Drawing 9/11. (Soundbite).Starting a career in political cartooning is a tricky business. In the case of award-winning scribbler scrib·bler n. One who scribbles, especially an author regarded as very minor, untalented, or disreputable: a scribbler of sentimental verse. Noun 1. Chip Bok, his first fulltime position, at Florida's long-defunct Clearwater Sun, came after a six-year hunt. It also ended in dismissal after a short six months, when a new editor who wanted only local cartoons took over. "It didn't take long before I had offended just about every body in town and probably most of the advertisers," recalls Bok. He recovered. His new book, Bok! The 9.11 Crisis in Politico I Cartoons (University of Akron Press The University of Akron Press is a university press that is part of the University of Akron. External link
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times, and Reason Online (reason.com/boktoc.shtml). Yet if it weren't for Mad and a certain presidential scandal, Bok might never have found his calling. "Alfred E. Neuman
Q: 9/11 was a difficult event for humorists A humorist is a person who writes or performs humorous material. The material written and/or performed by humorists tends to be more subtle and cerebral than the material created by stand-up comedians and comedy writers. . What have been the particular challenges for political cartoonists? A: Editorial cartooning is a negative art form: criticizing, satirizing, making fun of authority. In the case of 9/11, I didn't want to do that. It didn't seem like the moment to criticize the commander in chief-to see how close I could get his eyeballs together, how bushy I could make the eyebrows. That just didn't seem to fit. And though there were plenty of heroes to memorialize me·mo·ri·al·ize tr.v. me·mo·ri·al·ized, me·mo·ri·al·iz·ing, me·mo·ri·al·iz·es 1. To provide a memorial for; commemorate. 2. To present a memorial to; petition. , it's hard to do positive cartoons. I'm more into tearing things down. Q: So you eventually returned to your usual, scathing self? A: What broke the mental logjam log·jam n. 1. An immovable mass of floating logs crowded together. 2. A deadlock, as in negotiations; an impasse. Noun 1. was White House spokesman An Fleischer's reaction to Bill Maher's comment that suicide bombers were brave, not the cowards Bush had called them. Fleischer said, "People better watch what they say." Gee whiz, I thought. President Bush has a 90 percent approval rating, and they can't even tolerate a slightly critical statement on a late-night show called Politically Incorrect. Q: Are political cartoonists still under pressure to be patriotic? A: Not now. For a month or two there, yes. And that just renders cartoonists impotent. There's a place for flag waving, but we're not the guys to do it. You see these weeping Statue of Liberty cartoons, or Uncle Sam rolling up his sleeves. The time when that inspired people is long past. People look to political cartoons for some healthy skepticism about authority. |
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