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FEBURARY 27, 2007

YOUR COMMENTS ON MY COLUMN ABOUT AMATEUR CARTOONISTS

Wow, we sure got a lot of comments on my column about amateur cartoonists (below) Here are some selections:

Sorry that you are inundated with people that want to share their ideas with others. I feel you are throwing the baby out with the bathwater. I am sure thier are many cartoonists out there that are worthy of recognition. I send my cartoons to my friends and aquaintainances and they seem happy to received them. I have no intention in going to competition with you but you sound like 'I've got mine and the door is closed'. Nlot very nice. Bert Rechtschaffer


thank you for giving me some insight into a profession my daughter thinks about entering in her future
yours is one of the emails i eagerly anticipate seeing in my inbox to give me information and laughter
i'll look for your PayPal address on your site
regards, chandler wiland
I promise. No submissions from me. Keep up the good work. It really does the soul good to see others who get what's going on as well.
Sal Bovoso
Yours is not the only profession or job that is going to disappear. My grand children and great grandchildren will pay to change a faucet what I paid to se a doctor any kind of job that have to use your hands is junk and they will not touch it. And thanks for your cartoons sometimes you make some body's day. VMS
I am an aspiring artist so I can understand frustration, but I know I have to be different than everyone else! My work looks like some others I have seen and that will not get me anywhere. You have to standout and create your own style to move in the direction you want. Maybe I don't have the creativity to move where I want, but that's life. The wannabes need to realize this and maybe understand being a cartoonist isn't really the direction they need to go. As you said a cartoonist is a dieing field and really need to look at themselves if they want a change in their lives. Maybe being a cartoonist isn't the change they need. It could be something else altogether.
Good article.
Bob Klinkhammer
Bad day at the office then......
Alan Brown
You make it sound like a tough business....and I'm sure it is, but if it weren't for the professioanl cartoonists to show us the humor in our day to day lives....Jesus....what do we have left? You guys are great! Please keep it up. - Judy Whitford
May you never fade away. ­ John Vrugtman
Daryl Cagle,

You want to complain about losing your job? I lost mine two years ago. If it goes away, life will somehow go on. Don't whine, Daryl.
Run for President. You'd probably do as well or better than some of the folks who now want the job or who have had it.

At least with a cartoonist President, Al Queda would have a real target and maybe it is also about time we had a President with a real sense of humor, unscripted.

Bob Baumann
New York City


Thanks, you stopped me cold in my tracks, I was just about to send you a really, really, really funny cartoon idea concerning an outhouse on the White-House lawn.
Sharon
Daryl, I want to thank you for today's column. I have been a wannabe for some time now. I do follow politics, can draw, and have what I feel is a intuitive nature.
I also have a very good "day job". So I can cross Editorial Cartoonist off of my to-do-list and just enjoy the work of others.
Warmly, Don Morris
I do write, but I can only draw flies, so I exercise my primary abilities--reading and laughing! Thanks for all you do to feed this life-enriching addiction. Now I'm making these words more than lip flapping by buying one of your books... Paul Frey
Daryl,
I'm so relieved to have read your column... I was just on the verge of sending you a suggestion that the three parties now wrangling over the dead body of Anna Nicole Smith be "somehow illustrated with a game of 3-card Monte."
Whew! Glad I didn't do it! ;-)
Gene Halpern
I hope you're wrong - I think you guys portray more intelligence in a single cartoon than some writers with a 2 page article in Time, plus they are enjoyable - what a bonus. I really enjoy this website and I hope you continue it.
All I do is build more and more retail stores in America's malls - you do know we don't have enough?
Sincerely, Ron Griffin
You should run for President.
You really do have a clue, you can see the big picture;
it would be nice to be able to say that about our fearful leader.
Seriously, I love your cartoons.
Judy Gosnell, OR
STAY!
Your profession can in NO WAY fade away! Why do you think people like myself look for the second section with your cartoon and editorials before even glancing at the front page?
Anne Starritt Gunnison
Wow Daryl, bad day?
It saddens me to hear you say your profession is dying and print media is being crushed.
I'm trying to do my part by subscribing to two daily papers. Just want to let you know, you and your cartoonist brothers are appreciated.
Best always JH
Hey, it's ok, man. Sometimes, 'ya just gotta vent
Patrick Tueth
You could write a weekly column just on the subject of BEING a cartoontist...that was really very funny, Cagle and don't worry i KNOW i don't have any talent (except the wash-tub bass and the kazoo) ...keep up the good work and write if you get a raise!
Micheal Moore
Wow, Daryl, do you LIKE getting hate mail from paranoid whack jobs? Or are you starting a letter-bomb collection? I have a couple of suggestions:

- stop opening your mail, right now.

- offer to testify against a mafioso; better, offer to testify about an al Qaeda sleeper cell in the vice-president's office. The paranoids in D.C. will believe anything about sleeper cells -- if they were obvious, they couldn't be sleepers. This will get you into the witness protection program and give you the opportunity to keep you and your family safe.

- post your cartoons to the syndicate using a gmail account. or a hotmail account. or a yahoo account. Open a new account every couple of weeks.

- you don't really want a phone, do you?

Seriously, thanks for the newsletter. As an ex-pat in New Zealand, it's great to get your postings, cartoon collections, etc. I weep for your profession and it's prospects.

(And the political cartoonists for the Dominion Post here in Wellington are singularly unimpressive; perhaps you should emigrate. Do protected witnesses get to leave the country?)

Kind regards,
Edward C. Horvath, Ph.D.


Mr. Cagle,
Why do you think that your profession is 'fading away'? Surely there is as much (or more) room for editorial cartoons on the web as threre ever was in print...
Good luck,
Dave
Mr. Cagle:
Your commentary on unsolicited submissions from aspiring, if untalented cartoonists, was remarkably arrogant, and lacking in compassion.
I'm sure that it must be boring, frustrating, and generally unrewarding to be deluged with offerings that have no place in your mailbox, but your elitist, condescending tone is downright annoying. Perhaps you've lost sight of the fact that your success rate as a "professional" isn't always 100% either. How much would you enjoy it if nothing but withering disdain were heaped on you, every time one of your cartoons fell short of the mark?
The sort of remarks you have made, may well have their place at the family dinner table at the end of a long and frustrating day, or when engaging in "shop talk" with your fellow cartoonists, but your tirade against those who are not fortunate enough to have professional, or even high amateur levels of talent, really diminishes my opinion of your professionalism. It was at best, unnecessary, at worst offensive.
Capping off your tirade against the artistically challenged, with a polemic about the state of political cartooning, and the decline of it's habitat in the print media has me wondering, have you ever sought help for depression?
I hope you feel better tomorrow.
Sincerely,
Greg Wood
You are hilarious!
And you make think in pictures, but you do pretty good with words, too!
Thank you for working hard on a pittance of a salary to help amuse us. It's sort of like my job, exec. director of a non-profit theatre company. Except I don't draw.
Don't stop--ever--we need you.
Alice B.
Excellent article. too bad the same can not be said for the so called "real journalists" that somehow seem to get their articles publish regardless if anything they write is true.
You could have at least given the "wannabes" some kind reasoning as to how to go about getting published. Surely, they can't ALL be bad.. maybe they are...
I sure like yours though and thank you for your honesty.
I am not a wannabe cartoonist, nor do I wanna be one... i am glad you are though.
Sincerely,
Ben Fuller
Daryl,
I am saddened when you comment on the demise of your profession, as it should have a place in every newspaper and many magazines around the world. I am amazed that the readers don't respond and encourage the papers to keep or increase the content that you & your colleagues provide. It will be a sad day if & when your demise becomes reality. I hope it never does!! I enjoy reading your cartoons every time - whether I agree with the point or not. And I have enjoyed the fact that you share your podium with others, as it helps open my eyes to others in your profession who might have a different take on an issue.
Hang in there, as I know you will!!
Maurice A. Miller
I truly love the cartoons, not all of them. Some are EXCELLENT, most are very good. In time i suppose the really good cartoonists, like the Middle class will just fade away. Undoubtedly our government does NOT appreciate cartoons. The politicians would love them if they the cartoons would make them the politicians wealthier. If gives me a lot of pleasure when you people depict the Politicians as they really are, NOT what they think they are.. Keep on annoying the government fools,,,,,they deserve it. Al Mellen
yo,daryl,
loved and hated your piece on the state of the political catooning proffession.loved it cause it was well written...hated it because it was true!
best wishes, john larter

Justin Bilicki sent me the comment below. See Justin's cartoons here. Justin is a winner of the Locher Award as best collecg editorial cartoonist of the year.

Hey Daryl,

Wow. Your rant (below) on the reality of editorial cartooning was brutal. I agree with every point. Even though I draw 5 cartoons per week, I also work 50+ hours at my day job as an advertising art director. Could I survive on the daily toons and still eat? No. Do my cartoons suffer because I frequently draw them after a twelve hour workday? Yes. The question I've yet to answer is why do I still do it if it pays less than working at Wal-Mart. I guess that answer is editorial cartooning is not a "job" but a passion. The luckiest few find success if they can combine the two and live comfortably. If those aspiring cartoonists knew what it really takes, they may put their crayons down and continue doing something else they think they're good at.

Take care,
Justin.



FEBRUARY 24, 2007

Too Many Cartoonists, Too Little Time
By Daryl Cagle

Whenever cartoonists get together we complain about syndicates (the businesses that sell our cartoons to newspapers). Cartoonists are no businessmen -- we want syndicates to be like mothers to us, selflessly nurturing our careers so we don't have to sully our minds with yucky business thoughts, when we'd rather be thinking about cartoons. But syndicates don't act like mothers, and cartoonists have some very colorful names for the syndicate executives who sell their work - in fact, some of these colorful names include the word "mother."

In addition to being a political cartoonist myself, I run a small syndicate that specializes in editorial cartoons; I see that there must be one thousand aspiring cartoonists for every working professional, as I'm deluged with unsolicited submissions that are truly awful. At times like this, when people are passionate about politics, the inner political cartoonist emerges from the psyche of the talentless "wannabe."

Many wannabe cartoonists recognize that they have no drawing talent, but it seems that everyone thinks they are a writer. I get many submissions from writers who are looking to collaborate with editorial cartoonists. These writers want to send me gags, or want to find cartoonists who will draw their gags. Here is a typical gag submission:

"So, we have President Bush standing there, and he says, 'Things are improving in Iraq' and behind him you see two massive armies, the Shiites and the Sunnis, about to fight each other, and the sky is filled with thousands of U.S. helicopters, then, in the next panel ..."

These are people who think in words, not pictures. For some reason, this group of wannabes includes lots of lawyers who think they are funny. I think lawyers are funny, but I laugh at-them, not with-them; and it is a dark humor that makes me want to go take a shower afterwards. These guys just don't get it. The cartoon writers often send obvious or trite gags that they think are brilliant and original. Sometimes the writers follow up with angry mail when they notice that another cartoonist has "stolen" their gag.

The second group of wannabes do their own drawings, but can't see how truly awful their drawings are. These guys like to use computer fonts in their cartoons instead of hand lettering. Often they will use clip art in their cartoons, or lift photographs from the web, or they will use simple objects like squares and circles, and then have these objects making comments in speech balloons. These wannabes frequently don't know how to work their scanner and will send murky gray images that show crinkled paper backgrounds from the napkins they drew their cartoons on.

One thing aspiring editorial cartoonists have in common is paranoia. I get inquiries like this: "I'm really funny and I have some great ideas, but I need to know how to get them copyrighted first so you won't steal them."

I have a notice on our syndicate web site that that says: "We do not accept and will not review unsolicited submissions from cartoonists." Often the submissions come in with a note saying, "I know you don't accept submissions, but ... "

Ambitious aspiring cartoonists see syndicates as gatekeepers, guarding a barrier to the success they deserve. Sometimes the passion and perseverance of these wannabes can be frightening. They find my home phone number and my home address. Drive and perseverance in the face of adversity is a virtue, so their quest never ends.

Some horrid amateur cartoonists are convinced that the world of professional cartooning is a closed shop, an old-boy's network where success is a matter of who you know. Wannabes try to be friendly with my employees or cartoonist colleagues, hoping that the relationship will get them past the barrier. Many terrible submissions are forwarded to me by friends.

When I was an aspiring cartoonist I thought the syndicates were arrogant for sending form-letter responses, or for ignoring submissions - but now I understand why. For many wannabes, any response is an invitation to argue. The aspirants are convinced that their work is great and anyone who doesn't "get it" needs educating. Giving a polite brush-off sometimes fuels their anger.

Ironically, editorial cartooning is a terrible business. Newspapers pay only a few dollars a week for packaged groups of talented cartoonists who are, in turn, poorly paid. The professionals compete for fewer and fewer staff cartoonist positions at papers that are cutting back, as the internet crushes print. More and more professional cartoonists can't make ends meet. The syndicates aren't really a barrier to success for the aspiring cartoonists, just a hurdle on the road to more frustration in a dying profession.

My profession is fading away, I'm poorly paid and there are thousands of rude, talentless wannabes who want my job - but Britney Spears shaved her head - at least the life of a professional editorial cartoonist has its little pleasures.

Cartoons by Daryl Cagle and Ares


FEBRUARY 23, 2007

Don't miss our latest MSNBC.com Week in Political Cartoons Slideshow!


FEBRUARY 22, 2007

Sandy Huffaker's drawing of Britney Spears made me laugh. See our Britney Spears cartoons.

That Darn Time Magazine

Time Magazine has stopped running editorial cartoons again. The last time they dropped cartoons was after 9/11, when Time's narrow perception of editorial cartoons as jokes seemed inappropriate in light of the tragedy. Now the cartoons are gone because nobody cares; Time tells us that they haven't gotten any reader complaints about cartoons being dropped from the magazine..

I have mixed feelings about Time running political cartoons. It is a great venue for our art form, and we want more readers to appreciate editorial cartoons, but Time was as bad as Newsweek in their choices of cartoons, often picking cartoons that were stale, Yahtzee gags. Their choices of funny, inoffensive cartoons so closely matched the preferences of Newsweek that Time and Newsweek would often run the same cartoon in the same week, which must have been an embarrassment to them.

Even so, it is sad to see another venue for editorial cartoons fade away, without so much as a complaint.


Cartoonist Paresh Nath from the National Herald in New Delhi, India had a short hiatus from our site, now he's back. Click here to see more of Paresh's cartoons. Welcome back, Paresh!



Politicalcartoons.comParesh Nath, National Herald, New Delhi, India
Want to run Paresh's cartoons in your publication? Just e-mail cari@cagle.com.
Visit an archive of the artist's most recent cartoons in the drop menu at the right. Click on the cartoon to e-mail it to a friend.
   Next


FEBRUARY 17, 2007

Our new MSNBC.com slideshow is up! Come take a look.


FEBRUARY 14, 2007

Happy Valentines Day! be sure to visit our Valentines Day cartoon section, click on a cartoon to email an e-card to a friend!

I'd like to welcome a talented new cartoonist to the site, Tim Campbell from Indianapolis, Indiana. That's one of Tim's cartoons below right, you can see his archive here, and e-mail your welcome greeting to him at TCampbell5@indy.rr.com


FEBRUARY 9, 2007

AIN'T ENOUGH ROOM IN THIS TOWN FER THE TWO OF US

Most cartoonists go on a modern pilgrimmage each Summer to the San Diego Comic Con, the largest comics convention, held the last week of July this year. I enjoy it, even though I don't have anything to do with comic books. The event has grown to be so huge (well over 100,000 attending) that it encompasses all areas of cartooning in one way or another. I see lots of editorial cartoon fans there; I sign books and visit with my colleagues. It is a fun and busy time for me, even though I don't draw superheroes.

Why write about a July convention in February? Because it is almost impossible to get a hotel room in San Diego - even now, more than six months in advance. This is the week that Comic Con hotel room blocks became available and sold out immediately, causing a stir among frustrated cartoonists and fans. The system works like a radio contest where everyone calls the same phone number at the same time, the moment that calls are allowed, and the 106th caller wins. Online reservations were no better. I ended up finding a modest hotel room through Hotels.com for twice their normal, retail rate (over $400 a night). Sorry folks, all the hotel rooms in town are gone now.

San Diego just isn't a big enough town for the cartoonists anymore.


Visit our new MSNBC.com cartoon week in review slideshow. (Cartoon by Mike Lester)

We got some goofy entries to our contest, asking readers to count the cartoons in our Best Political Cartoons of the Year, 2007 Edition book (BEPY), and compare them to the cartoons in the competing Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year, 2007 Edition book (BECY). Hardly anyone took me seriously and actually counted, but some of the entries were pretty funny. One cartoonist sent me an accurate count of the number of cartoons about the Danish Muhammad cartoon issue in the BECY book (12, scattered through the book), and that was the only accurate count I received. I can see that our readers are not cut out to be accountants - but they made me laugh.




FEBRUARY 4, 2007

Read My Column About Political Cartoons ­ Then Write About Something Else, by Daryl Cagle

As a political cartoonist, I'd like to think my cartoons influence public opinion, but that rarely happens. People love a cartoon that they already agree with, and hate cartoons that they already disagree with. Editors like to choose editorial cartoons that they know their readers will like, so cartoons end up being a reflection of public opinion. In fact, political cartoons offer a great historical tool, giving a true picture of the opinions and emotions of a society at any given time.

Historians seem to have discovered political cartoons only recently, and I've started seeing a steady stream of scholarly papers about my profession as college professors and students suddenly look to my work and the work of my colleagues to support their political positions. One widely held canard seems to be popular among the academics: that the world supported the USA after 9/11 and this support was then squandered by the Bush administration's adventures in the Middle East.

Academics like to look at the cartoons drawn immediately after the 9/11 attack where, around the world, almost every editorial cartoonist drew the same image of a weeping Statue of Liberty. I drew one too. In fact, most cartoonists are ashamed of their weeping statues; we wish we could have a "do-over" where we wouldn't draw the first image to come to mind. Newspaper columnists all wrote much the same column right after 9/11, but it is easier to notice matching cartoons than matching columns, so cartoonists get the bad rap for "group-think." Even so, our matching cartoons were what the public wanted to see at that time and I probably received more mail from readers who loved my weeping Liberty than any other cartoon I've drawn.

International political cartoonists revile the USA in a uniform drumbeat of daily digs at America. The academics don't notice that international political cartoons before 9/11 were almost as negative about America as the cartoons now. After our matching, weeping statues, the American and international cartoonists diverged. On 9/12, American cartoonists started drawing patriotic cartoons portraying resolve, strength, and the virtues of the New York Fire and Police Departments, standing tall as twin towers. American cartoonists drew scores of images of a strong Uncle Sam, threatening eagles and a newly militant Statue of Liberty, demanding revenge.

Just after 9/11 the international cartoonists depicted the irony of mighty America put in its place. A favorite, foreign symbol for America is Superman, and we saw scores of images showing both Superman and Uncle Sam defeated, injured, bleeding and grieving. The worldwide cartoonists treated 9/11 in the way that tabloids treat fallen celebrities: with delight in the spectacle of a beautiful actress who is overweight, or getting a messy divorce -- or better yet, caught in a drunken scene, screaming racial epithets so that we can see that the rich, powerful, famous, conceited, fallen star was a hypocrite all along.

Some international cartoonists wrote to me about the patriotic cartoons; they couldn't believe American cartoonists would choose to draw such cartoons by their own free will; we must have been directed to draw that nonsense by the Bush Administration. Academics have picked up on the idea of "self-censorship;" that cartoonists somehow didn't draw what they wanted to draw because the country wasn't ready for jokes, or editors didn't want to see criticism of the Bush administration at a time when we all had to pull together.

In fact, the system worked as it always had: some cartoonists criticized the government right away, some cartoonists were joking immediately, most cartoonists held the same opinions as their readers, editors selected cartoons they agreed with and thought their readers would agree with. Newspapers ended up printing cartoons that accurately reflected public opinion, both here and abroad.

I have a few words for the professors and college students:

1.) Editorial cartoons show that the rest of the world didn't like America before 9/11; they didn't like us just after 9/11; and they still don't like us.

2.) The government doesn't control or intimidate American cartoonists or editors, now or then. Yes, we really believe what we say in our cartoons. No, cartoonists are not hampered by self-censorship.

3.) Please don't ask me to comment on your paper, thesis or dissertation about editorial cartoons. Just read this column, then write about something else.

Cartoons above by Steve Breen, Scott Stantis, Mike Ritter and Gary Markstein.



FEBRUARY 2, 2007

CONRAD AND THE FISH

Read Dwayne Booth's (Mr. Fish) article about Paul Conrad in the LA Weekly here.

RESPONSE ON GROUNDHOG DAY

You folks send lots of comments, even when we don't ask for comments. Some of you understood that Tom Purcell's column (below) about Groundhog Day was "tongue in cheek" and some took it seriously. Here are examples of comments from thick headed readers who didn't get it:

FIRST GOD-- THEN FREEDOM OF SPEECH--NO PRAYERS IN SCHOOL--- NO OPEN SMOKEING-- NOW GROUNDHOG. LEAVE IT ALONE ALL YOU TREEHUGGERS ARE THE SAME.
George Wright


Tom,
You're an idiot.
S/F,
Chuck Corpening
St. Louis
I just read your article on Puxatawny Phil in my local newspaper.

I'm born and bred Pennsylvania Dutch. I'm one of the "small minded people" who enjoys Phil and his prophesy on Groundhog Day.

If the only thing you have to complain about is a groundhog, then you have way too much time on your hands. To you and your other liberal ACLU friends I say "*&%$ You".

Bill Fava

And here are some of the comments from our readers who are not satirically challenged:


Dear Mr. Purcell, (& Cari)
I like the way you think and write!
The Cagle Newsletter always makes me laugh and think but your soliloquies make it better!
As a single woman, living alone, unmarried at 40 (with NO CATS thank you very much!), I will definitely take your request under advisement about needing to take care of all y'all single guys by getting married.
::grin:: In fact, find me a good guy and I'll go for it!
Have a lovely day,
Julie Bechtel


I laughed my ass off! (Looking back..) Oh... no wait... there it is.
Wendy Skains
Truly enjoyed the article on why Groundhog Day should be ended.
Very funny. Also liked the cartoon.
EKW
Way to go Tom.
Frank Norton
Beautiful. I'm just living to see rebuttals . ...
Field Ops ­ CPE, Alan Schneider, Dallas TX
The crazy thing is, in this day and age, I don't know if you are serious or not.
BarryOptimistic
ROFLMAO
Yea and verily, Groundshrub Day it should be forthwith!
Cassandra Kyle
You're funnily twisted, Tom.
Madelyn Toh
Mr. Purcell, Your take on "Groundhog Day" is brilliant.
Thank you, Lawrence (of Alaska) Noder
That's very funny. Great image. Could be a Woody Allen short-story or a bad country-western tune
Jim Lahner
Speaking as one of the few athiests with a profound respect for the Christian traditions upon which this country was founded, I can only say kudos.
Don Preston
On this day when I needed a laugh, you provided one for me........THANK YOU!!!!
Dennis Moore


FEBRUARY 1, 2007

Remember Jose Varela - the nutty cartoonist who took over the offices of the Miami Herald with a toy gun? He got off with no jail time. Read all about it on E&P.

Here is a disturbing column about Groundhog Day, from our Cagle Cartoons columnist, Tom Purcell.

Visit our Groundhog's Day cartoon collection!

The Cartoon below is by R.J. Matson.

Why Groundhog Day Should Be Outlawed
By Tom Purcell

Punxsutawney Phil must be stopped. The lovable little groundhog must be stopped.

You know Phil. Every Feb. 2, Groundhog Day, he is yanked from a tree stump in Punxsutawney, Pa. If he sees his shadow, his organizers allege, there will be six more weeks of winter. If he doesn't, spring will be just around the corner.

Millions have enjoyed this primitive ritual for years, but now there's a problem.

Groundhog Day evolved from Candlemas Day, a Christian tradition commemorating the purification of the Virgin Mary. As this tradition evolved in Germany, it got ever more colorful.

Germans soon believed that Candlemas Day could also predict the weather. Somewhere along the line they began yanking a hedgehog out of a tree stump, and the tradition was born. When German immigrants settled in Punxsutawney in 1887, they brought the tradition with them.

Now we have a problem.

How, in this day and age, can any government body impose on our diverse society any celebration that has its roots in a Christian faith? Aren't the people of Punxsutawney providing their de facto support of one religion over the others? Isn't their outmoded event offensive to those who practice no religion?

Isn't this annual event, then, out of sync with the American tradition of separating church and state? If Santa Claus and Christmas trees are being banished in public squares, how can Groundhog Day not follow suit?

Groundhog Day is guilty of numerous other offenses. In Punxsutawney, the event is managed by a group of men known as the "Inner Circle." These are the fellows who wear top hats and tuxedos and yank Phil out of the tree stump.

As usual, it is the men who are exploiting a helpless little creature for profit and greed, and men who have kept women out of leadership positions within their Inner Circle clique.

The hypocrisy of these allegedly Christian fellows is staggering. They talk of how they pamper Phil. That he lives in a heated home and is fed delicious treats. But then they boast about one especially disgusting tidbit.

Phil has a harem.

The Inner Circle provides Phil with three nubile female companions to take the edge off his lonely bachelor existence. That's right, this band of middle-aged pimps is trafficking in "woodchucks of the night."

For these reasons, I cannot understand how, in these progressive times, such an offensive primitive ritual continues to be celebrated every year.

Sure, I understand that small-minded people believe such traditions enrich our lives and bring levity to the hearts of millions.

I understand that American traditions evolved from a hodgepodge of cultural influences, and that the best of them celebrate our common humanity.

But still, Groundhog Day as we know it must end -- or at least be drastically modified.

For starters, we must set Phil free. No innocent animal should be kept in captivity so that he can be exploited by greedy capitalists. We must release him back to his natural habitat immediately.

We can replace him with a less offensive living entity, such as a tree or shrub. Trees and shrubs cast shadows, too, and holding them in captivity is much more humane, since their roots keep them from roaming freely anyhow. (Perhaps we can call the event "Groundshrub Day.")

Most important, this event should be entirely secular. Any reference to the Christian past must be deleted from the official Web site. I was shocked to find such references on the existing Groundhog Day Web site.

I'm confident that if the men in the Inner Circle make these needed changes ­ and if they begin admitting women to leadership positions immediately -- the Groundshrub Day tradition will continue for many years to come.

If they don't the ACLU is likely to take these suggestions seriously and file suit within the week.

Tom Purcell is a humor columnist who is nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons. For comments to Tom, please email him at Purcell@caglecartoons.com



JANUARY 30, 2007

ENTER OUR CARTOON COUNTING CONTEST!

Our readers surely know our Best Political Cartoons of the Year (BPCY) book which we plug incessantly on our site - but did you know that there is another, competing book called the Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year (BECY), that just hit bookstore shelves? I thought this would be a nice opportunity for a comparison cartoon counting contest.

Contest Part One!

Our BPCY book has more cartoons than the BECY book, 80 pages more, with more cartoons packed into each page, on average. Here's the first part of the contest - the first two readers to count all of the political cartoons in both the BPCY and BECY books and give us the accurate counts will win a copy of any of our books with an original drawing by ME on the back page (see the books here). E-mail your accurate cartoon counts to my loyal editor Cari, at cari@cagle.com, if you win, Cari will e-mail you back and ask for your book preference and mailing address.

Contest Part Two!

The competing BECY book has a reputation for not running strong cartoons that might offend someone - an editorial policy that is easy to see this year. We devote a large part of our book to the potentially offensive, Danish Muhammad Cartoons issue, including the original Danish cartoons along with lots of cartoons that cartoonists drew about the Muhammad cartoons. I'm not sure if there is a single cartoon about the Muhammad cartoons controversy in the competing BECY book. The first two readers to give me an accurate count of all of the Muhammad cartoons and cartoons about the Muhammad cartoons in our BPCY book, and in the BECY book, will win a copy of any of our books with an original drawing by ME on the back page (see the books here). E-mail your accurate Muhammad cartoon counts to my loyal editor Cari, at cari@cagle.com, if you win, Cari will e-mail you back and ask for your book preference and mailing address.

Here are the rules: We won't look at any of the e-mails until next Monday, so the date that you send your e-mail to us doesn't matter, so long as it is before Monday; we're just looking on Monday at all the e-mails we have received and picking two winners in each category. Our selections are final. Our choice of the cartoon count is final, and I understand that there may be some question about whether a particular drawing in the book constitutes a complete cartoon or not, and I don't want to argue about the number, so our selection is final without regard to whether or not you agree with the exact number. (Hey, the prize is just a book, don't get upset.)

If you have comments about the books after making your counts, please send them along and we'll post the most interesting comments here. And, no, I have not counted the cartoons in the books myself. I don't know how many there are. And you don't have to buy the books to do this! You can stand in the book store and count!



BECY book (bad)

 

 



BPCY book (good)



JANUARY 24, 2007

Here is an interesting column about women and marriage, from our Cagle Cartoons columnist, Tom Purcell. The Cartoon below is by Cam Cardow.


Women Without Husbands
By Tom Purcell

All right, ladies, the gig is up. It's time for all of us to get married, including you.

I refer to The New York Times' recent report. After sorting through U.S. Census data, The Times determined that for the first time in American history the majority of women, 51 percent, are living without a husband.

The story tore through the media like a lightning bolt. A slew of "I am woman, hear me roar" stories hit the airwaves. The storyline was clear: Women are finally free and independent now, and the last thing they need is some sloppy spouse who leaves his socks lying all over the house.

Well, nuts to that. Look, ladies, deciding not to marry for your own well-being is one thing, but it is we you're not marrying in the process. Your decision is killing single men -- literally.

Single men partake in more risky behavior than married men. We eat badly, smoke more, and avoid doctors' offices. We die younger. And we're far more likely to wake up in a pile of crumpled newspapers still clutching the tequila bottle we began sipping from two days before.

The reason why is not complicated. We are social animals. Men and women are very different creatures, but we were made for each other. The Catholics call it complementarity -- a man and woman, in union and harmony, round each other out.

Men need to be rounded out, too. Take dust. Because our brains take in less sensory detail than a woman's, we don't notice dust the way women do. Thus, married men tend to live in orderly, dust-free homes, whereas single men, says P.J. O'Rourke, clean up their place about once every girlfriend.

Though it's not like single women are faring much better.

The Times article quoted independent women raving about their freedom and flexibility. A 32-year-old woman had already lived with two boyfriends and said that if she ever did marry, she might opt to keep her own place. Another said she likes being able to sleep on either side of the bed.

Oh, just admit it, ladies. You need us, too. Sleeping next to a burping, snoring lug of a husband may not be the stuff dreams are made of, but it sure beats sleeping alone. And when you hear a prowler rattling the door knob in the middle of the night, whom do you send to investigate? Your cat?

I know The Times is eager for a more progressive society to take hold -- one in which the stodgy traditional marriage is kicked to the wayside -- but the fact is marriage, imperfect though it is, is good for us.

Married people are happier, says the Pew Research Center. They enjoy life more -- they enjoy sex more, too. Children raised by married couples fare better. Society fares better. Successful civilizations are built on the stability that traditional marriage brings.

But despite these simple and obvious truths, we keep trying to reinvent our nature. We keep trying to prove there are better ways to fulfill our simple needs -- keep trying to leave every option open, so that we can be "free" and "independent" forever.

And we end up alone.

I can't imagine what old folks homes will be like 40 years from now. There will be an unprecedented number of elderly single people living alone. No children or grandchildren will visit them -- no spouse will care for them. I wonder if The Times will do a front-page piece on that trend, too.

All I know is that my life would certainly be better if I woke every morning in a full home in which my children are laughing and my wife is smiling, rather than the way I often wake now -- with a throbbing noggin' because my single friends and I over-enjoyed our freedom and independence at the pub the night before.

Like I said, it's time for all of us to get married.

Tom Purcell is a humor columnist nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons. For comments to Tom, please email him at Purcell@caglecartoons.com

Here are a few comments from our readers:

I loved your column "women without husbands". Yep, marriage is great. I find that I no longer have to think for myself my wife does that for me. I eat healthier too (when she's not around) and after she goes to sleep I can watch whatever I want on the TV as long as I have the earphones in, even the scary shows that I'm not allowed to watch when she's watching with me.
My dog likes it that I got married too, well it used to be my dog now it likes my wife best but I still have to take the ungrateful mutt out to the bathroom.
Don't get me wrong I really do love my dog and I love being married ,most of the time.

I'm just kidding, my dogs not an ungrateful mutt, and I don't really mind taking it out to the bathroom.
Stan


It sounds nice...that getting married idea. I go through stretches where I think I might try to find someone again. But then I remember the first husband, the subsequent "room mate," and the "I can't make up my mind what I want" after that. It comes down to how much effort one wants to put forth, and frankly, most of you aren't worth the effort. I took care of myself plus them so I might as well be alone and take care of myself. Besides, most men after age 45 don't want women their own age--they want someone who looks like their daughter. If you all would grow up and act like mature adults, maybe more of us would be married. Until then, I'll eat whenever I'm hungry, move the furniture myself, sleep on whichever side of the bed I choose, and send one of my cats to check out the strange noises.

But, hey, thanks for the chuckles!

Kathy
Harrisburg, PA
Thanks for the article; I hadn't realized I was in the majority. Now I can heckle my married friends about not being single, right?

My deepest fear is being without family at the end of my life. It's almost making me want to reproduce. Nice to know that if my nightmare becomes reality I won't be the only one. Let's all hope there are bars in retirement homes by then. I think consumer demand will require it.

Cheers
Jessica Glebke
Missoula, MT


Dear Mr. Purcell,
I enjoyed your comments to Mr Cardow's cartoon (no-sex marriage).
Ever since the young women have become emancipated, jobs for men have diminished. Many professions which were formerly reserved for men have been taken over by women.
The birth-rate has diminished in Germany and other industrial countries because women prefer to seek a profession and there is no time to raise a family. Maybe someday there will no longer be any men and women will have to live by themselves.

Best wishes from a cartoon admirer.
Roland St.Pierre
Germany


Men need to stop expecting women, wives to take care of them like a mother. It is a share and share alike world not a chauvinist's dream.
Have A Very Blessed Day --- Cecilia Kuklies, Texas
Hi, Tom,
Let's see.....married 30 years.....divorced 8. Definitely prefer the last 8 years, I think. Would I even consider getting married again. Not a chance. If I find someone special enough to share my time and life with....I think I'd still insist on keeping our separate homes. I never want to feel trapped. I need my own space. That sounds selfish, but some of us spent our whole lives taking care of others, sharing everything, doing all we could to be all we were "supposed to be." Tired now. Relaxed now. Alone is good. "To everything there is a season..." I really like the season I'm living in now.
JB (Judy) in Colorado

I could not agree with you more!!! That said...Will you marry me?!! :-) April


Hey Tom,

How old are you? I'm a young 65 and single, and cute. Are you?. So I propose that we discuss marriage. I will not complain about snoring if you don't hog the covers. I have to draw the line at belching or passing gas, but I will compensate by being a really good cook. If I point out the dust on the furniture, would you dust it? I'd be running the vacuum at that time. What do you think?
Donna
Columbus Ohio
JANUARY 23, 2007

THE STATE OF THE UNION DRINKING GAME

Here are the rules for the State of the Union Address Drinking Game, from our Cagle Cartoons columnist, Will Durst.

George W. Bush 2007 State of the Union Drinking Game
Raging Moderate, by Will Durst

What you need to play:

·Four taxpayers: One rich white guy wearing a suit. Cufflinks are nice. Two people wearing jeans, one in a blue work shirt, the other in a white shirt and one person wearing clothes rejected by the Salvation Army. Belt and shoelaces removed.

·One shot glass per person. Everybody brings their own from home and places it on table. Suit gets first pick for use during game. White shirt picks next, then Blue shirt. Suit takes last shot glass as well, and Rags has to beg a glass from other players when necessary or drink out of own cupped hands.

·20-buck ante for everybody except Suit who throws in a quarter.

·1 pot of Texas chili and 1 bowl of guacamole in middle of coffee table with tortilla chips nearby. Rags has to prepare and serve the chili and guacamole.

·A large stash of beer. Rags gets the cheapest stuff available. Suit gets whatever import he likes. Jeans gets any domestic brand as long as it's no more expensive than Bud, but must pay for all the beer, the bourbon, the chips and the ingredients for the chili and guacamole.

Rules of the Game:

1. Whenever George W uses the phrases, "defending liberty," "enormous progress" or "challenges ahead," last person to knock wood has to drink 2 shots of beer. If he actually says, "There are those who envy our freedoms and seek to destroy us," everybody drinks a whole beer.

2. The first time George W mentions the tragic events of 9/11, the last person to eat one dollop of chili off a tortilla chip must drink three shots of beer. The second time George W mentions the tragic events of 9/11, the last person to eat one dollop of guacamole off a tortilla chip must drink three shots of beer. Continue to alternate. If you mis-chip, drink two extra shots of beer.

3. If George W mispronounces Iraqi President Al-Maliki's name, drink two shots of beer. If he even attempts to pronounce the name of Iranian President Mahmoud Amadinejad, first person to stop laughing is exempt from drinking three shots of beer.

4. If George W makes up a word like "9/11ers or "deterrencism," last person to yell out "Strategerie!" drinks two shots of beer.

5. Every time Senators Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama are shown in the audience, Suit drinks one shot of beer.

6. The first time George W talks about immigration, last person to finish three chips of guacamole has to drink three shots of beer.

7. If either the vice President, secretary of state or first lady are caught napping, last person to make snoring noises drinks two shots of beer. If Senator Robert Byrd is shown awake, Blue and White drink two shots of beer.

8. Everybody drinks two shots of beer if President Bush mentions Scooter Libby. Three shots of beer if he mentions Jack Abramoff. Four shots of beer if he mentions Osama bin Laden.

9. Whenever George W quotes the Bible, last person to sing the first eight bars of "Amazing Grace" has to drink two shots of beer.

10. If George W smirks during a standing ovation, take turns throwing chips of chili and guacamole at TV. First person to hit Bush's head exempt from drinking three shots of beer.

11. If George W tells a folksy Texas tale with a deeper meaning about not leaving before the job is done, Suit has to drink out of beer-filled hands of Rags, who gets to dry his hands on Suit's jacket.

12. Predict the number of applause breaks. After the speech, drink number of shots of beer equal to the difference between your estimate and the real number.

EXTRAS:

·Anybody who can identify person giving the Democratic response doesn't have to watch it.

·If George W uses a heartfelt story of one of our brave troops, white guy gets to kick everybody once. Twice if the brave troop is a woman. Rags gets to kick the suit if Bush reveals the subject of the anecdote is in the audience. Twice if the brave troop is sitting next to an astronaut.

·Suit takes home the $60.25.

·Leftover beer, chili and guacamole go home with Rags after he/ she is finished washing the dishes.

Political Comic Will Durst is going to try and sneak into the event disguised as an astronaut.

Copyright ©2007 Will Durst, distributed by the Cagle Cartoons Inc. syndicate. Will Durst is a political comedian who has performed around the world. He is a familiar pundit on television and radio. See www.willdurst.com for additional information on Will's performance schedule and listen to his twice-weekly commentaries @audible.com/willdurst. E-mail Will at durst@caglecartoons.com. Cartoons above by Mike Lester of the Rome News Tribune and Mike Lane, both of Politicalcartoons.com


SEE DARYL TALK!

Here's a Quicktime movie clip from a recent talk I gave at Wabash College in Indiana. I'm talking about cartoons I drew that caused trouble. It is your chance to actually see your frumpled, MSNBC.com cartoonist in action.

I laughed out loud when I read this article on a college newspaper site that referred to me as "New York Times cartoonist, Daryl Cagle." You can read about my experience with the New York Times below.


JANUARY 22, 2007

LOTS OF RESPONSE TO MY "FIELD GUIDE TO IRAQ" CARTOON!

The mail started flooding in from my latest cartoon, so I put the cartoon in the newsletter and invited a huge torrent of response. The cartoon is below, and some responses are below that. I'll post more as they come in. The first comment, by a Mike Gannon, was sent out with the newsletter so many readers responded to his comments. I also find it interesting that many readers complain that they don't know how to turn the cartoon over to read the answer - just lift up your monitor and turn it over. It's not rocket science.

From: mike gannon
Subject: racist cartoon?
your latest cartoon titled feild guide to iraq is basically racist. your
saying all these differing groups/religious factions all look the same to
you. mabey if we get to know these differing people of the mid east instead
of ignoring them youll be able to tell the difference.


Actually, the cartoon is all too accurate.

Sgt R.T. Smith
USMC


Q: Who shoots cartoonists?
A: A, B, & H, if he's American, and everybody if he draws Mohammed. (The Turk will also shoot him if he mentions Armenia.)
Paul Baker
I totally agree w/cha and I think your toon just shows the battle in Iraq as it really is. For those who say that you are racist just don't see it and never will. But saying that it is art and art will always be interpreted in different ways by different people.

Your newsletter is one the greatest e-mail subscriptions that I have ever Signed up for.

Have a great day,

Shawn
Your "Field Guide" is a perfect illustration of why we don't belong there. Our soldiers and Marines aren't sure who the enemy is and when they do, God forbid, kill someone, their own country puts them on trial. Great editorial work.
Ricky Miller
My five cents worth on the Field Guide to Iraq cartoon is this: I feel that this cartoon says that the 2003 ongoing Iraq pre-emptive strike war is like the 1970's Vietnam undeclared war, where the distinguishing between friend and foe is basically impossible. Too many factions, civilians and soldiers all involved as fighters, casualties, victims in one way or another. And that the various racists who do exist in the US government and the US voting population won't care who's really killed and wounded as long as they get their agenda. I only know your cartoons, so I don't know whether I like you as a person or not -- yet I certainly love the majority of your cartoons and many of your contributors' cartoons as well. Thanks for putting out the cartoon newsletter -- it keeps me laughing at the insanity in the world, and I need the perspective!
Lory in New Mexico :)
Why don't we just do what the Israeli's did to the Palestinians, tell them if they don't knock it off we are going to bomb them back into the stone age. Only do a compete job of it and don't stop until all resistance has ceased. Give them a week to comply and then start carpet bombing cities (starting with Baghdad) until they remember what life was like in the open dessert. Then go in and plunder all their natural resources, seize all their swiss bank accounts, and leave them without any modern tools. Once the rest of the region sees the results of this action they will stop all their senseless bickering.
John Parker
Well well well. I have never been good at recognizing hate. I still can't recognize it!
Katherine Downing
Racist cartoon. Nope, You're right. You're exactly right! And you should have been part of the study group! Keep up the good work!
Dennis Rodgers
I say get our troops the hell out of there and let A through J all shoot each other! They're going to do it anyhow, whether we're there or not. Why waste American lives over there? It's not so much that American lives are worth more than theirs. We just have the good common sense not to kill each other simply because we worship the same god differently. We don't need to get in the middle of crazy people who don't have that common sense.
Frederick Marvin
Why include the Kurds in this congregation of creeps? Unless I am missing something, they are the straight guys. Are they killing Americans? No, even though we betrayed them. One of their spokesmen was quoted: "We kill only our enemies". They, unlike the others, have a legitimate, definable gripe. Their natural homeland is occupied by Turkey, Iran and Iraq. They have enough problems, without your tossing them in that bag of bastards.
Chris Malone
Thank you so much for putting into words and pictures the situation into which we are sending our troops!!!!! This administration is self-serving and the whole country is being held hostage by the President and his messianic agenda.

I have put your ed. cartoon on the bulletin board in my classroom. Please continue to hold our policies up to a mirror. Your work makes it harder to miss the truths that many don't want to see!

Sincerely,
Patricia Lubitz


You nailed it as usual...Its not racist, its realistic and true
That is why we can't make any headway over there...keep up the good work
Michael Atlas
You mean to say we jumped head first into a bear trap in a briar patch?
Aw shucks.....
Lee Greenberg
You had to know you were going to get the "racist" blowback on this one in this day and age where truth takes a back seat to the PC culture club every time. You hit the nail on the head ­ America and the rest of the west need to realize the nature of the people in that region of the world; the individuals that have a moderate viewpoint in that region of the world have two choices: migrate to the West or suffer persecution/death. People do not throw off centuries of indoctrination for something as radical as self-determination just because we give them the opportunity.
Tony Butler
Excellent cartoon.
Sums up well the problems.You may be wrong on a few of these- I am pretty certain that "D" and "H" also hate Americans. I also suspect that many, if not most, members of "F" and "G" hate Americans as well.
One might say to "W", "it's a fine mess you've gotten us into now."
Keep up the good work.
Michael Fain
I thought this may let you know that Daryl seems to have it much more together than the cranially challenged individual who called him a racist.

The situation at hand in Iraq is not now or ever will be, one with either an easy out or answer. Should we presently decide to withdraw we will be sanctioning the creation of a new state in that region of the world, one that includes Iran and Iraq as a single nation with the ability to control not only Syria but all of Arabia.

Stay the course? Add twenty thousand troops? Not unless one is purely political with ulterior motives for personal advancement within our own government and does not care if we loose that area to the Iranians. Otherwise put some meat behind our potato retoric and throw in 100,000 troops and control the area until they can sort it out for themselves. No war can be won without control and domination.

Enough...
Greg Cronin
Excellent cartoon! This is how many of us see the war in Iraq. It is confusing as heck! We don't see how the Americans can "win" or how "winning" would be defined. As for reader accusing you of racism, obviously he is not fighting the war. Even our soldiers say they can't tell the good guys from the bad guys. Thanks for your tongue in cheek cartoon!
Cheers,
Jan Hudson
Definitely puts the political turmoil of the region in perspective. Great job!
Steve Tabb, Westmoreland, KS
Fabulous, fabulous. A simple cartoon highlighting the extremely complicated and discombobulated (in the American way of thinking) driving forces in the mid east. Love the newsletter! Keep up the good work cartoonists everywhere. Who else dares to articulate the truth than those who draw funny pictures.
Mary Kenny
I can't read the upside down message. What does it say?
Bill McGraw, Somewhere South of Chicago
Love it! Those crazy *&%$s in the middle east would like to think that they're all distinct, but they're really all the same two-faced hot heads. They'll be fighting over that worthless pile of sand long after the oil is gone.
Mike Powers
I loved your 'parsing out' of all the main groups (let's not forget the Turkomen, Chaldeans, Arab and Kurd Christians, and the odd non-combatant foreigner). What is a soldier to do? Even (or maybe especially) our policymakers in Washington and Baghdad can't keep the groups sorted out.
To mitigate the accusation of 'racism' it might be best to hide them all behind a wall, since many are invisible to the naked eye and only become identifiable after making claims for IED's, sniping, or shooting down helicopters.
Keep up the good work.
Eugene Owen, Annapolis, MD
To Mike Gannon,
Jeez, Mike, get a grip. It's a cartoon. Part of the so-called "humor" (which, if I am not misinformed, is an integral part of a "cartoon") is the cartoon's concept that our government doesn't seem to know who is who over there. That doesn't mean Daryl Cagle thinks all Iraqis, Kurds, Turkomen, etc. are alike!

Daryl, you have my deepest sympathy, Keep it up, buddy!

Best,
Susan Rogers


And this is the Shiite who hated the Sunni who hated the Shiite who hated the Sunni who hated the Kurd who hated the Sunni who hated the Chaldean Christian who hated the Shiite who hated the Sunni who hated the Americans who hated the ... and all in the house that Bush built.

I'm hoping against hope for the day we all recognize that hate is humanity's common enemy, that we all realize we're all together on this spaceship called "Earth", and, as the poet W.H. Auden said, "We must love one another or die".

Enough of dying.
Lloyd Wallisch

"Field guide to Iraq is one of those painful cartoons that pushes your face in something you dont want to see, or admit to - in this case that we are literally murdering other human beings who we dont know and cant tell apart, and can even joke about it. I shudder to think that there are people who might find this funny.
curt clay
Daryl you hit the nail on the head almost every time you're great
Earl Rhodes
All,
Okay, now I finally understand how to exit a quagmire. First, up the commitment a bit to 200,000 not 20,000 new troops to send to Iraq. Second, but most important, re-employ Madeline Albright to provide a few days indoctrination training so every soldier may learn to befriend each of the characters on the Iraq stage set as shown below. Ah, yes, then we may soon declare: Mission Accomplished yet once again. Yep, you gotta have a plan to stay the course!
Les
I don't feel for a moment that you're racist! That's what I see also. Except the Iranians (Persians) aren't Arabs. However, their religious leanings are the same.
I'm sure we look the same to them....Baptists vs Church of Christ vs Catholics.
Linda Anderson, Conroe, TX
Some of the people who have reacted to your cartoon have used the word 'racist'to depict what you have published.I do not think your pen,or any other,can show how the men depicted look any different from what I or most other Americans(or most of the World)have seen on in our Media for the past 30 plus years,(Iran Embassy Hostages,Palestinian Terrorist takeover of planes,Jihad here,Jihad there...)One of my thoughts on 9/11,as I watched the Towers Fall,and Americans died, for some type of Islamic/Arab hatred of Our Country, that this was as much a 'racist'attack on America as any religious or political attack.
Please keep the PEN mighty,it helps keepus ALL Thinking,and ALL Free.
Thanks, Al Kempf, N.Y.
You done good!! Your cartoon showed, in a few well-chosen strokes, the many factions involved, the complex relationships between us, them, each other, their government and neighboring countries... and the difficulty knowing friend from foe...
Thanks, Athena Mizelle
Finally, someone with a clear view of the war...but it still begs the
question: how do we get out without getting shot?
Michael Moore
Thank God someone has finally figured it out! Please tell George.
Mom in the Desert
Just because you used the same image does not make this racist. We cannot tell the people apart perhaps, but not because they look alike..............it is because they do not want us to know...............
This field guide is a very good illustration of why we (or the "they" in gov) don't or can't really understand what is going on and why.
Kristina A.
Sir,
As a Vietnam Vet I can honestly tell you that the cartoon "Field Guide to Iraq" brought back memories of the problems faced with telling the "good guys" from the "bad guys" there. Some may call this a racist cartoon but I would ask, can anyone really tell the "good guys" from the "bad guys" walking down any street in any country? Even in cities of our own?
--Dcrusoe gardener of litlone
PLEASE PRINT ANSWER RIGHT SIDE UP for those of us who are a tad handicapped
But then I am one of the few who believes it should read WHOM do you shoot!
Thanks for this cartoon. It does seem to say what is happening.
Cheers,
Patricia
Daryl,
It's tough to be right.
In my opinion, your cartoon captures the hate-filled Mideast accurately. Religion breeds intolerance.ALL religions ­ but some have more extremists than others.
Mike Collins
Whether I love or hate you depends on who's ox you happen to be goring that day. Can't resist taking a look not matter what.
Fran Whitaker
"A picture is worth a thousand words."
To quote the late, beloved, 'Lord' Buckley, in God's Own Drunk, "'cause it was just like a jitterbug dance,
it was so simple it evaded me."
Thomas Glenn, in La Union, Philippines
OUTSTANDING! It captures all the conflicting alliances, allegiances, purposes, etc & they all look the same! Great editorial cartooning.

Ginny Wright
Lincoln, NE
I believe that should be whom do you shoot?

My answer is: Do what we've always done before - let them shoot each other until only one is left. Then send foreign aid to the last one standing..... unless he's Al Qaeda

Dick Cheney's answer: Shoot anybody or anything that moves.
Natalie's (of the Dixie Chicks) answer would be to shoot.....oh, hell. We know who she would shoot.
Dubya would shoot himself...in the foot.
Great cartoon(s). Keep 'em coming.
Lonnie Wilson
While the P.C. issues are easily seen here, this IS a political cartoon, so nobody should take it as any direct reference to the various groups represented. What this cartoon DOES do very well is explain the unfathomable quagmire the U.S. has been inserted into by the decision to topple Saddam. Many thought it a big mistake at the time, and hindsight is clearly supporting that argument more every day. I think this is one of the very best and most astute political cartoons in quite some time.
David E. Wilhite
I think that referring to the cartoon as racism is missing the point.
Of course you made everyone look alike, because that is just the issue.
The differences in these points of view and loyalties are impossible to keep straight unless you live there, know the players intimately and stay alert. US soldiers don't have a clue who they are to shoot. They were just dropped in as exterminators. I think it makes the point that we should not be there at all and definitely should not be shooting anyone. The cartoon points out our cultural stupidity and indifference.
Glenna,
I really enjoy your cartoon news service.
Answer:
Don't shoot any of them; just get the hell out of there....NOW!!!!
Nathan Booker, Belgrade, Maine
Daryl,
I found your chart to be very accurate. I don't know if the person that referred to it as a " Racist Cartoon " has ever been in a war where your fighting a country's whose people look more alike than not. As in Vietnam you couldn't tell one from the other when you were in a close fire fight. You just prayed you shot a bad guy.
Splinter6
Daryl,
Your cartoon is right on. Your readers who think you are being racist might do well to remember that in the good ole days of traditional warfare, armys wore uniforms in order to distinguish friend from foe.
Given the fact of a civil war is in progress between various religious and political factions of tribal arabian groups in Iraq, to suggest that without identifying uniforms they all look alike is simply good sense.
In point of fact, given the reality that an Iraqi government soldier (and therefore our friend) may switch hit for a religious melitia on the weekends (our foe), it can be quite impossible to tell the players without a scorecard. Maybe that is why it was said three years that the worst case scenario would be if the mess devolved into a civil war.
Randy Horton, Yonkers, New York
The correct answer is they are all Muslims except for the Kurds. All muslims are our enemies, shoot them all.
Jerry
Too many people have very thin skin. How have they lived as long as they have? Let's put it this way - I have no intention of stopping enjoying your cartoons!!
Dolly in Syracuse
______________________________________________________________

I love your cartoons, everyone is entitled to an occasional screw up.
Wilma Lamb


Hi,
I think your cartoon shows just what the main problems are over there for our troops...
You can't tell who your enemies are from your friends...
It is not a racial thing, but a common sense thing...
Keep up the good work...
Sandey C.
The field guide cartoon brings to mind the old saying about not being able to tell the players without a score card. I think even with one in this conflict, it is hard. And you left out the local thugs who are just out for financial gain or are engaged in the never ending cycle of revenge that plays so prominently in Middle Eastern politics. Remember that the concept of an eye for an eye (a kinder, gentler response to insult or injury than was previously practiced) originated in Babylon, which is, by the way, a tourist site in Iraq. The cartoon also reinforces that old question, "Is the enemy of my enemy my friend or my enemy?"
Charlotte Peterson
With Super Bowl just around corner you'd think folks wouldn't get upset about balls.
Your toon showed balls. Go Chicago!!!!!!
Douglas Reed
Why didn't they use you for the Iraq Study Group? This says it all.
Great work!
James W. Brown, Jr.

Today's cartoon speaks volumes. Indeed, who do I shoot.
L. Noder, USMC
How does one "turn over" the answer to your cartoon?
Isabel Davis
Very, very fine piece! I'd like Mike Gannon to elaborate on why he thinks ideology is racist and why this doesn't address one of the central problems we face in this region.
Keep on drawing!
Eric Vincent
Dear Daryl:
What purpose does a political cartoon serve unless it stimulates conversation and thoughtful discourse? I loved the cartoon in question and have already shared it with some "fellow travelers". You were spot on with that cartoon and don't let the nay-sayers get you down!
There have been many days during the last four years that your cartoons have shown us that proverbial light at the end of this bleak, dark
tunnel. Please keep up the good work...you brighten my day!
Susan Rae
Daryl: remember when, in Vietnam, a big complaint was that we couldn't tell enemy from friend because they all wore black pajamas?
Well, the more things change the more the stay the same. Your cartoon hits the mark right on!
Perhaps in twenty years or so, when our mighty politicians get tired of sending men to f ight hopeless wars in hopeless places, we will discover some kind of magic bullet that will, discriminate. But until then, "semper fi" men and God be with you.
Thanks for the cartoons and your sense of humor . We need them these days.
Chrysis75
Political cartoons like these are just as distasteful as the ones published during the Nazi regime. As a jewish person never again means never again for anyone anywhere. You crossed the line this time.
Susan Horowitz
Hi Daryl,
I am a regular reader and a first time responder. This cartoon is very poignant and brilliantly illustrates the mess this leadership has gotten the U.S. into; bomb first and develop a plan later. The only problem is that a viable plan was never developed so young Americans and Iraqi Nationals are needlessly dying at an alarming rate. There is nothing racial about this cartoon. You hit the nail square on the head!
Joan M. Silverthorne, Grand Rapids, Michigan
Hey Daryl -
Couldn't have said it better myself. Now you should do one on Jimmy Carter's book....
Thanks for the email --
Steve Singer
I think this cartoon does a superb job of defining exactly what we are up against. Same cartoon, next question: Which one of these folks do you trust to control the world oil supply.
Frank G.-Texas
TO MIKE GANNON
Sweetheart, by the time you turn three, you will be able to tie your own shoes and go potty like a big boy. Then you can go out in the yard to play for a little while without Mommy. Grow up, Mike-ey. No damned body is that freakin' naive.
LMcDaniel
It is a provocative cartoon. It provokes the thinking process, and it's on target. Some people want everything to be simple. Nothing is. Please keep provoking our thought processes

Eden Eskin


Which one greeted us with flowers?

AB Campbell
Bison, KS
Even though they all look alike in your cartoon, the one common denominator among all of the groups is that they declare Islam as their guiding force.
Right on the money, Islam is the problem. And until our government understands this, there is no hope of success in Iraq.
WALT CAMPBELL
Gillette, Wy
Your answer is wrong. Correct answer : Kill them all, let God sort 'em out.
Pete Adams
I think you have been inside the mind of our dearly beloved George W. Does the CIA know of your powers?
Thanks for clearing things up for me.
Eldertwin
We've been following you for several years and you always come in on the right side!
But this latest effort is the best ever; you covered the situation with great clarity.
We read this again and again and the only conclusion we can come up with is, "What the hell are the 32% that buy into this war and wanting it to continue are thinking?"
Please! Please! Please! Keep up the good work and prayerfully there will be an awakening!
Thank You So Much.. Ray and Helen Sabbatis
Mike Gannon misses the point: they look the same to our soldiers over there in the middle of Bush's civil war. Steve Alcott
I loved it! That's exactly what makes this so difficult. You cannot tell who the enemy is. If they tried to tell the difference between a Baptist or a Presbyterian or a Catholic or any of the other "christian" groups over here, it would not be any easier and it's the same thing. Even American's can't tell the difference by looking. It's not racist!
Hadenough
Daryl,

I have never been to Iraq but I lived and worked in Saudi Arabia for 5 years.

I am very liberal in my political views and truly believe I basically unbiased. My Dad taught me to dislike individuals by their actions and not by their religion, skin color, etc.

Having said all this, I have to honestly say that in my 5 years in Saudi, I could not find one Saudi I would trust to watch my back.

First off, their religion - Islam - teaches intolerance. They have the golden rule --- except when it comes to non-Muslims. If you are not Muslim, then you are an infidel and infidels are by religion AND LAW lesser people. A Saudi could run into your car but it would be your fault because as a non-Muslim, you didn't belong there.

Secondly, their social structure prohibits questioning the authorities - religious or civil. In Saudi Arabia, books, magazines and newspapers are censored. Television is censored though I imagine satellite TV is making some inroads with uncensored news. There are no movie theaters.

Thirdly, they don't trust each other. In the Saudi Eastern province (where the oil is), Shiites make up over 85% of the population but Sunnis rule. In Aramco, the oil company, only Sunnis were in managerial positions.

I could go on but I think your cartoon points out the sheer lunacy of most Arab societies.

Wayne Gossett
You hit the nail on the head. Sometimes the truth seems to be racist.
Ralph Reichman
Shakespeare said it best "A plague on all your houses".
Albert Whiting
I thought it was great!
Lawana Fleagle
Thanks, Daryl!

Now it all makes perfect sense! I'm not at all confused anymore!
Love your work and your bitingly sarcastic humor. Keep on biting, and keep them worried and thinking (well, thinking may be a bit optimistic...)
Bonnie Bouldon
Love it. If it is considered by some as racist, so be it. Truth has no race.
Chuck Marsh
Love your cartoons.
Bob Faria
This is a great cartoon and says it all about the Washington morons that are trying to prosecute a war without knowing who the friends and enemies are. Mike Gannon's response..that "maybe if we get to know these differing people" and "Saying...they all look the same" is all very sweet and nice and if they weren't all shooting at us, it might be nice to get together over a tall cool one and sort out our differences. But the fact of the matter is that they ALL DO LOOK ALIKE and that's not recist, it's just reality
Regards, Don Stone
Daryl,

I spent a lot of time in the middle east including Iraq and Iran and United Arab Emerites and Israel
About the only think I learned is that they have been fighting each other for a little over 5000 years If they don't have a reason to fight and kill each other they invent one

Only 2 things wrong with your cartoon

One I cant read the answers on the upside down part

And two
They are all our enemies if not now then when it suits them to be and if it is to their benefit they will claim to be our friends. The president seems to think he can keep throwing troops out there and solve the problem. The fallacy is They don't want the problem solved. It is their way of life It has been since the beginning and will be when our great grandchildren are dead
Should by some miracle They actually come to some accord and we leave In a year or less They will be right back where they were before we butted in With a New "Saddam"
They raise their children to believe that it is required of them to spill their blood for Islam. They have no regard for life either their own or others. Personally I think we should get out by next Friday and let them kill each other. The only way to peace there is carpet bomb them all. Take the sand and oil Mix it up into asphalt and turn it into a parking lot. They come to our country and expect everyone here to fall over them and their beliefs

This is America And as such they can believe as they wish If they don't like what their neighbors do Go Home

Keep up the good work I love your cartoons

Pony Rein


Getting to know the various Iraqi differing groups/ religious factions available sounds like an EXCELLENT idea for Mike Gannon. May he wake up there tomorrow and thus begin to live his dream! ­ John Hemmis Sr.
How can we win a war against terrorism? It is not the enemy which no one in the media wants to identify. Terrorism is a tactic. We did not fight WW2 against sneak attacks. Why will the media not identify the enemy? The enemy is Islamofascists. They are Muslims. What is so difficult about the media identifying them?
Richard Friess
KA8KCR
Dear Cagle,
This one says it all. It is just Great.
William Rogers
I am surprised that people would claim it was racist. Regardless of whether someone thinks all Arabs or Iraqis look alike, the point is valid that most of these people do not look different based on sect or even hometown (their accents *may* give away some information on which part of Iraq they are from; their names likely will tell you if they are Sunni or Shiite; their look does not provide such clues). This very situation is what makes it a problem for the Iraqis themselves. They do not know quickly if the person on the bus is from the other sect, so they are in danger from everyone. If people do not understand that, they are at a strong risk of not understanding why this situation is so dire.

regards, Paul


I'm afraid that you missed one, just maybe we ought to nuke the whole region and let it go at that. There is NO political or military settlement. I would doubt that Soloman, in all his wisdom could solve the mess that Dubbya has created
Jim Hoover.
I would add an option "Z" to your list: Forget which flag anyone is flying,
Forget the groups each belongs to,
If they shoot first... shoot back!

America must find a better way!
Pat Cassin
a veteran that did pay attention to Viet Nam
Brilliant! The one email you posted proves that some people don't get it even if you draw them a picture. Beautiful satire. You are doing what editorial cartoonists do best. Sometimes you just make my day. --Daniel Williams
I hope you continue to provide an "alternative" view point to us all. I left the USA for Canada rather than face the Viet Nam war as a mother and tax payer. Canada does generally go along with the US, but fortunately not in Iraq. That country will likely fall apart after the US leaves, but the consequence of that seems to me to be less than the frustrating continued involvement.
Thank you for your cartoons which I enjoy on line in Edmonton, Alberta.
Mattie Charlene Dyer


JANUARY 21, 2007

Visit our latest MSNBC.com Cartoon Week in Review. That's Eric Allie's cartoon in the promo to the right.

Today the New York Times printed a correction regarding the omission of the attribution for my cartoon, mentioned and shown in my column below. They write:
Correction: Cartoons
Published: January 21, 2007
A credit on Jan. 7 for a cartoon by Daryl Cagle, about the death of newspapers, omitted the publication and syndicate for Mr. Cagle's work. His cartoons appear on MSNBC.com and are distributed by CagleCartoons.com.

I'm happy to welcome two new cartoonists from "down under" to our site. The first is New Zealand's Peter Bromhead, who re-joins us after taking some time off from cartooning.

Our second addition is my good buddy, Australian Peter Broelman, who won the most recent "Cartoonist of the Year" Stanley Award from the ACA (Australian Cartoonists' Association). Peter is also president of the ACA. That's Broelman's cartoon below.

I'm delighted to have you on board, Peter, and Peter!



JANUARY 14, 2007

I"m back, sorry for the long vacation. Be sure to see our latest MSNBC.com week in review.

THE NEW YORK TIMES AND CARTOONS

Last week The New York Times ran one of my cartoons. The cartoon showed three kids on a couch with their laptops and iPods, one says, "Check out Saddam hanging. Ouch. That's gotta hurt." The next one says, "He's so dead." The third one says, "Let's look again at Britney Spears with no underwear." The caption reads, "The death of newspapers." It is a cartoon that plays well with newspaper editors who are obsessed with the crass, unedited Internet that is destroying their business.

The Times ran my cartoon in their weekly round-up of editorial cartoons where they edit the cartoons to remove the artist's signature and attribution. Typically, the Times will print the artist's name and attribution alongside the cartoon, as with the two cartoons above mine where the artist, his newspaper and syndicate are credited. But in my case, only my name is given, no credit is given to MSNBC.com, my publication of record, which was erased from my cartoon and omitted from my attribution.

Although it is traditional for a cartoonist to sign his work and include his publication name in his signature, some newspapers object to any mention of a Web site in a cartoon, or in a syndicated column; the concern is that mentioning a Web site is like giving the cartoonist or writer a free advertisement. The Times wouldn't be concerned about their readers picking up a copy of The Columbus Dispatch, so an advertisement for another newspaper doesn't carry much value, but a mention of MSNBC.com might send readers to a serious competitor. This is ironic, given the subject matter of my cartoon. By itself, the cartoon is funny, but suggesting that the cartoon came from a Web site - particularly MSNBC.com, whose audience dwarfs the New York Times - that might just be too painful for the Times to acknowledge.

The Times calls their weekly cartoon round-up "Laugh Lines," a title that doesn't sit well with editorial cartoonists who consider themselves to be graphic columnists. Like columnists, cartoonists are sometimes funny; sometimes we want the reader to wince; sometimes we want to bring a tear to the eye. Some of the most famous cartoons are serious cartoons. We all drew the Statue of Liberty weeping after 9/11. Bill Mauldin famously drew the statue of Lincoln weeping after the assassination of President Kennedy. But don't expect to see a poignant cartoon running in The New York Times under the title "Laugh Lines." Many cartoonists decry the trivialization of our profession by editors who choose to reprint cartoons that are soft little jokes. Serious cartoons are not so popular with timid editors who want to avoid offending anyone. We call this phenomenon "Newsweekification" because of the funny, inoffensive, trivial cartoons that Newsweek chooses to run each week - just like the Times. The secret to becoming a popular editorial cartoonist is to be funny and not express an opinion.

The New York Times reprints syndicated cartoons on Sundays, but hasn't had its own editorial cartoonist since the 1950s. More and more newspapers are doing without staff cartoonists as our profession slowly dies. Top newspapers without cartoonists include the Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, USA Today and the Chicago Tribune. There are two famous quotes, attributed to "the editor of The New York Times," (although I'm not quite sure just who actually said these). The first is: "We would never have an editorial cartoonist at the Times because we would never give so much power to one man." The second quote: "We would never have an editorial cartoonist at the Times because you can't edit a cartoonist like you can a columnist." (He must have forgotten about how the Times edits the signatures and attributions of out the cartoons.)

A number of cartoonists e-mailed me this week with the same question, "Hey, Daryl, I saw your cartoon in the Times, how do I get my own cartoons in the Times?" I regret that the reality behind the big-time political cartooning business is a little disappointing. Here's how it works: dozens of cartoonists around the world e-mail their cartoons to the Times and other "pay-per-use" newspapers who accept unsolicited submissions. It is the same thing with USA Today, send it in and if they run it, they pay $50 - but the Times is a little different. Instead of just paying $50, the Times doesn't pay unless the cartoonist notices that they ran the cartoon and sends them an invoice. The Times doesn't tell the cartoonist that they ran the cartoon and if they don't receive an invoice, the Times saves the $50.

Suppose The New York Times dealt with McDonalds the same way they deal with cartoonists. The Times would say:

"Hey, McDonalds, I want you to deliver a hamburger to me every day; I may choose to eat it, and I may not. If I choose to eat the burger, I will pay you for it. If I don't eat the burger, I won't pay you. I'm not going to tell you if I eat a burger or not. If you want to get paid, you'll have to see me eating the burger and then send me a bill, and the bill must tell me when you saw me eating the burger. I understand that you'll have to watch me all the time to see if I'm eating one of your burgers, but that shouldn't be a problem, because I'm very big and very interesting, and I expect you to be watching me all the time anyway. If you're lucky, I might eat one or two of your burgers every year."

There are about one thousand aspiring cartoonists for every one who actually makes a living as a professional editorial cartoonist. I'm sure that if the "wanna-be" cartoonists would actually look inside the editorial-cartoon-burger, to see how it is made, it would give them a belly ache - a $50, New York Times-sized belly ache.

FROM THE CAGLE MAIL BAG

Hi
I'm a high school teacher at Black River Falls in Wisconsin - I teach World History and Economics and had a link to your page on my school web page - we got a new Sonicwall filter and your site was blocked - when I asked them to unblock it I was told that it was inappropriate for students - I checked with the principal and he said it was not the liberal or conservative viewpoints, but rather the ?sexual? content. Any ideas?

Kris Wrobel
High School Social Studies
Black River Falls, WI

Hi Kris,

We feature content that appears in general circulation newspapers; schools often feel that newspapers contain inappropriate content. If you wouldn't let your kids read a newspaper, you should not let them visit our site. Our complaints vary depending on what is in the news - we got lots of complaints back when the news was about Bill Clinton's cigar and Monica's dress.

I should note that the government of Iran also blocks our site, so your principal can feel reassured that he came to the same conclusion as the mullahs.

All the best,
Daryl
Cartoonist for MSNBC.com

 

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Artwork © each artist. The Professional Cartoonists Index is ©Daryl Cagle. All rights reserved. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.