Quantcast
Channel: Bado's blog
Viewing all 2269 articles
Browse latest View live

First Anniversary of the Charlie Hebdo Attack

$
0
0
On C-Span.



Ann Telnaes and Signe Wilkinson talked about the role of political cartoonists and the state of freedom of speech one year after the attacks on satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo's Paris headquarters. 
They showed various cartoons and discussed their editorial intention and what topics and caricatures were acceptable. 
Also discussed was the controversy over Ms.Telnaes'Christmas cartoon of Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) and his children that was pulled by Washington Post.

Mix & Remix

$
0
0
From ECC Cartoonbooks Club.



Mix & Remix is the pseudonym of the Swiss cartoonist Philippe Becquelin, born in 1958. Here is a sample of his work:


"... I'm happy!..". "... we can do something about that!... "
... Have you received my e-mail in which I asked you to respond to my text message?...
... Are you filming your ear?...
... I'm have a phone call ! ... 
... It seems people get too much information...
... yes, I'm already informed!... 

All cartoons from:

Le Mix
Les Cahiers Dessinés, 2013
Paris
162 pages

Satire makes a comeback in Myanmar

$
0
0
From Channel News Asia.


With a flourish of his pencil, cartoonist Maung Maung Aung skewers a pampered politician in a sketch, an image that just a few years ago would have been unthinkable.

The illustrator is among an increasingly brazen band of satirists that has emerged in a nation where recent elections tipped the balance of power from authoritarian military rulers for the first time in generations.
Maung Maung Aung's drawing shows a destitute family chiding a paunchy parliamentarian.

"We are very happy for you that you have not been beaten and abused. We only hope that you won't cause trouble for others," reads a speech bubble above the raggedly dressed father, mother and small child.

The image takes aim at inequalities faced by many ordinary people in Myanmar, despite reforms that have rippled through the long-cloistered nation.

Those changes led to a landmark victory for Aung San Suu Kyi and her pro-democracy party in November, boosting hopes of a prosperous future -- and a more open press...

"Cartoons need freedom. The more freedom there is, the more a cartoon is able to say and be creative so they can carry more meaning," said 60-year-old Maung Maung Aung, perched behind his drawing board in a Yangon studio cluttered with illustrations.


In four decades as a cartoonist he has suffered poverty, fear and censorship, working with little margin for error under a junta that jailed dissenters and ripped anything deemed critical from newspaper pages.

That drove him to seek refuge in the United States, where he worked as a painter at a fine arts studio in Florida.

But he returned to his homeland in 2012 soon after a quasi-civilian government replaced outright army rule.

Now cartoons are enjoying a renaissance, tackling a range of subjects -- from the country's economic woes to foreign policy and the elections -- peppering newspapers and websites daily.

And Myanmar's caricaturists are sharpening their pencils for the next test -- how to satirise the revered Suu Kyi as her party prepares to take over government in late March.

Suu Kyi is lionised in Myanmar, where the peaceful resistance to army rule was for years depicted as a tussle between the frail and graceful Nobel laureate and brutish generals.

Maung Maung Aung said illustrators should not shirk from depicting "The Lady", as Suu Kyi is known.

"Cartoonists should not be biased, they should point out the faults of any government," he told AFP.

Arab cartoonists hope to prove the pen is mightier than the sword

$
0
0
From Equal Times.

Drawing by Khalid Albaih

Freedom of speech in the Arab Region can come at a very high price, particularly for cartoonists. Even as far back as 1987 when the Palestinian cartoonist Naji Salim Al-Ali, creator of the iconic cartoon Handala, was shot and killed in London by an unidentified assassin, the dangers of biting socio-political criticism in the region have been clear.And since the so-called Arab Spring of 2011, these risks have only increased.
The violent assault of Ali Ferzat, the current head of the Arab Cartoonists’ Association, in 2011 is just one example. Agents of the Syrian regime shattered both his hands in retaliation for his satirical drawings of President Bashar Al-Assad.

The 2013 arrest of the Egyptian cartoonist Magdy El Shafee, author of the acclaimed graphic novel Metro, is another example. He was detained at Egypt’s infamous Tora Prison for trying to stop clashes between anti and pro-Muslim Brotherhood protesters.
But in spite of the dangers, cartoonist across the Arab region continue to fight for free speech.

The Sudanese cartoonist Khalid Albaih, creator of the Facebook page Khartoon!, Nadia Khiari, who created Willis from Tunis to try and make sense of the changes in Tunisia following the fall of Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali’s 23-year rule, and Syrian-Palestian cartoonist Hani Abbas– winner of the 2014 Editorial Cartoon International Prize – are just some of those fighting on the frontline with their political insight and humour. 

Equal Times spoke with the trio at the Internazionale a Ferrara festival in Italy, last October.

The full article here.

I wish I'd drawn... (37)

$
0
0
... this very funny cartoon by Jeff Olson.

The Vancouver Courier, January 14, 2016

The 2015 United Nations / Ranan Lurie Political Cartoon Award

$
0
0
From the United Nations / Ranan Lurie Political Cartoon Award.

First Place - $10,000 Winner

Aristides Hernandez Guerrero, Courrier International
Second Place - $5,000 Winner

Raimundo Rucke, O Dia, Brazil


Third Place - $3,000 Winner

Mike Luckovich, The Atlanta Journal Constitution, USA
Citations for Excellence

Panos Maragos, Ethnos of Sunday, Greece


Marco De Angelis, Buduar, Italy
Clay Bennett, The Chattanooga Times Free PressUSA

World Press Cartoon 2015 (my cartoons)

$
0
0
I received the 2015 catalogue of the Cascais, Portugal World Press Cartoon competition.


A drawing of mine was selected in each of the three categories:


Gag cartoon

"The Castaway", Planches #1

Caricature

"False note in Kiev", Le Droit, February 20, 2014


"Dieudonné", Le Droit, January 10, 2014

Editorial cartoon

Kate Beaton, Lisa Hanawalt, MariNaomi, Rokudenashiko Head Slate for 2016 Toronto Comic Arts Festival

$
0
0
BK Munn in Sequential.

The Toronto Comic Arts Festival has announced the first batch of headline guests for its 2016 event, scheduled for May 14-15. The guests, hailing from the U.S., Canada, and Japan, are the vanguard of a host of cartoonists who will be making their way to the Toronto Reference Library for this annual pilgrimage. The eight revealed today were: Kate Beaton (Canada), Duncan Fegredo (U.S.), Lisa Hanawalt (U.S.), MariNaomi (U.S.), Sean Phillips (U.S.), Michel Rabagliati (Canada), Rokudenashiko (Japan), and Chip Zdarsky (Canada).


Of the group, perhaps Rokudenashiko is the least known in North American comics circles, although she has garnered international headlines for her art and activism against censorship in Japan. Twice arrested for obscenity for her “vulva-centric sculpture,” Koyama will be issuing her graphic novel, What Is Obscenity? The Story Of A Good For Nothing Artist And Her Pussy at the Festival.

According to Festival organizers, major “guests will continue to be announced through January, February, and March, with special guests from Germany, Italy, USA, France, Japan, and Canada still to be revealed!”

The Festival has also issued a call for programming, asking volunteers to pitch workshops, panel discussions, or other events for the various audiences TCAF attracts.

Kosobukin and Pirana Exhibition

$
0
0
Jan Oplinus from the ECC Cartoonbooks Club website.


The European Cartoon Center in Kruishoutem, Belgium is now hosting an exhibition of renowned Ukranian cartoonist Yuri Kosobukin (1950-2013) and Belgian cartoonist Pirana.

Kosobukin was one of the most outstanding cartoonist with a unique style you immediately recognize. Not surprisingly , he won hundreds of prize all over the world.






Pirana (Leon Van De Velde) is a famous Belgian press cartoonist.
He drew for several newspapers and magazines and published no less than 23 comic strip albums.


"Time to do the dishes honey..."

He was a regular guest at comic festivals at home and abroad.
Typical for the work of Pirana is the minimalist and simple drawing style and his black, sexist and no-nonsense humor.
In the exhibition I saw many good erotic cartoons, but the most funny to me are a series a torture chamber cartoons.


Pirana and Center director Rudy Gheysens




"Say cheese "

It was a good idea indeed by the ECC board to publish an exhibition catalogue for an honest price (10eur/piece). A minus is the poor printed resolution of some cartoons in the Kosobukin catalogue, and also noticeable in some Pirana cartoons. I hope this pixelation issue will be resolved as it is a print on demand catalogue and higher resolution pics can't be a problem as the cartoons in the exhibition are all of high resolution quality. I hope the next prints of the catalogue will be double checked and the pixelation issue resolved.

Learn more:

about Yuri Kosobukin:

on Bado's blog
cartoon Gallery
Kosobukin Tribute Gallery on Pinterest

about Pirana:

on Wikipedia
on Lambiek.net
Mensen van bij ons (Dutch)

I wish I'd drawn... (38)

Canadian artists weigh in on Grand Prix D'Angoulême sexism 'debacle'

$
0
0
John Sufrin from the CBC website.

Illustration by Philippe Pochep

When Montreal illustrator Julie Delporte saw the nominee list for this year's Grand Prix D'Angoulême— one of the most prestigious lifetime achievement awards in the comic book world — she was incredulous. The previous year's list was short on female nominees, so Delporte had hoped the prize, which will be announced Wed., Jan 27, would take the opportunity to be more inclusive. She was wrong. This year's list was exclusively male.
"I was already a bit upset by last year. And this year — not a single woman," she says. "It's so obvious that it's not fair."

Delporte is a celebrated artist; her 2014 graphic novel Everywhere Antennas was nominated for a prestigious Doug Wright Award and won a CBC Bookie award in 2015. She's also a member of BD Egalité, an artist collective that called for a boycott on the prize, which, in its 43-year history, has only ever been awarded to one woman (Florence Cestac). As controversy around the all-male list grew, nominees began to withdraw as an act of protest, including comic legends Chris Ware, Charles Burns and Brian Michael Bendis.

Earlier this month, the Grand Prix D'Angoulême caved to pressure, announcing it would do away with the nominee list altogether and allow committee members to vote for whomever they wished. Still, Franck Bondoux, the festival's executive officer, defended the original list.

"Unfortunately, there are few women in the history of comics," he told French newspaper Le Monde."That's the reality. Similarly, if you go to the Louvre, you will find few women artists."

It's unclear whether the list — described as a "debacle" by many — was a result of short-sightedness or something more insidious. But is it just a symptom of deep-seated equality issues within the industry as a whole? That depends on whom you ask. For Delporte, it is.

"Everything in history has been shaped by men," she says. "If everything is chosen by men, and read by men, of course men's works will be more appreciated."

Delporte sees inequality in Canada's comic scene, too. She points to a recent study that shows female visual artists in Canada earn 35 per cent less income than their male counterparts (the overall income gap between men and women, according to the study, is 31 per cent). She also senses resistance within the upper echelons of the comic world.

"To me, it seems as easy for a woman to do comics as for a man. But to be confident to be a publisher, it's not easy," she says. "It took me a long time to realize that I could learn how to print books and decide what's good in comics."

Julie Doucet, a veteran comic book artist from Montreal, wasn't surprised in the least by what transpired with the Grand Prix D'Angoulême. To her, it has always been a mainstream, commercial, conservative event. But she also says it's not fair to make wide-ranging judgments based on what's happening on another continent.

"France is France," she says. "The relationship between men and women is so far away from what we have in Canada. It has absolutely nothing to do with us."

Doucet — whose latest collection, Carpet Sweeper Tales, is due from Drawn & Quarterly in March — got into comics in the late '80s, when the medium was considered mostly a male one. Even then, she felt welcomed by the community.


"I never really had any problems," she says. "Maybe because of the type of comics I was doing. It was so crazy, so sexy. I got respect from the guys."

Going back even further, Canada's Lynn Johnston— creator of the widely syndicated For Better or For Worse — recalls what it was like getting into the scene in the '70s.

"The only people who really treated me with a certain amount of disdain were from the really old boy's club, guys who were maybe 20 years older than I was," she says. "The guys who were my age were welcoming and respectful and thrilled to be a colleague."

She's perplexed, though, by Bondoux's assertion that women have played a limited role in comics throughout history, saying there are "hundreds of us."

"I kind of wonder what his background is in comics," she says. "For somebody to say that, it's somebody whose first love is probably not comics. They just haven't done their homework.

"Toronto's Teva Harrison is new to comics (her graphic memoir, In-Between Days, will be published this spring), but for her, what happened with the Grand Prix D'Angoulême has become a tiresome recurrence in the art world in general.

"I've been an artist for my whole life, and these sorts of lists happen across all the arts," she says. "Women do things and they struggle to have their voices heard. It's a shame."




As for Delporte, who vented her frustrations with an illustration on her website, it's all further proof that women need to keep pushing.

"We need role models," she says. "When I see people like Annie Koyama, who started her own comics company with her own money, I think maybe things will change."

Turkey Bans Cartoonist Latuff's Website

$
0
0
From Cartoonists Rights Network International.


Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff has reportedly had his website banned by the Turkish government. Latuff’s cartoons have frequently taken aim at Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

In an interview with Al-Monitor Columnist Pinar Tremblay, Latuff said: “Turkey is the only country where access to my cartoon blog was officially blocked. I haven’t heard of a similar ban in other countries. In the case of Turkey, I have the document from the Turkish government certifying the ban.”

This is, according to journalist Tremblay, “the first time a foreign cartoonist is facing a legal ban in Turkey.”

Seth Laments the Demise of The Guelph Mercury Record

$
0
0

Seth for The Globe and Mail.

Illustration by Seth 

I don’t know – was I surprised or not surprised by the sudden closing of our local newspaper, the Guelph Mercury? 
Initially, yes – mostly because I thought it was doing all right. Not that I am especially plugged in to “what’s what” here in Guelph, Ont., but I hadn’t heard any inklings that it was in dire trouble. 
True, I was taken aback for a moment … but then, with resignation, not much surprised, really. Nowadays, when you hear a newspaper has closed its doors that isn’t exactly shocking news. 
It is very dispiriting, though. I don’t subscribe (pardon the pun) to the idea that printed newspapers are out of touch with the current culture. Why do people believe this? Just because digital devices are ubiquitous at the moment doesn’t mean that reading a physical newspaper is an absurd act. Can’t we do both? Are we that limited in our thinking? 
Have people forgotten the pleasure of opening a newspaper and being presented with a finite canvas – a carefully curated capsule of what is happening in our world today? Must it be a scrolling, infinite labyrinth of hyperlinks or nothing at all? Forgive me, I’m off on a tangent. I know most people read the newspaper online anyway. The culture wars of print versus digital are not what I’m supposed to be writing about here. 
Back to the Guelph Mercury. Its closing is a loss. A real loss to Guelph.
I didn’t subscribe to the paper myself – this is not a shameful admission. You see, my wife, Tania, subscribes to “The Merc” at her barber shop (The Crown) and then brings it home for me at the end of the day, so I always see the news the day after. That’s fine with me. I’m not in a great hurry for the local news. I can wait a day. What’s the rush, everybody? 
By the time I get the paper it is well-thumbed. More thumbed than the Globe or the Post (which also come home to me). Often those papers haven’t even been unfolded by Tania’s customers. Why is that? Well, it’s not because the Mercury was the best paper in Canada, it’s because it was the local paper. Believe it or not, even in this current worldwide mega-culture people still have some desire to be connected to where they live. 
Thinking about it, I’d be hard-pressed to come up with another example, besides a local paper, that so effectively does that job. I mean, simply living somewhere doesn’t necessarily connect you to a place. You can live in Guelph, for example, yet spend your entire inner-life online – living in some “neitherworld” of neither here nor there. 
If you are not actively involved in the local culture – somehow personally invested in it – it’s pretty easy for that place to simply be where you sleep and buy your groceries.
Reading the local paper is such a vivid reminder of where you are and sometimes, who you are, too. 
When I moved here from Toronto around the turn of the century (this one, not the 20th century) it took me some time until I felt like a Guelphite. Quite some time. Maybe a decade. I was very invested in being a Torontonian. I’d lived 20 years there. It was a big part of my identity. Unlike most people, I spend the majority of my time at home (in my studio) and so I didn’t connect all that quickly to Guelph. 
Three things helped me put down roots here. First, marrying a Guelphite. That was the big one. Second, the support I’ve received, as an artist, from the community. They’ve really embraced me over the years and made me one of “their own.” 
And third, reading the Guelph Mercury. 
That daily experience of seeing your local places, names and events creates a kind of resonance and connection and investment with where you live. Canadians pay a lot of lip service to the importance of telling Canadian stories. We are so used to seeing American references that just watching a movie, for example, set in a Canadian place will “charge us up” with local feeling. A sense of seeing “ourselves” portrayed. 
That’s the daily charge of a local paper. Investing you with news and culture of YOUR PLACE. Take that away and you genuinely diminish that feeling in a community. 
That is a real loss. Especially in a world where people are increasingly living in a central abstract space. A “no place.” 
I’m an old-fashioned person. That’s no revelation to anyone who knows me or my work. I’m clinging to old models and mediums that, in my opinion, have deep and resonant value. Once they close we will never see complex institutions like local papers reopen. It’s sad to see our paper locking its doors. I won’t pretend to know much of The Merc’s long, important history. I’ve only been a Guelphite for about 16 years. 
Some folks will surely say that if a newspaper can’t survive in the current media climate then its days were well over anyway. Move on. 
Naturally, I disagree. The Mercury didn’t close because it wasn’t needed. It closed because you can’t make any money selling newspaper ads any longer. In my opinion, you don’t replace something valuable with nothing. What will fill that important role for Guelph now? 
I guess, at the barber shop, we’ll subscribe to the Kitchener Record now. Kitchener is nearby. Not the same thing, though. That is, if the Record is still in business. I better Google it and find out first.

Seth is the author of the graphic novels It’s a Good Life If You Don’t Weaken and George Sprott (1894-1975).


Angouleme organizers criticized for presenting fake awards

$
0
0
From Robot 6.


As if this year’s Angouleme International Comics Festival hadn’t been plagued by enough controversy, the organizers decided to play a practical joke at the closing ceremony that a lot of people didn’t find very funny.

The ceremony began with comedian Richard Gaitet, clad in a neon-blue suit and red bow tie, announcing, “This will be the shortest ceremony in history, because all we want to do is drink and dance.”
He proceeded to present nine awards in rapid succession, including the award for best series to Saga, best comic for young people to Aaron Renier’s The Unsinkable Walker Bean, and the Fauve d’Or, the big prize, to Arsène Schrauwen, by Olivier Schrauwen. And then two women appeared and said, “Bravo Richard, for that joke about the false fauves [awards] and the size of the Grand Prix. We laughed a lot, but now we must go.” And then they presented the real awards because that first set? That was fake.

Gaitet has apologized for the hoax, saying that he thought it would just be a silly joke. “My fundamental mistake was failing to grasp the range of expectations and hopes, the strong emotions that reigned in the room on such an occasion,” he said, “nor did I realize the importance of social networks in this context.” He mentioned each of the “Faux Fauves” recipients by name and said “I am sincerely sorry for having hurt the professionals who work very hard to support this major art that I love: Comics. No, it was neither the place nor the time nor the year to try such a trick.”

Making the joke even less funny was the fact that the creators and publishers weren’t forewarned. “We were all happy, we had tears in our eyes, and then we were humiliated,” said Sam Soubigui of Komikku, one of the publishers whose book won a “Faux Fauve.” “Happily, my authors weren’t there, so I didn’t have to explain this shitty French humor to them.” 

Patrice Kiloffer, co-founder of the publisher L’Association, said that neither he nor Schrauwen got the joke, and Pol Scorteccia, the French publisher of Saga, had already relayed the news of the false win to writer Brian K. Vaughan and artist Fiona Staples, and then had to backtrack. “We looked like clowns,” he said. ActuaBD reported that one editor whose comic won a “Faux Fauve” left the auditorium in tears when she realized it was fake.

Reaction on social media was swift and negative. The French creator Boulet blasted the organizers on Twitter, and the publisher Éditions Cornélius tweeted, “Tonight we experienced a great moment of shame and humiliation.” “What a great feeling, telling my BF (Aaron Renier) that he won an award at #FIBD2016 only to find out it was a mean joke,” Tweeted Jessica Campbell.

The festival published a rather defensive response to the controversy, saying that Gaitet had been tasked with bringing “freedom, impertinence, and humor [to the ceremony], in keeping with the independent spirit of most comics creators.” And the festival’s executive director, Franck Bondoux, blamed Twitter, saying that all the great awards ceremonies have jokes and “The problem is the dictatorship of the tweet.”

Cartoonist Islam Gawish arrested for anti-government comics

$
0
0
From Mada Maar.

"I don't like being drawn!"
"Arrest of Islam Gawish, accused of having drawn the president…"
Cartoon by Andeel

Security forces arrested cartoonist Islam Gawish on Sunday for drawings critical of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and the Egyptian state, his colleague Mohamed al-Ziyat told Mada Masr.

Nasr City Prosecution postponed their interrogation of Gawish until Monday morning, pending investigations by National Security, Sameh Samir, a lawyer with the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights told Mada Masr. Gawish will be held at Nasr City Police Station overnight.

The complaint and arrest warrant were issued by the artistic products police department against the manager of the company where Gawish works, but he was arrested for possession of drawings offensive to the state, Samir said, adding that it's unclear whether they intended to arrest Gawish to begin with, but they took him when they found his cartoons.

Gawish spent three hours at Nasr City Prosecution waiting to be questioned, before they decided to wait until the next day.

At noon, a force of over 10 security personnel stormed the social media marketing company where Gawish works and arrested him, confiscating his laptop and other computers owned by the organization, Ziyat reported.

Gawish told Ziyat that he was taken to Nasr City Police Station, and that he would spend the night in custody. He was told that he was arrested for his drawings before his phone was switched off.

A source at the Ministry of Interior told privately owned Al-Bedaya news website that Gawish is being detained for running a website and Facebook page without permits and disseminating false news, in addition to illegally possessing pirated computer software. The source added that Gawish will be referred to prosecution.

According to a statement by the Interior Ministry, published by the state-owned Al-Ahram newspaper, Gawish was arrested during an inspection by the artistic products police department after they received information that one of the company’s founders was broadcasting news with no license. The Interior Ministry spokesperson said Gawish was arrested because he's in charge of the graphics department.

Gawish is most known for his work with Al-Waraqa comics, and has a popular Facebook page with over one million followers. His comics focus mainly on social issues in Egyptian society, and he often draws story boards for popular songs. A collection of Gawish’s drawings were printed in a book last year.

Gawish’s arrest comes in the midst of a security crackdown that intensified in the lead-up to the fifth anniversary of the January 25 revolution. Residents of downtown Cairo apartments were subject to nighttime raids by state officials in recent weeks, along with inspections of institutions in the area, including performance art center Studio Emad Eddin and the independent Merit Publishing House.

The privately owned Masr al-Arabia news website was also raided by the Office of Artistic Products Police Department and managing editor Ahmed Abdel Gawad was temporarily detained. Security officials also raided Townhouse Gallery and the adjacent Rawabet Theater, both of which remain closed.

Academics, journalists and activists critical of the government have also been subjected to a crackdown on freedom of expression and dissent. Among those arrested for their work are journalists Ismail Alexandarani and Hesham Gaafar, both of whom remain in pretrial detention. 

The Committee to Protect Journalists issued a report in December placing Egypt as the second worst jailer of journalists in 2015, second only to China, with at least 23 journalists currently in jail.

Oregonian pulls "Non Sequitur" strips in wake of stand-off shooting

$
0
0
Dan Gardner in The Daily Cartoonist.
The Oregonian pulled three strips from a Non Sequitur week-long strip series that poked fun at the armed occupants of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in eastern Oregon. The series ran January 25-30, but after one of the militant leaders was shot on the 27th during an attempt to arrest him by authorities, the paper opted not to run the final three strips in the series.


Oregonian editor Mark Katches says the paper pulled the strips after the killing of LaVoy Finicum. 
“The strip, which had been making fun of such groups, seemed jarring and in poor taste given that someone now was dead,” Katches says. “That decision has yielded a grand total of two reader complaints.”

The five strips can be found on GoComics starting on January 27.

Cartooning for Peace

John Cleese on "political correctness"

$
0
0
From The Evening Standard.


John Cleese has said political correctness is destroying comedy and could lead to an Orwellian existence.

He compared the constant fear of offending to living in a dystopian society like the one created by George Orwell in his novel, 1984.

In a video for The Big Think the Monty Python star said: “The idea that you have to be protected from any kind of uncomfortable emotion is what I absolutely do not subscribe to.”

He continued: “The whole point about humour, the whole point about comedy, and believe you me I’ve thought about it, is that all comedy is critical. All humour is critical.

 


“If you start to say ‘We mustn’t criticise or offend them’ then humour is gone. With humour goes a sense of proportion, then as far as I’m concerned you’re living in 1984.”

The Fawlty Towers star quoted psychologist Robin Skynner, saying, 'If people can’t control their own emotions then they need to start controlling other people’s behaviour’ before adding: “When you're around people who are super-sensitive, you can’t relax, be spontaneous as you have no idea what is going to upset them next.”

The comedian also revealed that he has been warned to not visit university campuses “because the political correctness has been taken from being a good idea […] to the point where any kind of criticism of any individual or group could be labelled ‘cruel’.”

Cleese isn't the first comedian to hit out at political correctness. In an interview with ESPN Radio’s The Herd with Colin Cowherd, Jerry Seinfeld said that he avoids gigging at college campuses.

“They just want to use these words: ‘That’s racist. That’s sexist. That’s prejudice'," he said. “They don’t even know what they’re talking about.”


More about the oversensitivity of college students:

"The Coddling of the American Mind" in The Atlantic.

A Chinese cartoonist skewers the Communist rulers from afar

$
0
0
Carol Hills on the PRI website.


A Chinese man decided to disappear on his own. He's a cartoonist who goes by the pen name: Badiucao.


I follow global political cartoons here at The World, so I've known about Badiucao since he went into exile in Australia a while back. 
I always wanted to know was the meaning behind his name. "Actually, it doesn't mean anything at all," he says. "I just picked it by the sound. Any meaning behind it can refer to my real identity. So I just chose a random name for myself. 
The pen name is for safety. China's communist government do not find his work funny.
Badiucao draws for self-expression. "I'm probably not a good writer, but I can draw," he says. "And with my drawing I can give the world my voice. Also, I think cartoons are a good way to go against the dictatorship." 
Many in China saw his work on social media site Weibo. But viewers don't have much time to look. Chinese officials shut down his account quickly and regularly. "I've reopened my account more than 30 times," he says. 
Despite the roadblocks and being forced to live in exile, Badiucao hopes his cartoons can challenge the authority of the Chinese Communist Party. "I want to use my cartoons to deliver a message: As individuals, we can still have our voice."

China Digital Times has just published a collection of Badiucao's cartoons in an e-book called Watching Big Brother: Political Cartoons by Badiucao.

Reprint on the iPolitics website (29)

Viewing all 2269 articles
Browse latest View live