Monday, August 10, 2015

LA Times Fires, Publicly Shames Editorial Cartoonist Ted Rall

When your boss fires you, it's a low point. For most people, firing is a private thing. It's just you and your boss and, then, the security guy who escorts you and your cardboard box out of the building.

When your boss later writes in the LA Times that you are a liar, and that the Los Angeles Police Department has proved it -- and THAT is why you were fired, well, that's different. You've been humiliated publicly by one of the biggest newspapers in the country. And with the support of the LAPD.

Ted Rall, who is maybe the most divisive political cartoonist of the day, was fired last month by the LA Times. Why? Because he wrote a column about being ticketed for jaywalking 14 years ago. (Ted writes as well as draws for the LA Times.) The LAPD said that Rall's version of the 2001 arrest was wrong and then produced an audiotape of the incident. (Yes, even in 2001, people were being recorded without their permission/knowledge.)

Nicholas Goldberg, the Times editorial page editor, wrote

“An audiotape of the encounter recorded by the police officer does not back up Rall’s assertions; it gives no indication that there was physical violence of any sort by the policeman . . .”

The Cartoonists Rights Network has the story:

Rall has posted both the police recording provided to the LA Times and an enhanced version of that tape by three sound technicians Rall consulted. In the cleaned-up version of the tape, the cartoonist reports, someone can be heard saying “He was just jaywalking . . . you need to take off . . . you need to take off his handcuffs.” 
Rall had done hard-hitting cartoons for the LA Times since 2009. 
As Rall said in an interview with Sputnick News: “Look, I pissed off cops. I’ve done many anti-LAPD cartoons and essays over the years. The LAPPL [Los Angeles Police Protective League] made clear in their blog that they have long been angered by me, and they are crowing about my dismissal. So, just at a bare minimum, think about how disturbing this is. The LAPD, or the LAPPL, passed illegally — basically stole something out of the evidence room — slipped it to the top editors at the LA Times, one of the biggest and most widely-respected metro-dailies in the United States, in order to get me fired. In order to send a message to other reporters, ‘don’t screw with cops’.”

The LA Times is not commenting, and has directed Ted to contact their legal counsel. (Note: Ted has and, to date, has not received a response.)

Did the LAPD give the LA Times an opportunity to fire a cartoonist who regularly criticized the LAPD? Was this a smear to destroy Ted Rall's reputation? 

This is a bad thing, and we need to speak up for Ted. 

So far, Slate, Salon, the ACLU, the American Association of Editorial Cartoonists have been contacted -- but there is no response. 

Cartoonists: please do not be silent. Tweet, Facebook, Instagram about this. It's wrong and unfair and they could come after another person who draws those "damned pictures" without warning. 

Related:

Boing Boing: The LA Times fired a journalist after cops told them he lied—but did they investigate?

Monday, August 03, 2015

See You Soon

I'm away from the studio, visiting family. I hope to be back soon

The Garden As of Early August


Some photos of the garden, now green and bushy -- with lots of small green tomatoes.





And some flowers:










Friday, July 31, 2015

UPDATED Cartoonist Ted Rall Fired by Los Angeles Times Speaks Out




Background: An investigation has been requested into the firing of Ted Rall, whether the LA Times and LAPD obtained the tape of his jaywalking stop illegally and whether the publisher (who is reportedly running for LA mayor) and LA police chief Beck colluded in any illegal activity leading to the ouster.

Ted Rall: LAPD Convinced LA Times To Fire Me After I Criticized Cops [exclusive]


UPDATE 8:44am: A New Domain files this story:

Ted Rall-LAPD-LATimes Battle: New Tape Proves Cops Lied [exclusive]

There is also a petition to reinstate Ted Rall at the LA Times where you can sign your name. 

Thursday, July 30, 2015

A Home for Puff


It was late winter when I left some food out for a wild cat darting around our woods. Within a month of me leaving the food out, she was purring and letting me pet her and generally hanging out on the porch, washing herself. She wasn't wild, she was just a stray. She was a pretty thing, and someone had obviously loved her before she became homeless.

And then one day she appeared at the door with two tiny kittens. Two little powder puffs.

I was horrified.

Within a week, one of them had permanently disappeared. And a couple weeks after that, the mother cat, who had been a very good mom  -- inexplicably -- rejected her remaining kitten. It was terrible. She would hiss and growl at him and not let him near her. Maybe the little guy was getting bigger and she saw him as a rival for her food. Maybe she was sick. I just don't know. She then left.

We became the little kitten's new parents and he bonded with us and wanted to play and be let in the house. Such a cutie.

But we already have 4 indoor cats in the house and four is plenty. I know. They told me with their eyes.



So, yesterday, I took the kitten, which we nicknamed "Puff," to the vet. It was the first time he was ever inside anywhere!

He was very good at the vet, but a little scared. At one point he crawled on my shoulder to the back of my neck and gave me a bath, purring away. He is a sweetie, what can I say?

He got a clean bill of health. The vet was also able to tell me that he was a he. I didn't know for sure. Puff is very fluffy down there, you see.

And then we drove Puff to the far side of Manchester to meet the woman who had written that she "would love to have a kitten" on her Craigslist ad.

We gave her Puff and the vet paperwork and Puff's little brush and away they went last night. Puff will be safe and loved and not have to be afraid of thunder, fast cars or foxes.

It was bittersweet.

The mama cat has come back. She needs to be trapped and have that TNR thing done.

We will miss Puff very much.





Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Lost Recording: James Swinnerton Interview


 

 1932 photo of Swinnerton at his desk from the fotosdecomics blog. 


James Swinnerton (1875-1974) was one of the early giants of American cartooning. Four years before THE YELLOW KID, Swinnerton was drawing a little bear on the San Francisco Examiner every day. The bear cub became a hit and the Examiner's owner, William Randolph Hearst, asked "Swin" to move to New York to join his New York World bullpen, which included Tad Dorgan, George McManus, George Herriman and others.

Swinnerton created a lot of characters and was an early experimenter in comic strip narrative technique. An early success was THE LITTLE TIGERS. The naughty Mr. Jack became his breakout character, and the strip was later renamed for him. His longest running comic was LITTLE JIMMY (1904-1958).

Around 1905, this successful cartoonist was diagnosed with life-threatening tuberculosis. He was told he had a short time to live, and he should move out to the desert, where the air would be better for him. Swinnerton did this -- but he also defied the doctors by living for another 69 years, healthy and productive, continuing cartooning and painting his desert environs.

Below is the background on the 1963 interview and the audio itself. The video has a lot of rare art and certainly begs to be watched full screen:
"In 1963, Milt Kagen arranged for Master Sergeant Percy Brown, Jr. to interview legendary cartoonist Jimmy Swinnerton for a program that was broadcast by shortwave to troops overseas.

"A lifelong comics fan, Mr. Kagen carefully preserved the tapes of that interview and is now making the program available to the public."





Links:
OSU site
Coconino County page
Spectatorship and Framing in the Strips
Animation Resources
Illustration Art
STWALLSKULL




-- Edited from a April 12, 2012 blog entry.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Editorial Cartoonist Mike Keefe on Leaving the Denver Post

From 2011, Mike Keefe talks about winning the Pulitzer and accepting a buyout from the Denver Post, a newspaper that he worked on for 35 years.

"Nobody is replacing anybody" when it comes to editorial cartoonists, so says Mr. Keefe.

Monday, July 27, 2015

British Movietone Short Film: Cartoonist Rowland Emett "Lunar Cycle"

Cartoonist and inventor extraordinary, Rowland Emett, enters the space race with a new method of moon transport. The "Lunacycle" may not get into orbit, but for sheer invention it matches your Apollos and Sputniks.




Related: British Pathé Short Film: Cartoonist Rowland Emett at Home (1963)

Friday, July 24, 2015

Aaron Fine Travel Posters

A while ago I posted about Aaron Fine, who wrote and illustrated a 1955 children's book PETER PLANTS A POCKETFUL. Mr. Fine's graphic style blew me away and I bought the used book at a Maine thrift store as soon as I saw it. Here's the cover page:


Rodrigo Baeza posted a comment about Mr. Fine on the above link:

Thanks for posting this, Mike. I found some additional info about Aaron Fine: it seems he's better known for his posters for Pan American airlines (some of these can be found on Tumblr and/or Pinterest), that he was a friend of Andy Warhol, and that he died of cancer in 1962.

Thanks, Rodrigo! Here are some of his posters:






Just stunning work!

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Joe Phillips: Classic Hollywood Stars as Superheroes


Comic book artist Joe Phillips imagines old time Hollywood stars in superhero movies in this fun series of images. See Comics Alliance for the whole set. 

Yeah, okay: one nitpick: It's Carole Lombard, NOT "Lombart."

If the Moon Was Replaced with Some of Our Planets

From Yeti Dynamics: What if there were other planets out there, orbiting the Earth, instead of the good ol' moon? It would look something like this:




Sunday, July 19, 2015

Have a Good Week

I'll be away for a short time. Hope you are having a good time and not spending too much of your summer in front of a screen.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Video: Chuck Jones - The Evolution of an Artist

An analysis of Chuck Jones' technique as a Warner Brothers shorts animator by YouTuber Every Frame a Painting.



To see the names of the films, press the CC button and select “Movie Titles.”

Video: Toronto Star Cartoonist Theo Moudakis "Bring the 2024 Olympics to Rob Ford’s Toronto"

Video: 1981 John Candy Interview

An early 1980s interview with John Candy, filmed at his home in a Toronto suburb. Part of the "That's Life" series.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

THE KATZENJAMMER KIDS by Joe Musial


Hello Dollinks! Here are a few hi res scans from the tiny KATZENJAMMER KIDS paperback collection of Sunday strips by Joe Musial. It's copyright 1970 by King Features.

THE KATZENJAMMER KIDS were created by Rudolph Dirks who, at William Randolph Hearst's request, nicked them from the German cartoon MAX AND MORITZ. 

"The strip relates in the frenzied style the war-to-the-death carried on by Hans and Fritz against any form of authority, whether parental, educational, or governmental."

I had this paperback when I was a kid and studied it. It was lost and so, last week, I bought a copy off of eBay. Such wonderful manic writing and terrific cartooning by Musial. Reading it now for the first time since I was nine years old, I was surprised at how many of the gags I remembered. 

Obviously, these are great fun (if not politically correct) to read out loud. 







That last panel, where Hans and Fritz kiss with a "smak!!" is funny and chilling and perverse at the same time.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

New "Bloom County" Comic Strips by Berke Breathed? Yes, Please!

"Bloom County" is back and creator Berke Breathed is drawing it. Michael Cavna has the story at the Washington Post. 

And Rachel Maddow, a "child of the 80s," celebrates the return of her favorite strip in the first five minutes of her MSNBC show on Monday, July 13, 2015.




John Candy, Rick Moranis, Catherine O’Hara, Dave Thomas and More Cast and Crew in 1982 ‘SCTV’ Cast/Crew Softball Game

Just discovered by John Candy's widow -- and now shared with all.



The Garden As of July 15, 2015


Bigger and bushier than when I last posted, two weeks ago.


The squash is coming in nicely.


Above and below: lots of leaves and tiny, tiny tomatoes as of now.


Nice to have a small first yield of squash and cucumber:


Okay, let's close with some flower pictures: