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City Paper Covers 20 Years of Stegelin

Cartoonist Steve Stegelin is a snarky Charleston iconoclast who makes us laugh out loud, cringe and nod at political truths. For 20 years, he’s been Charleston City Paper’s resident cartoonist, crafting award-winning drawings that got better year after year. His original gritty style morphed into colorful weekly panels on important issues that sometimes skewer, sometimes […]

More Cartoonists in the News

Pat Moriarty, Hugh Kilpatrick III, Charlie Hall, Quino and Malfalda, Anton van Dalen (obit), and Mary Wings (obit). Cartoonist Pat Moriarty Goes Nuclear with Billboard You might have seen the disconcerting, colorful billboard while driving down 6th Avenue in Tacoma. The cartoon illustration shows what looks like a scared kid with an ice-cream cone standing […]

CSotD: Weekend Wrap-up

The answer is a lot easier than Walt Handelsman expected it to be. As noted here yesterday, the stock market is largely driven by a combination of rumors and panic, as Kal Kallaugher noted in the wake of the October 1987 crash: The good news is that Wall Street followed its worst day in two […]

Eye on Cartoonists in the News

Drew Friedman, Gary Varvel, KC Green, Karl Christian Krumpholz, Harvey J. Kaye and Matt Strackbein The Faces of Caricature Humans love to “make faces.” As children we learn that sad faces produce sympathy, angry faces produce fear, kind faces produce trust, and funny faces produce laughs. This quality is central to Friedman’s brand of representation, […]

Lalo Alcaraz Joins CALÓ News as Editoonist

Cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz has announced he has joined the CALÓ News team: I have a new job as staff editorial cartoonist for CALÓ News LA, drawing local editorial cartoons about LA & Southern California & the SouthWest and wherever else me da la gana [I feel like]. Please follow on IG @calonewsLA & yours truly […]

CSotD: Campaigns and Complaints

David Cohen comments on Louisiana’s “police buffer law,” which went into effect this month and prohibits reporters or others at the scene of an incident being within 25 feet of an officer who has ordered them back. This seems like a solution in search of a problem, unless the problem you’re attempting to solve is […]

Pinheads Paraphrasing Pulps

“He looked about as inconspicuous as a tarantula on a slice of angel food.” – Raymond Chandler, Farewell My Lovely “He snorted and hit me in the solar plexus. I bent over and took hold of the room with both hands and spun it. When I had it nicely spinning I gave it a full […]

Wayback Whensday: Rick O’Shay & Hipshot

David Hofstedt for Cowboys & Indians remembers Rick O’Shay and Stan Lynde. The year Rick O’Shay debuted there were more than 25 westerns on television. This was not a coincidence. “While a few of these series were very good, many were not really westerns at all,” Lynde wrote in his book Rick O’Shay, Hipshot, and […]

It’s the Great Corn Maze, Charlie Brown

Peanuts and Halloween have become inextricably linked by way of The Great Pumpkin. Now… Visitors to corn mazes across the country are finding a familiar and joyous figure in the winding labyrinth of tall stalks. Snoopy. More than 80 farms in the U.S. and Canada have teamed up with Peanuts Worldwide to create “Peanuts”-themed mazes […]

CSotD: Hello, Walz!

Dave Whamond leads off today because he is one of the few cartoonists who made the name of the Democrats’ (purported) VP candidate into a pun that (A) works and (B) is politically relevant and (C) shows Whamond knows how the name is pronounced. I don’t think Trump paraphrases Reagan very often, but Whamond has […]

Strip Mining the Funny Pages

Dick Tracy, Rubes, Blondie, James Bond, Gil Thorp, Tarzan, plus Tom Toro, Laura Eggleston retires, and more. Dick Tracy begins a new story with Eric Costello continuing as “guest writer.” (Some commenters have suggested that Uncle Duke from Doonesbury is showing up here.) I know Mike Curtis has had some health problems over the years […]

CSotD: Some Obvious Pun About a Bear

Nick Anderson (Tribune) gently transitions us from two days of comedy to a day of politics. It’s appropriate, because RFK Jr, as it happens, seems to be a 2:1 mix of comedy and politics, in the same way that a (real) martini is a 2:1 mix of gin and vermouth, except that a lot of […]

A Classic’s Centennial: Little Orphan Annie

One hundred years ago in the pages of The New York Daily News … The world, or New York anyway, was introduced to the spunky Little Orphan Annie by Harold Gray. Not too far in the future Annie would meet “Daddy” Warbucks and, off and on, be a part of his household. Within a month […]

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