Stantis: Animated cartoons shouldn’t be part of Pulitzer consideration
Skip to commentsLast month I raised questions on how animation should be weighed in the judging for a Pulitzer Prize. The Birmingham News editorial cartoonist Scott Stantis has written a column opining that animated cartoons shouldn’t even been in allowed into competition. From Editor and Publisher, here are excerpts of his column:
“We were led to believe that this is an award for the newspaper industry. Unless it’s broken down and printed on every page so you can view it as a flipbook, it’s hard to imagine how an animated cartoon qualifies.”
“What makes an editorial cartoon great, what makes it the thing readers turn to first on the editorial page is the unique ability of a well-conceived and well-executed cartoon to cut through the spin. To slash through the deliberate fog that politicians create and get to the hard and often uncomfortable nub of an issue. They may take a comic turn but in their black hearts they are not ‘zany.’ They’re savage. … Zany is not what an editorial cartoonist aspires to, yet many in the publishing business increasingly expect it.”
“What’s next? ‘The Family Guy’ gets a Pulitzer? ‘The Simpsons’? ‘American Dad’? The Jib-Jab guys? They’re animated, have political content, and are posted online. According to the new rules, they’re all eligible. So don’t be surprised some day if you see Scooby-Doo accepting the highest honor in journalism. Now that would be zany.”
Danny Burleson
Rich
Danny Burleson
DT