For almost a century, readers have turned to The New Yorker for its award-winning journalism. But the magazine's cartoons are what have left the most lasting impression on our walls, refrigerators, ...
Since 1925, The New Yorker's cartoons have been as much of a standard-bearer for the magazine's editorial stance as its reportage and short fiction. The absurdist sketches of deluded city folk have ...
According to Bob Mankoff, The New Yorker once did a survey and found that upon opening an edition of the magazine, "98% of people read the cartoons first, the other 2% lie." The ever-joking Mankoff ...
Cartoonist Charles Barsotti was known for his simple, often poignant, drawings. Barsotti died Monday at the age of 80. New Yorker cartoon editor... Remembering Charles Barsotti, Who Drew Cartoons That ...
After I wrote recently about bias, several readers complained about a political cartoon that had appeared in The Sunday Oregonian. This is a good opportunity to clarify the differences between bias ...
In recent weeks, other readers have echoed this reader’s request. They argue that too many editorial cartoons in The Dallas Morning News have pummeled President Donald Trump and his administration’s ...
Howdy. I’m Emma Allen, and I take it you want to be a New Yorker cartoonist. Before you uncap that pen or dip your quill in the blood of your frenemies, you might want to take these cartooning tips ...
Cartoon Brew is proud to announce the appointment of Jamie Lang, a veteran entertainment journalist based in Madrid, as the site’s new editor in chief. Lang joins Cartoon Brew from Variety, where for ...
The editor of The Daily Illini, the independent student newspaper at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has been fired for violating company policies when he published the controversial ...
When The New Yorker was founded, in 1925, by the square-jawed newspaperman Harold Ross and his wife, the feminist and journalist Jane Grant, it was envisioned as a comic weekly. Since its inaugural ...
The Palm Beach Post fired its editorial page editor after the Florida paper ran a cartoon on the war in Gaza that local Jewish groups slammed as antisemitic. Tony Doris, 67, who worked at the ...
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