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The Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year 2001

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September 11 Brings Out the Worst in Editorial Cartoons
by Daryl Cagle

During a year when dramatic events in the news increased the audience for editorial cartoons, cartoonists have responded with some of the worst work in the history of the profession.

Editorial cartooning thrives as an art form when there is a diversity of views, a hearty public debate and editors who are open to different ideas --this diversity was lost on 9/11. Nearly all Americans, cartoonists and editors alike, came to share the same perspective in support of America's War on Terror. Local and national newspapers led with the same headlines as we all watched the same news each day. The cartoonists responded with one mind.

In the days after 9/11, almost all of the cartoonists drew the same image, a weeping Statue of Liberty witnessing the tragedy. More duplication followed as dozens of cartoonists drew matching images: a fireman and policeman standing as the "twin towers," Osama's face in the smoke, firemen raising a flag in the position of the Iwo Jima memorial statue, a sad or militant Uncle Sam, an angry or crying eagle and Pearl Harbor. The lack of originality is clear to see on our web site. In recent days we've seen dozens of Osama in an hourglass, Osama escaping from Afghanistan wearing a burka, Osama clones and Osama running away from a missile. One of our readers wrote, "if I see another cartoon of Osama meeting Dick Cheney in a cave, I'm gonna puke."

The sameness hurts the profession in the eyes of editors. The job market for cartoonists has been shrinking in recent years as the newspaper industry consolidates and editors turn to less expensive syndicated cartoons. Why should a newspaper hire a local cartoonist to draw Osama digging a hole to Hell, when there are six other syndicated cartoons on the editor's desk with the same gag? Cartoonist jobs have been lost this year at the Orlando Sentinel, The Columbus Dispatch, the Boston Globe, the New York Daily News, the San Jose Mercury-News and the Honolulu Advertiser. Prominent drawing boards remain empty at the Chicago Tribune, the Washington Post, the New Orleans Times-Picayune and the Seattle Times.

Ironically, cartoonists are under economic pressure to draw the similar, syndicated cartoons that hasten the demise of the profession. In the 1960's, cartoonist Pat Oliphant started a trend with a compelling drawing style, showing a funny take on the news in a single, horizontal panel. Jeff MacNelly followed in Oliphant's mold and popularized the new style of cartoons in the 1970's. Young cartoonists copied MacNelly and were dubbed "McCartoonists" because they drew the same --like burgers at McDonalds, and like MacNelly. Cartoonists with roots in the1950's looked out of date, with a vertical format, clumsy symbolism and tear-jerking sentimentalism. The new cartoonist was a cocky child of Saturday Night Live, drawing cynical, gag cartoons about current events.

Cartoonists drew many powerful images that reflected our feelings about the 9/11 tragedy more clearly than words, but the weekend after the terror attack, the New York Times didn't print their regular, weekly cartoon round-up, noting that cartoons were inappropriate in light of the tragedy. Poignant cartoons are not popular with editors.

"Newsweek cartoonist" is the term used to describe the style of the conventional, cross-hatching, gag cartoonists whose work is reprinted regularly in Newsweek Magazine. Newspaper syndicates market inexpensive "packages" of cartoonists who draw in the acceptable format and are reprinted more often than their peers. The Chicago Tribune announced the finalists for their coveted editorial cartoonist position, Mike Luckovich, Jack Ohman and Nick Anderson ­three of the best "Newsweek cartoonists."

To compete for an editor's eye, cartoonists are squeezed into a horizontal box, pressured to be funny, to use few words, to have acceptable opinions, to have an acceptable drawing style and to draw a cartoon on the subject being discussed each day on CNN. After 9/11, the editors, cartoonists and readers had the same opinions. It should be no surprise that most cartoons were similar and banal.

This was a bad year for our nation and a bad year for editorial cartoons. Our Best Cartoons of the Year is a selection of the images that shine brightly through the doom and gloom of tragedy in an art form suffering from competitive mediocrity.



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All cartoons are displayed here with the permission of the artists. Artwork © each artist. The Professional Cartoonists Index is ©Daryl Cagle. All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.