Showing posts with label Journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalism. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Norwegian Daily Faces Backlash Over Modi Cartoon

From News 18.


Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten faced massive backlash after it published a racist cartoon depicting Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a snake charmer with a fuel-station filling pipe as the snake. 

The image was used for an opinion article titled “A sneaky and slightly annoying man".

Monday, May 4, 2026

On the Line

Anthony Feinstein in The Globe & Mail.


Strongmen have an extraordinarily thin skin when it comes to laughing at themselves.

It is a striking that these men with enormous power, vast armies, lethal weapons, and apparently limitless self-confidence fear the simple cartoon. 

Is it because they know instinctively that Mark Twain was correct when he had one of his characters observe, “Against the assault of laughter, nothing can stand”? 

Hitler’s fury at being lampooned by the cartoons of David Low pales, however, when compared to the violence unleashed more than half a century later by 12 cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad published by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Michael de Adder wins National Newspaper Award 2025

Michael de Adder of the Globe and Mail is a second time winner in the Illustrated Commentary category at the 77th edition of the National Newspaper Awards.

Monday, March 23, 2026

KAL wins his 6th Overseas Press Club Award

Kevin (KAL) Kallaugher is the winner of the 2026 Overseas Press Club Award for editorial cartooning. 

This is the sixth time KAL since 1998 that KAL has won the award. KAL’s winning portfolio spans cartoons published in The Economist, The Baltimore Sun, and his Substack, KAL Draws the Line.

"His work is pointed yet funny," stated the judges, "balancing sophisticated hard-hitting satire with belly laughs, the true mark of a great editorial cartoonist."

You can see cartoons from his winning portfolio by clicking here to go to his Substack

Friday, March 13, 2026

Jack Ohman wins 2026 Herblock Prize for editorial cartooning

From the Herblock Foundation.


Jack Ohman was announced as the winner of the 2026 Herblock Prize for editorial cartooning. 

Pedro X. Molina was named as this year’s finalist.

Friday, July 11, 2025

Cartoonists’ & free speech orgs in support of LeMan magazine

From Cartoonists Rights International.


The undersigned are appalled by the victimization of staff at LeMan humor magazine, Istanbul in recent days, following the publication June 26th of a cartoon strip by Doğan Pehlevan, the content, meaning, and intent of which has been distorted by government officials in Turkey, leading to inaccurate media coverage and misguided public outrage and, ultimately, four jailed on multiple charges, two more colleagues wanted by police, and the entire entity under investigation for accepting foreign influence.

  • Association of Canadian Cartoonists / L’Association de caricaturistes Canadien
  • Daryl Cagle – Cagle Cartoons, Inc. (Newspaper Syndicate)
  • Cartoon Movement
  • Cartooning for Peace
  • Cartoonists Rights
  • Columbia Global Freedom of Expression
  • European Cartoon Award
  • Forum for Humour and the Law (ForHum)
  • Freedom Cartoonists Foundation
  • Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC Strategy
  • Professional Cartoonists’ Organisation (PCO)
  • ToonsMag

Thursday, July 3, 2025

The Baltimore Sun sets for Kal

From Substack.


I am disappointed to announce that after 31 years of award-winning cartoons in The Baltimore Sun, I was abruptly dismissed from the paper on Friday.

It was just a matter of time.

In February of 2024, David Smith, the conservative owner of the Sinclair Broadcasting group purchased the struggling paper. 

As my politics do not align with the new owners, I assumed my days were numbered. 

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

AI Re-Imagines original cartoons

From The Daily Cartoonist.


It seems a fairly new YouTube uploader is taking cartoonists’ original cartoons, “re-imagining” (read: swiping) them through the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI), and then passing them off as their own.

Original Jack Ohman cartoon

Thursday, April 3, 2025

"Capitulation is contagious"

Adrienne LaFrance in the March issue of The Atlantic.


By killing a cartoon that lampooned its owner, The Washington Post set a dangerous precedent.

Monday, March 24, 2025

UPenn Lays Off Cartoonist Mr. Fish

From The Daily Cartoonist.


Days after the Trump Administration froze $175 million in federal funding the University of Pennsylvania has terminated the employment of progressive Lecturer (and Cartoonist) Dwayne Booth, aka Mr. Fish.

From the Mr. Fish Patreon page:

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

The New Yorker 100th Anniversary

 


The New Yorker celebrates its centenary this month.

 It’s been one hundred years since our founding editor, Harold Ross, and his wife, Jane Grant, dreamed up what they called a “comic paper” over poker games and liquid lunches at the Algonquin Hotel and other midtown haunts. 

The 100th Anniversary Issue is available in full today exclusively to our subscribers. 

Sunday, January 19, 2025

The Latrobe Bulletin will do away with editorial cartoons

From The Daily Cartoonist.


The Latrobe (PA) Bulletin has decided they can no longer publish opinion pieces – oops, make that political cartoons – “because we strive to better the community, not divide it.”

Cartoonist Lee Judge‘s commentary was the source of controversy in a red part of the purple state.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Political Cartoonists on facing Donald Trump

Zach Rabiroff in The Comics Journal.

Trump's ABC by Ann Telnaes

Zach Rabiroff for The Comics Journal investigates the state of political cartooning as the practitioners face a revitalized and seemingly very powerful Donald Trump who is entering his second term as President of the United States with few limits in his way. 

Monday, January 13, 2025

Being "Bado"

From the Historical Society of Ottawa


The editorial cartoons of Bado (alias Guy Badeaux) have offered Le Droit's daily readers a humourous and insightful running commentary on almost a half century of local, Canadian and world history.

Join us on January 25 as he reflects on a remarkable career that has spanned two generations of Trudeau and a vast expanse of lampoon-able news events in-between. 

Saturday, January 4, 2025

Ann Telnaes Quits The Washington Post

From Open Windows.

(rough of cartoon killed)

I’ve worked for the Washington Post since 2008 as an editorial cartoonist. 

I have had editorial feedback and productive conversations—and some differences—about cartoons I have submitted for publication, but in all that time I’ve never had a cartoon killed because of who or what I chose to aim my pen at. 

Until now.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Darkness at News

Mike Peterson in The Daily Cartoonist.



There have been a number of cartoons responding to Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos having spiked an endorsement for Kamala Harris, many of them playing on the Post’s motto “Democracy Dies in the Dark.”

Ann Telnaes gets the top spot in part because she works there and her cartoon joins with 16 Washington Post columnists who signed an outraged statement protesting the move, which is reason enough, but also because while she is perennially one of the most inventive political cartoonists, she knows when it’s time to be plainspoken.

And her fans recognize her outrage, as the comments on her page indicate.

The fact that the Post has published protests over the topic — from both staff and readers — is encouraging, because it indicates a chasm between the people who make the paper and the man who owns it, and that there is a difference between doing what you’ve been ordered to do and behaving like a lickspittle.


Thursday, October 17, 2024

Saudi Arabia sentences Mohammed al-Ghamdi to 23 years

From the Associated Press.


Saudi cartoonist Mohammed al-Ghamdi, who drew under the pen name Al-Hazza, has been sentenced to 23 years in prison, according to the Sanad Human Rights Organization.

The sentence for Mohammed al-Ghamdi marks the latest in a widening judicial crackdown on any perceived dissent in Saudi Arabia since the rise of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, now seen as the kingdom’s day-to-day ruler in place of his 88-year-old father King Salman.

Saudi officials did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday from The Associated Press.