The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

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pineapplemike
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The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by pineapplemike » Mon Jun 10, 2019 4:19 pm

cowards
NY Times will end its political cartoons after 'anti-Semitic' depiction of Netanyahu
https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/n ... onist-says
NYT editorial page editor James Bennet told Fox News that the paper was considering removing political cartoons for "well over a year" and will no longer be printing them beyond July 1st.
The end of political cartoons at The New York Times
https://www.chappatte.com/en/the-end-of ... ork-times/

All my professional life, I have been driven by the conviction that the unique freedom of political cartooning entails a great sense of responsibility.

In 20-plus years of delivering a twice-weekly cartoon for the International Herald Tribune first, and then The New York Times, and after receiving three OPC awards in that category, I thought the case for political cartoons had been made (in a newspaper that was notoriously reluctant to the form in past history.) But something happened. In April 2019, a Netanyahu caricature from syndication reprinted in the international editions triggered widespread outrage, a Times apology and the termination of syndicated cartoons. Last week, my employers told me they'll be ending in-house political cartoons as well by July. I’m putting down my pen, with a sigh: that’s a lot of years of work undone by a single cartoon - not even mine - that should never have run in the best newspaper of the world.

I’m afraid this is not just about cartoons, but about journalism and opinion in general. We are in a world where moralistic mobs gather on social media and rise like a storm, falling upon newsrooms in an overwhelming blow. This requires immediate counter-measures by publishers, leaving no room for ponderation or meaningful discussions. Twitter is a place for furor, not debate. The most outraged voices tend to define the conversation, and the angry crowd follows in.

Over the last years, with the Cartooning for Peace Foundation we established with French cartoonist Plantu and the late Kofi Annan - a great defender of cartoons - or on the board of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, I have consistently warned about the dangers of those sudden (and often organized) backlashes that carry everything in their path. If cartoons are a prime target it’s because of their nature and exposure: they are an encapsulated opinion, a visual shortcut with an unmatched capacity to touch the mind. That’s their strength, and their vulnerability. They might also be a revealor of something deeper. More than often, the real target, behind the cartoon, is the media that published it.

In 1995, at twenty-something, I moved to New York with a crazy dream: I would convince the New York Times to have political cartoons. An art director told me: “We never had political cartoons and we will never have any.“ But I was stubborn. For years, I did illustrations for NYT Opinion and the Book Review, then I persuaded the Paris-based International Herald Tribune (a NYT-Washington Post joint venture) to hire an in-house editorial cartoonist. By 2013, when the NYT had fully incorporated the IHT, there I was: featured on the NYT website, on its social media and in its international print editions. In 2018, we started translating my cartoons on the NYT Chinese and Spanish websites. The U.S. paper edition remained the last frontier. Gone out the door, I had come back through the window. And proven that art director wrong: The New York Times did have in-house political cartoons. For a while in history, they dared.

Along with The Economist, featuring the excellent Kal, The New York Times was one of the last venues for international political cartooning - for a U.S. newspaper aiming to have a meaningful impact worldwide, it made sense. Cartoons can jump over borders. Who will show the emperor Erdogan that he has no clothes, when Turkish cartoonists can’t do it ? – one of them, our friend Musa Kart, is now in jail. Cartoonists from Venezuela, Nicaragua and Russia were forced into exile. Over the last years, some of the very best cartoonists in the U.S., like Nick Anderson and Rob Rogers, lost their positions because their publishers found their work too critical of Trump. Maybe we should start worrying. And pushing back. Political cartoons were born with democracy. And they are challenged when freedom is.

Curiously, I remain positive. This is the era of images. In a world of short attention span, their power has never been so big. Out there is a whole world of possibilities, not only in editorial cartooning, still or animated, but also in new fields like on-stage illustrated presentations and long-form comics reportage - of which I have been a proponent for the last 25 years. (I’m happy, by the way, to have opened the door for the genre at the NYT with the “Inside Death Row“ series in 2016. The following year, another series about Syrian refugees by Jake Halpern and Michael Sloan got the NYT a Pulitzer prize.)

It’s also a time where the media need to renew themselves and reach out to new audiences. And stop being afraid of the angry mob. In the insane world we live in, the art of the visual commentary is needed more than ever. And so is humor.

Patrick Chappatte
June 10, 2019


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AverageJoe
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by AverageJoe » Mon Jun 10, 2019 4:51 pm

The NYT is a joke of an organization anymore. The funny part is the writer resents the very "moralistic mob" the NYT helped create. We are literally watching the creation eat its creator.

Well done NYT.

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C-Mag
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by C-Mag » Mon Jun 10, 2019 4:53 pm

No humor on the left during the reign of Trump
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Don't fear authority, Fear Obedience

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Speaker to Animals
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by Speaker to Animals » Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:04 pm

There never was any real comedy in political cartoons. It's all propaganda and venom.

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TheReal_ND
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by TheReal_ND » Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:19 pm

Let's see the happy merchant

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Speaker to Animals
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by Speaker to Animals » Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:24 pm

I think this might be the offending cartoon.

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TheReal_ND
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by TheReal_ND » Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:51 pm

Holy shit jews are such pussies. They make fun of us for decades but God forbid someone even speak critically of them.

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pineapplemike
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by pineapplemike » Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:56 pm

Speaker to Animals wrote:
Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:24 pm
I think this might be the offending cartoon.

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yeah that was it, from a few weeks ago, figured everyone had seen it but i should have posted in OP

to be honest i don't know why it's anti-semitic

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C-Mag
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by C-Mag » Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:58 pm

TheReal_ND wrote:
Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:51 pm
Holy shit jews are such pussies. They make fun of us for decades but God forbid someone even speak critically of them.
+1
There's some truth in that. They tend to make fun of themselves too.
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Re: The end of political cartoons at The New York Times

Post by Speaker to Animals » Mon Jun 10, 2019 6:46 pm

pineapplemike wrote:
Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:56 pm
Speaker to Animals wrote:
Mon Jun 10, 2019 5:24 pm
I think this might be the offending cartoon.

Image
yeah that was it, from a few weeks ago, figured everyone had seen it but i should have posted in OP

to be honest i don't know why it's anti-semitic

Because it shows them as manipulating the blind goy to ruin.