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Daryl Cagle's Cartoon Web Log!
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OCTOBER 30, 2006

HARVARD CARTOON "PLAGIARISM"

Today I've been getting a bunch of phone calls from reporters doing a story about supposed plagiarism by the student cartoonist for the Harvard University newspaper, "The Harvard Crimson." In an article in the school paper and in Editor and Publisher, I'm cited as one of the cartoonists whose work was stolen, with my cartoon (below) of Kim Jong Il with his hair looking like a mushroom cloud. The other cartoons below are by Patrick Chappatte, Riber Hansson, Cam Cardow, Alexandr Zudin, Jeff Koterba, Paul Zanetti and Julius Hansen - and there are a lot more than this. I first drew my Mushroom-doo Kim three years ago.

Regular readers of our site know about Yahtzees, a term I coined to refer to times when five or more cartoonists draw the same gag at the same time. The Kim Yahtzee isn't drawn at the same time, it trickles in over the years as cartoonists independently get the same, banal, trite idea. Editors are as much to blame for this phenomenon, because they all want the same thing from cartoonists: Jay Leno style funny jokes about the news that convey no opinion at all. Newsweek magazine is an ugly culprit, reprinting opinionless gag cartoons, week after week. Editors suffer from group-think, all wanting the same thing from cartoonists, who should all fit into the same little box. Time Magazine does it too, and with all of the hundreds of cartoons to choose from every week, they often print the very same cartoons in their cartoon round-up that Newsweek does. (Time Magazine printed Cam Cardow's Mushroom Kim this month.)

When editors all want the same thing from a cartoonist, and the cartoonists are all drawing on the same topics at the same time, it is no wonder that we come up with the simple, easy, first-gag -that-comes-to-mind. That is what I see in this poor, besieged Harvard cartoonist - easy, Yahtzee gags - and that should be no surprise given that she is just a student, and her editor clearly suffers from editorial group-think. The other gags the cartoonist is accused of plagiarizing include one from Walt Handelsman (who shares my views on this issue) showing Bush saying something, and a Democratic donkey standing next to him with a sign and arrow pointing at him that says, "not." Readers of our site know that the t-shirt or sign pointing at something with a comment ("I'm with stupid") is a recurring Yahtzee theme.

TAKE THE CAGLE CHALLENGE ...

I can take any reputable cartoonist and find cartoons that are similar to his cartoons, drawn earlier by other cartoonists, that make as good a plagiarism argument as the case being made against this poor student cartoonist.

The Harvard cartoonist should not be fired. The cartoonist and her editor should be taken into the publisher's office and told to stop the group-think. The cartoonist should be instructed to emphasize topics of interest to Harvard students. The cartoonist should be instructed to draw in a square or vertical format, and encouraged to draw local cartoons, and to use more words or multiple panels, and to develop a unique style and voice. The editor should be instructed to make a unique contribution as well, by not looking to fit his contributors into the same aesthetic box that he sees in Newsweek, the Boston Globe and the Boston Herald; he should be instructed to be accepting of ideas and presentations that have strong opinions with a different and distinctive look and voice.

It is interesting that when reporters call me the first question they ask is "Are you aware of this?" then, "Are you going to pursue some action against this plagiarism?" Talk about "group-think."

If you want to see an example of what plagiarism looks like, look here at the cartoonist who was fired from the Tulsa World newspaper. And look here, at a cartoonist who was fired from a Saudi Arabian newspaper.

And instead of picking on student cartoonists, teach them.

Want to send a comment to the editor of the Harvard Crimson? Click here.


I love to see cartoonists depart from the 1 1/2 wide by 1 gag cartoon box that confines so many of us. R.J. Matson did just that with his two, wonderful, Halloween election cartoons below. R.J. deserves congratulations for thinking outside the box. Happy Halloween!

Be sure to visit our Halloween cartoon collection, Steve Sack's Haunted House and Dan Reynolds' Little Monsters.


OCTOBER 29. 2006

Check out our newest CARTOON WEEK IN REVIEW SLIDESHOW.


OCTOBER 27, 2006

Mort Kondracke has an interesting lead on his most recent column in Roll Call.


The political cartoon on my office wall shows Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld as a frazzled father trying to drive the car while kids in the front and back seats yell, "Is it Vietnam yet?"
Daryl Cagle's cartoon was delightful back in March 2003, lampooning critics of the war in Afghanistan. Now it's a mordant commentary on Iraq.

The tragic fact is that Iraq has become Vietnam -- a noble cause that has lost the support of the American people and Congress and is on the verge of ending in disaster. But this time, the consequences will be much worse.

Hmmm. How did that cartoon wind up on Kondracke's office wall?


OCTOBER 23, 2006

"THE SERGIO" AND CAPS

I went to the Comic Art Professional Society (CAPS) banquet last Suturday night where they unveiled their first annual lifetime achievement award, dubbed "The Sergio" after beloved Mad Magazine and Groo cartoonist, Sergio Aragones. That is "The Sergio" award in the photo at the right. My buddy,CAPS president Chad Frye, tells the story of its creation below.

Saturday's banquet was a "big draw" for CAPS as they honored my hero, Mad's Jack Davis, as the first recipient of "The Sergio" - then they Surprized Sergio Aragones by making him the second recipient. Even though Sergio had designed the award, he didn't know that he would also receive one, he hadn't designed himself as the character depicted in the award and the fact that the award was named for him came as a surprize. Jack was gracious and Sergio was blushing on Saturday night.

The award features Sergio, with his foot stuck in an ink bottle, holding a giant pen, standing on a computer, on top of a page of Groo.

It was a delight to spend some time with Jack, who is probably a bigger influence on my own work than any other artist. Jack is a gentleman and I'm happy to see him festooned with shiny golden awards.

Next year CAPS turns 30 years old. In 1977, cartoonist Don Rico, writer Mark Evanier, and MAD Magazine's own Sergio Aragones joined together and formed the early version of the Comic Art Professional Society in Los Angeles. Over the years this independent organization has existed for the comraderie and education of fellow professional cartoonists and writers of print media. Even today we meet monthly in Burbank, California, where we can get out of our studios and come together to talk shop and hear fellow professionals speak about their work.

Earlier this year, the CAPS board began to discuss the possibility of having our own award to give the honorees of our annual banquets. In the past we have given certificates, which evolved into a nice plaque that differed from year to year. The time had come to design and produce our own award. But where to begin? Mark Dos Santos (Secretary), Michael Aushenker (Treasurer), Bill Morrison (Vice-President) and Chad Frye (President) came to one unanimous conclusion - Sergio must be the designer of our award.

While things have changed with our organization over time, throughout all those 29 years one thing has remained consistent about CAPS - Sergio Aragones. Sergio has been a vital part of CAPS being a voice of reason to the club leadership, leading the charge as auctioneer in our annual auctions, lending advice to younger cartoonists coming in, and inspiring those of us around him to just LOVE our business. Sergio IS CAPS.

Sergio was glad to accept our invitation to design the CAPS award. Our only direction to him was that it should reflect our membership of cartoonists AND writers, and it must also reflect the Sergio whimsy. Then we waited with baited breath to see what our patriarch would come back with.

During that time, we discussed what we should call our impending new award. All good awards have a name: the Oscar, the Emmy, the Reuben, the Golden Globe, the Eisner, Miss Congeniality - you name it. We tossed around a few ideas, but the more we thought about it, the more it was obvious. This new CAPS award should be called "The Sergio".

But was that taking things too far? Would the membership like it? Would Sergio hate it? All these doubts and more creeped in, but were quickly dispelled. At a recent membership meeting, several folks suggested we call it "The Sergio". When even outsiders heard Sergio was designing the CAPS award, they asked if we were going to call it "The Sergio". With so much respect in our industry for this man, and so much respect from those of us who have the priviledge to spend time with him, we christen this new CAPS award "The Sergio" out of our love and admiration.

Sergio's design captured perfectly the ideals of CAPS. The computer represents the work of our members who are writers, while the figure represents the drawing side of things. And of course, the foot stuck in the bottle of ink is pure Sergio. It was everything we hoped for.

Once Sergio finished his final drawings for the award, we gave his art to master sculptor Ruben Procopio. Ruben worked for Disney Feature Animation for many years as a clean-up lead artist and as a sculptor of many of their maquettes. These days he works full-time as a sculptor with clients such as Electric Tiki, Disney Classics Collection, and even toy companies (see his work at www.maskedavenger.com). He graciously took on our project while in the midst of a very busy schedule and simply worked wonders.

When Ruben heard what we planned to name this award, he busied himself on creating this terrific sculpt making one slight change to what Sergio had intended. He looked up some of Sergio's work to find his self-caricatures. These served as Ruben's inspiration to make the statue look like Sergio, a change Sergio has only become aware of tonight.

We hope that you agree that this wonderful whimsical award is unique among cartoondom's awards, and we couldn't think of anything more fitting to represent CAPS. Sergio has been a leader in his field for many years. We trust that the few who will receive this award over the years will be honored to be the recipient of something that represents not only our club, but the honor, integrity, professionalism, and pure joy for cartooning that Sergio himself represents.

Thank you, Sergio.

Chad Frye, President, CAPS

The photo below shows me at the CAPS banquet with my hero, Jack Davis, and the original movie poster art that Jack did for the Woody Allen movie "Bananas."


OCTOBER 21, 2006

CAGLE RE-EMERGES

When I'm not updating the blog I get complaints from our readers. It's nice to be missed. The reason I've gone missing is the deadline for our newest book, The Best Political Cartoons of the Year, 2007 Edition - yesterday we wrapped it up and delivered it to the publisher. The book is huge with 288 pages and close to a thousand cartoons. Too huge, I think. I'm still recovering from a project that is just too big. Since then I've been taking a long overdue nap. I'll resume a more regular schedule now.

The October 20th deadline is strange for a book that purports to be the best cartoons of the year 2006; the book is really the best cartoons of the fiscal year 2006, from the end of October through the next end of October. The strange deadline is so that we can get the book into stores early in December for the Christmas season when people are thinking about end of year events. There is a competing book called The Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year ("BECY") that has an October 2nd deadline for artists to submit their work, but arrives in bookstores the following March - I understand that - knocking this thing out quickly by October 20th is an ordeal, it would be nice to have four more months to work on it.

We get some angry complaints from cartoonists who are not featured in the book who tell me the book is not really the "Best Cartoons of the Year" if it doesn't contain their cartoons. Cartoonists like to have their cartoons called "the best," and if their cartoons are not among "the best," that makes them angry. I suppose I would get fewer complaints if I called the book "The Random Selections of Political Cartoons of theYear"- the word "best" in the title is enough to make some cartoonists seethe.

Cartoonists who are featured in the book also complain about the choices of cartoons in the book. The first complaint is "Daryl, how come you have so many of your own cartoons in the book." That's a silly question, I'm the editor and I have a big ego. As President Bush would say, "I'm the decider." Cartoonists also complain that another cartoonist's work is bigger than theirs, or they say, "why did you choose THAT cartoon when I drew the same thing first and it was so much better." Some cartoonists complain that they are shorted with only one or two cartoons in the book.

Yet another complaint I hear is that the selection of cartoons for the book are not "important" enough - meaning that the book should be all Bush bashing and Iraq, without much mention of Mel Gibson, Brokeback Mountain, Katie Couric or Spinach. If we let cartoonists submit their work for the book we would have very different cartoons, as the cartoonists would emphasize more "serious" subjects. I want the book to be a cartoon history book that accurately reflects the topics that cartoonists were really drawing about during the year, in the correct proportions to what they really drew. This year readers have grown tired of Iraq and the cartoonists were drawing fewer Iraq cartoons; our Iraq chapters are smaller than in the past - however we have more cartoons about Hezbollah, the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and Hamas' election victory, so there is plenty of war in the book. The cartoonists will complain that our book has Spinach cartoons - even though they were the ones drawing all those Popeye cartoons.

Cartooning is a negative art form. I think it is natural for cartoonists to complain.

DUELING "BEST CARTOONS OF THE YEAR" BOOKS

Cartoonists have taken to calling our book "BPCY" in contrast to a competing book called "Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year" or "BECY." There's an interesting contrast between our BPCY book and the BECY book (which can usually be seen on the Barnes & Noble or Borders bookshelf next to ours); the competing BECY book sends out a call for entries and selects from the cartoons the cartoonists choose to submit, making for a more "serious" selection of cartoons, with less emphasis on celebrities and light subjects. Cartoonists also complain of a conservative bias in the BECY book, which was evident to me a couple of years ago when we had a huge chapter on the Abu Ghraib prison scandal and it was difficult to find an Abu Ghraib cartoon in the BECY book. The BECY book is edited by retired, conservative, Alabama cartoonist Charles Brooks.

We will likely have about 80 more pages than the BECY book this year (at 288 pages) and probably twice as many cartoons packed into those pages. Another difference between BECY and our BPCY is that the competing BECY book is much more inclusive of aspiring, part-time and semi-pro cartoonists and it is a nice place for those cartoonists to get their work seen on a level playing field with the top pros who participate in their book. The inclusion of aspiring cartoonists in the BECY book leads to many complaints from established cartoonists who don't like seeing their cartoons displayed alongside the work of the semi-pros. Our book is limited to the professional cartoonists who participate on our site; we don't include the work of aspiring cartoonists. I get a lot of complaints from aspiring cartoonists who emphasize that their cartoons are in the BECY book and should, therefore, also be in ours.

The question often comes up, "If these are the best cartoons of the year 2006, why will both of these books say '2007' in their titles?" I'd prefer that the title would say "2006" but the problem is that our book will be sitting on the shelves throughout 2007, next to the competing BECY book with 2007 in it's title. If our book was labeled as "2006" it would look like it was a year older. Maybe we'll have some competitive "title year" inflation and start titling the books for two years out, or three years out. Oh, the confusion!

Even though we finished our "BPCY" book only yesterday, the book has been offered for sale on Amazon.com for a couple of months already. (Oh! The marvels of technology!) Our BPCY book will also be available for sale this year as an e-book in pdf format for a reduced price. It looks like both annuals will be here to stay and will make a handsome yearly addition to any cartoon fan or news wonk's library! Buy ours now for delivery before Christmas, then buy the other book next Spring (here's a link to their last BECY book) and let me know what you think of the dueling "Best Cartoons of the Year" books. We'll list all of your complaints here.


OCTOBER 6, 2006

Our new MSNBC.com Political Cartoon Week in Review Slideshow is up!

I got this note from conservative cartoonist, Scott Stantis:

Daryl,

You know me to be a cradle Republican. A Reagan conservative. My creditentials regarding my politics are well known to you and your readers through my cartoons.

And as such this Foley fiasco frosts my shorts towards the GOP for three glaring reasons:

1) Foley is a scumbag. Yes, 16 is a child. And the republicans yapping dogs who point to age of consent or some such are condoning pedophilia AND sexual harassment.

2) By pointing to democrats like Mel Reynolds or Gerry Stubbs, (even Bill Clinton), as even worse is hypocritical in the extreme. We wailed against them and there actions as wrong. They were. So were Foley's. And for those who say Republicans at least have the good graces to resign while Democrats keep their jobs I say, point not taken. Republicans resign after they get caught. If they stand as the party of moral values they had better practice what they preach.

3) The cover-up by the Republican House Leadership. But then, we shouldn't be surprised that they are acting like the House of Representatives Country Club. They have gotten fat and corrupted by the power as the majority. They have cut taxes but continue to spend like drunken Democrats. They ceased being republicans a long time ago.

Yes, there are far more important issues confronting our country. And, yes, the democrats finger prints are all over this. But in the end, I am deeply, deeply disappointed by the conservative blogs, cartoonists and talking heads who are trying to spin unspinable behavior.

Be well,

Scott Stantis


OCTOBER 5, 2006

Here's a note from Jimmy Margulies:

Daryl,

We had sort of a similar discussion at my paper yesterday. Technically, 16 is the age of consent, but 16 is still a minor in most people's eyes. Beyond that, this is similar to what is called sexual harrassment, in that there is a grossly unequal balance of power between a member of Congress and a teenager with a temporary appointment as a page. The more ordinary imbalance, of say, a boss and his or her employee is greatly magnified by both the great age difference, and the stature that this was member of Congress.

Someone at my paper pointed out that there are certain terms for people who are interested in teens, as opposed to younger kids. But certainly pedophile is an accurate description in this case.

Best,
Jimmy

And a note from our mailbag that is typical of the response we're getting now:

Democrats disgust me more than any one Republican could. How about some Mel Reynolds or Gerry Stubbs-related rhetoric in your cartoons?.or perhaps some discussion on the 3 standing ovations given to the Democrat by Democrats after his sexual misconduct was aired. Seems to me that Democrats were doing this sort of thing well before Republicans were. Great examples for people to follow.

Am I wrong? Or...perhaps it's all George Bush's fault...I forgot to mention that possibility. That's right, he made Foley do it! You Libs guys crack me up.

Democratic morality is the truest oxymoron.

If you respond, try to keep it to the topic at hand, and not just any old peeve you can dredge up from your democratic ass-licking media vaults.

Jeff Freeman

Most of our readers will remember how our site came into being, through the Clinton/Lewinsky scandal, with more than a thousand pages containing more than four thousand lurid cartoons bashing President Clinton for years. Our cartoons bashing Democrats have recently featured crooked congressman William Jefferson (who kept his bribe money in his freezer), lots of cartoons bashing Hillary Clinton and her upcoming run for president, and a collection I enjoyed on crazy congresswoman, Cynthia McKinney.

More of you have written to say that Foley is not a "pedophile" but is really an "ephobephile," citing articles today in the Los Angeles Times and Slate. Come on people.

It's not Foley's fault because he's an alchoholic, and he was abused by a priest, and it was all talk - no action, and the Republican leadership never really saw the worst e-mails, and they weren't even e-mails, they were instant messages, and the age of consent in Washington DC is sixteen so he could have had sex with the boys if they wanted to anyway, and the sun was in his eyes.

And do you still read Slate? Really?


Cartoon by Mike Lester of the Rome News-Tribune.


OCTOBER 4, 2006

Pedophile Congressman?

Jeez, it didn't take long for our readers to start complaining about my cartoon. Yes, disgraced former Republican congressman Mark Foley is a "pedophile." The Merriam Webster and American Heritage dictionaries define "pedophile" as: "an adult who is sexually attracted to children."

Some of you point out that the youngest page that Foley is accused of e-mailing is sixteen years old, and that "the age of consent" is sixteen in Washington, D.C. and that a sixteen year old is "not a child." I call sixteen year olds "kids" - I don't know about "the age of consent," but the crime Foley may be charged with is "soliciting sex with a minor" which applies to sixteen year old kids.

It sounds like there are a lot of angry, defensive, conservative readers out there who want to parse words about this creepy "pedophile congressman."


OCTOBER 2, 2006

Another rare opportunity to see the reclusive Daryl

If you live in the Seattle area, come and see me! I'll be giving the keynote speech at the Washington State Council for the Social Studies, a one day state teachers convention in Edmonds, Washington. This event will be free and open to the public. I'll show cartoons, share anecdotes and do sketches in books. Free - what a deal!

My talk will be on Saturday, October 14th at 2:00pm, in the "Great Hall" at Edmonds-Woodway High School, 7600 212th Street SW, Edmonds, WA 28026. The title of my lecture is, "Political Cartoons at the Center of the Storm ­ and Weathering the Storm in Your Classroom." I'll talk about cartoon controversies and show lots of shocking cartoons. For more information, click here!


SEPTEMBER 29, 2006

Wabash College

I just got back from a visit to Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Indiana, where I was invited to visit and lecture about editorial cartoons. Dr. David Hadley, who heads up the Wabash Political Science department teaches a class on editorial cartoons; I was impressed with his curriculum and his students. Of-course, I'd love to see more colleges take our art form as seriously as they do at Wabash. There are very few courses on political cartoons in American Universities. Cartoons are taken much more seriously around the world than they are here at home - ironic, I think, since the modern political cartoon grew up in America. Our art is much louder is much more memorable and has more impact than the words that surround our cartoons on the editorial pages, yet colleges seem to see the words without seeing the pictures.

Kudos to Dr. Hadley for breaking away from the academic herd to focus on our art form. And thanks to everyone at Wabash College for their warm welcome and hospitality.

Ugly Orphan Works Bill on Hold

I just got the update below from the Illustrators Partnership about the ugly "Orphan Works Bill" that threatens to gut the copyright law, hurting the little cartoonist to the advantage of internet giants who want an easy procedure to steal our work.

GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS

First the good news:

The Copyright Modernization Act (aka Orphan Works Act) appears to be dead for this year. For the third time in as many weeks the bill failed to make it out of mark-up today, and in two days Congress adjourns for this session.

Now the bad news:

Lamar Smith seems committed to this awful bill and has promised to bring it back next year.

And a caveat:

Congress returns after elections for a "lame-duck" session, so the bill could still be attached to some other unrelated bill and passed into law without discussion. Don't breathe too easily until this Congress is adjourned for good.

Although there's little reason to break out the champagne over this development, the illustration community should take great satisfaction from the knowledge that your unprecedented efforts have brought sufficient scrutiny to this bill to have stalled it so far. Remember that in March, the bill's sponsors warned us that it would be law by now and that any group that opposed it would be "ignored" and "left behind." It hasn't worked out that way.

Because of your efforts ­ and those of our allies, the photographers, textile designers, greeting card manufacturers and others ­ Orphan Works legislation has now been exposed as a Trojan Horse for those who want to see a radical change in copyright law. We need to stay vigilant and we must expect that when the bill comes back (in whatever form) its sponsors will be prepared for principled opposition. They'll plan their strategy accordingly, and we should be ready to renew our campaign all over again.

In the meantime, thanks to all of you for a united effort ­ you did a fantastic job. We'll pass along more information when we learn more.

- Brad Holland and Cynthia Turner,
- for the Board of the Illustrators' Partnership


SEPTEMBER 26, 2006


Cartoon by Mike Lester of the Rome News-Tribune.

Here's another column by our columnist, Dick Morris, about Bill Clinton's recent interview on Fox News. E-mail Dick at: dmredding@aol.com

The Real Clinton Emerges
By Dick Morris

From behind the benign façade and the tranquilizing smile, the real Bill Clinton emerged Sunday during Chris Wallace's interview on Fox News Channel. There he was on live television, the man those who have worked for him have come to know - the angry, sarcastic, snarling, self-righteous, bombastic bully, roused to a fever pitch. The truer the accusation, the greater the feigned indignation. Clinton jabbed his finger in Wallace's face, poking his knee, and invading the commentator's space.

But beyond noting the ex-president's non-presidential style, it is important to answer his distortions and misrepresentations. His self-justifications constitute a mangling of the truth which only someone who once quibbled about what the "definition of 'is' is" could perform.

Clinton told Wallace, "There is not a living soul in the world who thought that Osama bin Laden had anything to do with Black Hawk Down." Nobody said there was. The point of citing Somalia in the run up to 9-11 is that bin Laden told Fortune Magazine in a 1999 interview that the precipitous American pullout after Black Hawk Down convinced him that Americans would not stand up to armed resistance.

Clinton said conservatives "were all trying to get me to withdraw from Somalia in 1993 the next day" after the attack which killed American soldiers. But the real question was whether Clinton would honor the military's request to be allowed to stay and avenge the attack, a request he denied. The debate was not between immediate withdrawal and a six-month delay. (Then-first lady, now-Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) favored the first option, by the way). The fight was over whether to attack or pull out eventually without any major offensive operations.

The president told Wallace, "I authorized the CIA to get groups together to try to kill bin Laden." But actually, the 9-11 Commission was clear that the plan to kidnap Osama was derailed by Sandy Berger and George Tenet because Clinton had not yet made a finding authorizing his assassination. They were fearful that Osama would die in the kidnapping and the U.S. would be blamed for using assassination as an instrument of policy.

Clinton claims "the CIA and the FBI refused to certify that bin Laden was responsible [for the Cole bombing] while I was there." But he could replace or direct his employees as he felt. His helplessness was, as usual, self-imposed.

Why didn't the CIA and FBI realize the extent of bin Laden's involvement in terrorism? Because Clinton never took the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center sufficiently seriously. He never visited the site and his only public comment was to caution against "over-reaction." In his pre-9/11 memoirs, George Stephanopoulos confirms that he and others on the staff saw it as a "failed bombing" and noted that it was far from topic A at the White House. Rather than the full-court press that the first terror attack on American soil deserved, Clinton let the investigation be handled by the FBI on location in New York without making it the national emergency it actually was.

In my frequent phone and personal conversations with both Clintons in 1993, there was never a mention, not one, of the World Trade Center attack. It was never a subject of presidential focus.

Failure to grasp the import of the 1993 attack led to a delay in fingering bin Laden and understanding his danger. This, in turn, led to our failure to seize him when Sudan evicted him and also to our failure to carry through with the plot to kidnap him. And, it was responsible for the failure to "certify" him as the culprit until very late in the Clinton administration.

The former president says, "I worked hard to try to kill him." If so, why did he notify Pakistan of our cruise-missile strike in time for them to warn Osama and allow him to escape? Why did he refuse to allow us to fire cruise missiles to kill bin Laden when we had the best chance, by far, in 1999? The answer to the first question - incompetence; to the second - he was paralyzed by fear of civilian casualties and by accusations that he was wagging the dog. The 9/11 Commission report also attributes the 1999 failure to the fear that we would be labeled trigger-happy having just bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade by mistake.

President Clinton assumes that criticism of his failure to kill bin Laden is a "nice little conservative hit job on me." But he has it backwards. It is not because people are right-wingers that they criticize him over the failure to prevent 9/11. It was his failure to catch bin Laden that drove them to the right wing.

The ex-president is fully justified in laying eight months of the blame for the failure to kill or catch bin Laden at the doorstep of George W. Bush. But he should candidly acknowledge that eight years of blame fall on him.

One also has to wonder when the volcanic rage beneath the surface of this would-be statesman will cool. When will the chip on his shoulder finally disappear? When will he feel sufficiently secure in his own legacy and his own skin not to boil over repeatedly in private and occasionally even in public?

Dick Morris was an adviser to Bill Clinton for 20 years. Look for Dick's new book "Condi vs. Hillary" available now.


SEPTEMBER 21, 2006

Our newest MSNBC Cartoon Week in Review Slideshow is up!


SEPTEMBER 20, 2006

Paul Conrad on PBS

PBS's Independent Lens show will feature an episode on the career of legendary Los Angeles Times cartoonist, Paul Conrad on or around November 7th, check your local listing for the time of the program in your area. Conrad is a regular contributor to our site, see an archive of his cartoons from recent years here. Conrad is best known for his hard hitting cartoons bashing President Nixon during the Watergate years and for winning three Pulitzer Prizes.

Here are two interesting Quicktime clips from the show:

This first clip shows Conrad talking about how he felt to be included on Nixon's "enemies list."

This second clip addresses corporate cutbacks at newspapers and the poor job situation for cartoonists, including Conrad losing his job at the Los Angeles Times.


SEPTEMBER 15, 2006

Our new MSNBC.com Cartoon Week in Review Slideshow is up!


SEPTEMBER 14, 2006

See Cagle in Indiana

I don't get out much but I'll be heading to Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Indiana on Thursday, September 28th at 8:00pm to give a talk about political cartoons. Read more about it on the Wabash College web site. The public is welcome to attend the free event at Wabash's Lovell Lecture Room in Baxter Hall.

Orphan Works Update: Mark-up Postponed

The Copyright Modernization Act of 2006 was pulled from the schedule for mark-up yesterday. House Judiciary IP Subcommittee Chairman Lamar Smith said that representatives of the various interests were meeting with him and Ranking Member Berman, or their senior staff, for further discussion. (update coutesy of the Illustrators Partnership)

Chinese Editorial Cartoonist is Suspended for Drawing Chinese President Hu Crying

According to a report from Reuters, Kuang Biao, the cartoonist for the Guangzhou-based tabloid News-Express was suspended for drawing a teary-eyed President Hu replying to a letter from the daughter of a university professor who died from overwork at age 48. In countries where there is little or no press freedon, it is typical that cartoonists are punished for depicting their nation's leaders - this is the unwritten rule in China. The cartoonist was suspended in a pre-emptive move to protect him from further punishment from the central propaganda authorities, the Post said. Kuang is being allowed to draw for other publications under a pseudonym.


SEPTEMBER 12, 2006

Bad Copyright News

I just received the disturbing alert below, from the Illustrators Partnership, a trade organization for commercial artists that is advising cartoonists on the progress of the Orphan Works Act through congress.

Orphan Works Go Ballistic

In our Senate testimony on Orphan Works, we warned that "the Orphan Works Act is not an Orphan Works Act at all but a radically new copyright law." Today comes the confirmation. We've just been informed that Congress has drafted a new bill, tentatively called "The Copyright Modernization Act of 2006." It's scheduled for mark-up, perhaps as early as Wednesday.

At more than 100 pages, we haven't had time to completely review it, but it appears to embody all the bad provisions of the Orphan Works Act into a comprehensive overhaul of U.S. Copyright Law. Judging by its length, it's not likely that congressmen whipped this up as an afterthought during their August recess. Yet, if it's been in the works, why the surprise? And why the stealth?

The speed and secrecy with which certain interests want copyright law rewritten raise questions. We'll try to learn more about this and report what we learn.

- Brad Holland and Cynthia Turner,
for the Board of the Illustrators' Partnership

The Los Angeles Times today reports that a newspaper in Iran was closed because it ran a cartoon that lampooned Iranian nuclear negotiations. According to the Times: In a letter to the paper's managing director, the Press Supervisory Board ordered the shutdown "for publishing articles insulting to religious, political and national figures, and fomenting discord." Ouch.

Nik Kowsar tells me that Mana Neyestani has been out of jail on bail for a couple of weeks and his time out of jail may be extended. The Persian cartoonists visited him and posted photos on the web. Nik notes that Mana lost a lot of weight in prison and is looking gaunt. Mana is the cartoonist who was jailed for drawing a cockroach that insulted an Iranian minority group; his case was covered earlier in our blog.


SEPTEMBER 9, 2006

Visit this week's MSNBC Week in Review slideshow!

Felix Grabowski, who manages the Newspapers In Education (NIE) program with the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists (AAEC) sent me this note:

Explore Constitutional issues through Political Cartoons and get a free book for you, a student and your school library! Check it out at http://nieonline.com/aaec/cftc.cfm

In May 2005, Congress enacted a law stating that "Each educational institution that receives Federal funds for a fiscal year shall hold an educational program on the United States Constitution." This year Constitution Day is Sept. 18.

To help schools comply with that federal requirement we've produced a program that encourages teachers to use political cartoons as a resource to discuss and explore constitutional issues.

The first 150 teachers who share with us their experience in using political cartoons in their classrooms as part of this project will receive three free copies of the book "May it Amuse The Court." One copy for the teacher, one copy for a student who excels at the exercise and one copy for the school library.
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Regards,

Felix

My buddy TAB lays claim to drawing the first Christmas cartoon this year. I think he wins (below).


SEPTEMBER 1, 2006

Our new MSNBC week in review slideshow is up!

CLICK HERE TO GO TO THE JULY/AUGUST 2006, CAGLE WEB LOG


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