So here's the deal:
If all you had to say about the 2016
GOP presidential primary race was, "Yup, Trump was a short
fingered vulgarian last week, and an embarrassment to the leaders of
his nominal party, and a man with iconic bad hair – and he is this
week, too!", you probably didn't make the cut this morning.
(Unless you're Matt Bors, below, and you go meta.)
And if you don't trust Iran but the
only reason you're really against the nuclear treaty is because
Obama's for it, or if you think that the treaty is only between the
US and Iran, and that no other countries are involved, you probably
didn't make the cut.
And if you perpetuated the bullshit in
the doctored documentary on Planned Parenthood – whether you knew
it was bullshit or just bought the bullshit and never bothered to
find out that it wasn't – you are so far from making the cut that
the light rays from making the cut won't make it back to you for
thousands of years.
And if the latest mass shooting of
Americans by Americans on US soil (but it wasn't an act of
domestic terrorism, damnit! –
that's commie talk!), or the latest incident of police violence
against unarmed civilians, has pretty much exhausted your supply of
new ideas for expressing your outrage and dismay, you are most
certainly forgiven, but you probably didn't make the cut either.
I'd like to help you out, I really would, but we've got new realities to adjust to around here.
Today's toons were selected by a panel
of judges who abruptly found themselves out of work, after NBC dumped
both Trump and his Miss USA pageant, from the week's offerings at
McClatchy DC,
Cartoon Movement, Go
Comics, Politico's
Cartoon Gallery, Daryl
Cagle's Political Cartoons, About.com,
and other fine sources of toony goodness.
p3 Picks of the week: Mike
Luckovich, Gary
Varvel, Signe
Wilkinson, Clay
Bennett, Matt
Davies, John
Deering, Phil
Hands, Rebecca
Hendin, Kevin
Kallaugher, Mike
Lester, Ted
Rall, and Matt
Wuerker.
p3 Certificate of Harmonic Toon
Convergence: Clay
Jones and Jerry
Holbert.
p3 Misguided Science Award:
Stuart
Carlson. (Pretty sure Trump's ego would have the same mass on a
planet twice the size of earth. But it would weigh twice as much.)
Adjusting to the new realities, Part
1: Ann Telnaes watches as America goes dead
from the neck up.
Mark Fiore suggests a
care-and-feeding regime for The One We Do Not Name.
Adjusting to the new realities, Part
2: Tom Tomorrow marvels
at the species that gives up immediately.
Keith Knight conducts
yet
another thought experiment.
Reuben Bolling brings
the
42 episodes you might have missed during those Saturday mornings
of your childhood.
Red Meat's Milkman Dan has his
moment
of self-awareness.
The Comic Strip Curmudgeon
brings up an interesting question: How bad at the job does a
villain's minion (or henchman, to avoid confusion) have to get before
he gets the pink slip?
Comic Strip of the Day revisits
the adage about it being what you don't know that gets you.
Adjusting to the new realities, Part
3: In celebration of the
New
Yorker article this week
reporting geological findings that everyone in Oregon and Washington
living between I-5 and the coast should head farther inland, here's
Superman in "Electric Earthquake," directed in 1947 by Dave Fleischer.
Uncredited voice work by Bud Collyer (Clark/Superman), Joan Alexander
(Lois), Jackson Beck (also known around here as the voice of Bluto
from Paramount's Popeye cartoons, as the world's most polite villain and pretty much everyone else). You can decide for yourself why the
villain's lair looks like a coffee
percolator of the era, and what Metropolis is doing in Manhattan.
The Technically-Oregon Toon Block:
Ex-Oregonian Jack Ohman ponders
hot-heads who
imagine they're the cooler heads.
Very Likely Ex-Oregonian Jen
Sorensen thinks it's
good to be a pundit. (Also, this
is the pundit in real life.)
Oregonian Matt Bors struggles
against the inevitable.
Adjusting to the new realities, Part
4: The gag in this week's Jesse
Springer toon didn't go
the direction I thought it thought at first, and now I don't know if
I feel sorrier for the fellow in bed or all
of us who live west of I-5.
Test your toon captioning powers at The
New Yorker's weekly caption-the-cartoon
contest. (Rules here.)
And you can browse The New Yorker's cartoon gallery here.
The p3 Sunday Comics Read-Along:
Pearls
Before Swine, Doonesbury,
Rhymes with Orange, Zits,
Adam @ Home, Mutts,
Over the
Hedge, Get
Fuzzy, Prince
Valiant, Blondie,
Bizarro, Mother
Goose & Grimm, Rose
is Rose, Luann,
Hagar
the Horrible, Pickles,
Rubes, Grand
Avenue, Freshly
Squeezed, The Brilliant Mind
of Edison Lee, and Jumble.
3 comments:
I don't think it's really a "harmonic toon convergence" when I drew mine first.
Hi, Clay. I don't doubt you for a minute, and frankly I would probably flip out if I were a professional cartoonist and had to deal with coincidences like this.
I imagine you're one of the artists who takes care not to look at other artists' work until you've filed your own, so the suggestion that you were influenced by someone else's work is one that would naturally sting. I assure you that wasn't my point.
As I said somewhere on the blog back in the day, HTC is about the perfect storm of deadlines, obvious targets, and a limited number of tropes hanging out there, faced by all political cartoonists. I respect your work, and have wished you the best since you went indie.
bn
No problem and I don't take offense by your post. It could be a coincidence. I saw one other. I think I took this one kinda personally because I felt really good about mine...and then a day later two more come out.
I actually do look at other cartoons. I will know if I saw something before. I try to think "weirder" than other cartoonists anyway so it's not often I have the same idea as someone else.
Thanks for the kind words.
Clay
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