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A Short List of Quick Hits

Gary Varvel in the Public Square Gary Varvel is the guest on this weekend’s Story in the Public Square. Editorial cartoonists use illustration to offer a different perspective on the news and in doing so they challenge us to think in new ways. Gary Varvel brings a conservative perspective to his cartoons for the IndyStar.Story […]

Not Comics: Newspaper Prints Embarrassing Typo in Political Ad

The Kansas City Star is reporting on the power of good copy editors in today’s (August 5th) edition.From the story:A word in a 10-paragraph statement of the full-page ad supporting Samons was supposed to say “assets,” the newspaper’s publisher wrote in a public Facebook post Saturday morning.Instead, Samons’ ad contained this sentence: “I believe in taking care […]

Comic Strip of the Day: Collectible Consciousness

Bado has coverage on his blog of an interesting auction, in which the only known copy, outside the Library of Congress, of the newspaper in which Ben Franklin’s original “Join, or Die” cartoon appeared was auctioned off for the minimum bid of $40,000, which went to $50,000 with the buyer’s premium.“Interesting,” in part because he includes […]

Quick Hits and Short Shrifts

AwardsArt Spiegelman, on August 12, will be the recipient of the MacDowell Medal. Wikipedia: The Edward MacDowell Medal is an award which has been given since 1960 to one person annually who has made an outstanding contribution to American culture and the arts. It is given by The MacDowell Colony, the first artist residency program […]

Steve Conley Blows Pasts Goal for ‘The Middle Age’ Graphic Novel Volume One

Multiple-award nominee cartoonist Steve Conley is raising funds over at Kickstarter for his beautifully illustrated “The Middle Age.” With a few weeks left, Steve has already greatly exceeded his $5,000 goal.From the Kickstarter page:Sir Quimp of Grawlix is an older knight who is stuck with a sarcastic, cursed sword and is on an against-all-odds quest to rescue his […]

Comic Strip of the Day: Futility

Matt Wuerker introduces our theme for the day, which is futility.The economy has grown four percent and, for all the hoo-hah, you’d think we’d developed a car that runs on plastic straws.It’s a very good number. It’s the best we’ve done in nearly four years, which is to say, we did it under Obama, too, […]

Walt Wallet and the Old Comics Home

Walt Wallet returned to the Old Comics Home today in an impressive panel by Jim Scancarelli.Many cartoonists are lovers of the classic comic strips and occasionally pay homage to them in their own comic strips. Mark Tatulli’s Lio, Stephan Pastis’ Pearls Before Swine, Mike Curtis and Joe Staton’s Dick Tracy, Bill Griffith’s Zippy, and Patrick […]

A Q&A with NCS Foundation President Steve McGarry on the New ‘NCS Fest’

The National Cartoonists Society (NCS) recently announced a change in format for their Reubens’ Awards weekend from a closed membership-only event to an open-to-the-public European-style comics fest. The Daily Cartoonist interviewed former NCS President and current NCS Foundation President Steve McGarry on the updated event.TDC: This is a big change from the Reubens weekend we’ve […]

Comic Strip of the Day: Friday Funnies

(A non-political look at the week just passed.)The few days I spent in Denver last month saved my sanity but left me homesick for the Front Range. People joke about “it’s a dry heat,” but it was ten degrees warmer there than it has been here in New Hampshire and I was far more comfortable.The […]

No More Sunday Funnies for Danville Readers

Joining a growing list of newspapers that have forsaken the idea that the Sunday Comics Section is a circulation builder, the Danville, Kentucky Advocate Messenger will soon drop the Sunday section.Beginning Aug. 20, The Advocate-Messenger will change print publication days to Tuesday through Saturday, no longer producing a printed edition on Mondays. The move to […]

Comic Strip of the Day: Happy Juxtaposition Day!

(Ann Telnaes)(L’il Donnie)Jeff Sessions is a busy, busy man, and it’s little wonder that he hasn’t time to cater to every one of Dear Leader’s needs.Telnaes attributes it to his natural tendency to stick his nose into other people’s private affairs, while Norton gets an additional laugh by making it all a bit of confusion […]

When a Cartoonist Goes Blind

A political cartoonist’s career began at The Daily Iowan and launched him into publishing in such outlets as The Washington Post and USA Today. Now, he faces blindness. Joe Sharpnack’s first “Campus Zero,” ran in The Daily Iowan on Nov. 3, 1986. (Daily Iowan Archives)Joe Sharpnack headed to The Daily Iowan with a lifetime of […]

Quick Hits – Ed-Op Cartoons

Jim Carrey’s Anti-Trump CartoonsSince 2016, Carrey has created more than a hundred cartoons protesting the Trump Administration, a pastime that borders on the obsessive. “I fight him to the end,” he said recently, citing the Bhagavad Gita.New Yorker contributor Charles Bethea sits down with Jim Carrey about his spare time hobby of editorial cartooning for […]

Comic Strip of the Day: Reports from the Handcart

Mike Luckovich on a topic nobody cares about anymore. As was noted here in a recent Candorville, media attention has largely moved on from separated families despite the problem not having been solved.But about seven hundred kids are now orphaned by the incompetent cruelty of a policy that separated families and then lost track of […]

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