Editorial cartooning Newspaper industry

The Last (Advance) Editoonist

The Cleveland Plain Dealer has announced that they will not replace staff editorial cartoonist Jeff Darcy.

From Plain Dealer editor Chris Quinn:

Our longtime political cartoonist Jeff Darcy retired Sunday after a decades-long career in which he produced thousands of biting and funny cartoons, and I tell you that no one on this staff was more of a lightning rod for reader comments.

Alas, Jeff’s retirement is the end of an era. We will no longer have a political cartoonist in the newsroom. I’m converting his position to something I’m not yet ready to discuss but which is more focused on our evolving needs.

Jeff Darcy, Cleveland Plain Dealer

With all we are doing and hope to do – to remain a thriving and successful newsroom — we constantly re-assess our priorities. A political cartoonist in a newsroom the size of ours no longer makes the priority list, as much as that distresses some readers – and cartoonists. I know from previous cartoon decisions that cartoonists are a vocal lot, so I expect this column will bring heavy criticism from them on social media.

We will continue to carry political cartoons from our wire service subscriptions, which covers national issues. What we lose is cartoons about local issues, which gave our platforms a dimension that is increasingly rare in U.S. regional news outlets.

Quinn closes with:

Ultimately, we must stay focused on our mission: producing high-quality, sustainable journalism.

From the gist of the editorial it will be ai-generated/-prompted journalism.

As Advance Publications joins Gannett, McClatchy, Alden, etc. this leaves Lee Enterprises as the last major media group employing staff editorial cartoonists (Adam Zyglis and Phil Hands). There are still a few independent newspapers that have editoonists on staff.

feature image by Jeff Darcy of The Cleveland Plain Dealer

Hat tip

K. White

Previous Post
CSotD: Winners and Losers
Next Post
Cartoonist Carousel

Comments 7

  1. Converting Jeff Darcy’s position to something the editor cannot discuss… hmm, what might that be?

    Corporate memo stenographer?
    Subscription cancellation manager?
    Last one out please turn off the light engineer?

    1. That really stood out brightly to me, too.

  2. Does Mike Thompson count for anything? He said he was planning to do freelance work for USA Today/The Detroit Free Press, but I don’t recall if he’s ever followed through with that.

  3. “Our local cartoonist by far gains the most attention and response from our readers of anyone on our staff, but making people want to read the paper and interact with us is no longer a priority, so, much as it will upset them, our readers need to recognize that we don’t care what they want or what they think.”

  4. “emerging market optimizing editor” i believe was one of the new positions gannett came up with for the “musical chairs” layoff the had in ’14

  5. Excuse me, not to be rude, but one of Advance’s flagship papers still has Drew Sheneman. The Star Ledger which covers all of NJ. No longer print, but still very much alive. I don’t know why, because they did away with their Washington DC bureau a few years ago. But that’s the economics of the industry now. At least they have kept Drew on, and given him a space for a column, in addition to his editorial cartoon.

    1. I’m thinking Drew is more a contract cartoonist rather than a staff cartoonist. His Star Ledger page https://www.nj.com/staff/ddshenem/ (which does have ‘staff’ in the url) has a single weekly (Sunday) cartoon rather than multiple cartoons a week as his syndicated offering does https://www.gocomics.com/drewsheneman/2025/09/16
      which makes me suspicious of a staff position there.
      Even the ‘about’ page at Drew’s Cartoon Cavalcade Substack doesn’t list him as a staff cartoonist at The Star Ledger. https://drewsheneman.substack.com/

Comments are closed.

Search

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get a daily recap of the news posted each day.