Saturday, July 6, 2019

Newspaper editorial cartoons face 'existential threat'

From CBC Radio.


The editorial cartoon is facing an "existential threat" in the face of shrinking newsrooms and meme culture, according to a Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist.

"Editorial cartoons … do cause a lot of trouble,' said Nick Anderson, who draws for The Washington Post Writers Group.

He told The Current's guest host Megan Williams that with less money and power than before "to defy advertisers" and some outspoken readers, newspapers have become "a little gun-shy" to run cartoons about controversial topics.

"I think they feel like maybe editorial cartoons aren't worth all the trouble."

Last week, Canadian editorial cartoonist Michael de Adder lost his freelance contract with Brunswick News Inc. (BNI).

The termination came a day after one of de Adder's cartoons went viral online.


The cartoon depicts U.S. President Donald Trump, wearing golf gear, standing next to the bodies of Oscar Alberto Martínez Ramírez and his young daughter, Valeria, who drowned in the Rio Grande while trying to cross into Brownsville, Texas.

The image of Ramirez and his daughter, face-down in the river, was based on a devastating photo by Julia Le Duc.

BNI "vehemently denied" that the termination was related to this specific cartoon, and the decision had been made before it went viral. In a statement, the company said it was never offered the Trump cartoon for publication, which de Adder shared online from his own accounts.

The group of New Brunswick newspapers is owned by the province's Irving family, which owns companies with ties to U.S. trade, including Irving Oil and Irving Shipbuilding.

Speaking to As It Happens on Monday, de Adder said that while working for BNI, cartoons critical of Trump were routinely axed.

"One of the biggest bones of contention — the only subject, actually, that I know was taboo and I was told — was Donald Trump," he told Susan Bonner.

A year after he won the Pulitzer in 2005, Anderson worked for the Houston Chronicle until he was fired in 2017. He told Williams that like de Adder, he was never given a clear reason.

During his career, he's seen the number of editorial cartoonists in North America shrink from a couple hundred to less than two dozen.

"We are going to be gone in five or 10 years, if we don't come up with a different business model."

In April, Anderson also co-founded Counterpoint, an email newsletter that delivers editorial cartoons from across the political spectrum.


Industry competing with meme culture, says cartoonist


Veteran Canadian cartoonist Terry Mosher remembers a time when political cartooning was "well respected, and feared in a way."

"Politicians were very nervous about appearing in political cartoons," said Mosher, who has drawn for the Montreal Gazette for more than five decades under the pen name Aislin.

"[They] then pretended to like it, and [would] hang these cartoons like trophies on their wall," he told Williams.

Nowadays, many artists see the industry as competing with meme culture online.

Anderson warned that while memes can be produced and disseminated much more quickly than a hand-drawn cartoon, the public don't know where they come from.

"They're unsigned; you don't know the origin of the person that's trying to influence you," he said.

"The advantage of an editorial cartoon is it's signed work. You can see their body of work, you can get to know a person's voice."

Jean Sorensen

Political cartoonist Jen Sorensen agrees that there is a feeling of peril around the industry, but thinks the internet is also helping young cartoonists to self-publish and find audiences.

"I do think that the future of political cartoons is probably going to be a mix of formats, and you may even see more longer, graphic essay-type pieces," said Sorensen, who contributes to newspapers and online publications such as The Nib and The Nation.

When Mosher talks to young cartoonists, he warns them that newspapers are "death ships."

"What you have to do is find a platform and develop an audience … then perhaps you can monetize it after that somehow," he advised.

He remains optimistic, however, because he's seen online platforms generate engagement and discussion, similar to the editorial page of a newspaper.

"There's a great taste for this, because despite all of this talk, cartoons remain hugely popular," he said.

"I can't imagine visual humour, whether it's a static drawing or animation, disappearing."

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