Artificial Intelligence! Watch it on YouTube or on Caglecast.com!

We just added closed captioning and different language sub-titles on YouTube, and we’ll have that soon on CagleCast.com too! In this episode see me and our CagleCartoonists Jeff Koterba, Andy Singer, Rick McKee and our anonymous cartoonist, Rivers!

#2. R.J. Matson

 

#3. Jeff Koterba

 

#4. Guy Parsons

 

#5. Rivers

 

#6. John Darkow

 

#7. John Cole

 

#8. Rick McKee

 

#9. Dick Wright

 

#10. Ed Wexler

Support our Popular, liberal, funny Cartoonist, Bob Englehart –We Need to Keep Bob Drawing!

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Climate Change Part FOUR!

These cartoons are by various CagleCartoonists, including two by me (Daryl Cagle)!  Five cartoonists discuss these and a bunch of other climate change cartoons on our Caglecast podcast!  Here’s the video!  Come look and please subscribe on YouTube.

Chris Weyant

 

We have a great new Caglecast about Climate Change with FOUR great CagleCartoonists: RJ Matson, Taylor Jones, Peter Kuper and Guy Parsons!

Daryl Cagle

Daryl Cagle

Patrick Chappatte

 

John Darkow

 

Adam Zyglis

Support our Popular, Moderate Cartoonist, Jeff Koterba –We Need to Keep Jeff Drawing!

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Blog Newsletter Syndicate

Climate Change Cartoons Part ONE!

We have a great new Caglecast about Climate Change with FOUR great CagleCartoonists: RJ Matson, Taylor Jones, Peter Kuper and Guy Parsons!

Luojie, China

 

Here’s the video! Come look and please subscribe on YouTube.

 

Here are some more of the cartoons that the cartoonists discuss on the video …

Gatis Sluka, Latvia

Kap, Spain

MichaelKountouris,Greece

Steve Sack, Minnesota, USA

Adam Zyglis, New York, USA

Dave Whamond

Support our Popular, Moderate Cartoonist, Jeff Koterba –We Need to Keep Jeff Drawing!

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Blog Newsletter Syndicate

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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Support Monte Wolverton – Don’t Lose Liberal Cartoons in the Public Debate

We’ve put up a crowd funding campaign for our beloved and brilliant, progressive cartoonist, Monte Wolverton at Cagle.com/Wolverton –come take a look!

The problem we have is that, with the continuing decline of newspapers, we’ve reached a point where many editorial cartoonists, like Monte, simply can’t afford to keep drawing for the pittance that newspapers pay. I hate seeing our profession slowly die, and I would hate to see Monte leave the public debate.

So we’re putting up a crowd funding campaign and hoping that support from fans can keep Monte in the game. Our Cagle.com Heroes have been very generous in keeping Cagle.com operating, perhaps editorial cartoon fans would want to support keeping one of their favorite cartoonists drawing.

Here’s Monte’s message to his fans on Cagle.com.

I did a Caglecast podcast with Monte showing some of his recent work and talking about his famous, cartoonist father, Basil Wolverton. See the video below!

See Monte’s archive and read our pitch for your support. We think Monte has an important voice and we really appreciate your support for Monte.