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   - Scott Statis <http://blog.al.com/stantis>
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   - Ted Rall <http://www.rall.com/>
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By JESSE WASHINGTON AP National Writer

Cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz was in front of a classroom full of black and Latino
kids, drawing presidents. He sketched Bush, then Clinton. Next came his
favorite, the man he voted for: Obama.

"Hey, those lips are big," Alcaraz heard a black girl say from the back of
the room.

Alcaraz was disturbed. "I try to bend over backwards not to make him look
like a cartoon stereotype," and certainly not a racial stereotype, he said.

Editorial cartoonists are bending over backwards a lot these days, as they
try to satirize the nation's first black president. And when they don't, the
result is the kind of outcry that erupted this week after a New York Post
cartoon featured a bloody chimpanzee - intentionally or unintentionally
evoking racist images of the past.

The problem is, cartoonists make their living by making fun of people -
especially presidents - and exaggerating their features and foibles.

The best political cartoons are "like an X-ray machine," said Amelia Rauser,
an art history professor at Franklin & Marshall College and author of
"Caricature Unmasked," which examines the art form's historical role in
political discourse.

"You have to deform someone facially in order to make a larger point about
their character," Rauser said. "But that deformity reveals their inner truth
and makes them look more like themselves."

The late Herblock often saddled Richard Nixon with an enormous cartoon nose.
Liberals drew George W. Bush like a simpleton, or worse. There have been
minor kerfluffles from the left about drawing Hillary Clinton as
insufficiently feminine, and from the right about depicting Condoleezza Rice
as servile to President Bush.

Drawings of President Barack Obama, however, must contend with America's
history of degrading racial imagery, from ape comparisons to enormous
"Sambo" lips. (Caricatures of the president's admittedly large ears have so
far escaped scrutiny.)

Michael Cavna, who blogs about comics for The Washington Post, wrote that
"an unnerving number of North America's political cartoonists are bizarrely
obsessed with President Obama's lips." He followed with a detailed analysis
of several cartoons where Obama's lips were large, some shade of blue, or
both.

On Wednesday, the New York Post published an editorial cartoon showing a
chimp shot to death by police officers. "They'll have to find someone else
to write the next stimulus bill," the caption reads.

Amid widespread black condemnation, the Post initially defended the panel by
its longtime cartoonist Sean Delonas, saying it referred to a chimp that
recently attacked its owner's friend and was killed by police. The newspaper
apologized "to those who were offended" after 200 protecters picketed the
Post offices on Thursday.

During the presidential campaign, The New Yorker magazine was accused of
racism for an infamous cartoon of Obama dressed as a Muslim, fist-bumping
his wife, Michelle, who was toting a machine gun and sporting a black-power
Afro. The magazine said it was satirizing right-wing smears of the Obamas.

Scott Stantis, editorial cartoonist for The Birmingham (Ala.) News, said he
received several complaints this week that his Obama drawings look "simian."
As a conservative in a city that's 77 percent black, Stantis has learned to
consider the feelings of his audience.

"Being the typical American editorial cartoonist - doughy, white,
middle-aged - I'm more than willing to accept that I don't know what may or
may not be offensive," he said. "But editorial cartoons are supposed to be
offensive, and provocative. We're entering new waters here. What can you use
or not use?"

"All my characters look simian," he said. "I don't make Obama look nearly as
simian as our former Gov. Fob James, who I DID draw as a monkey, on more
than one occasion. And he's a white guy ... I'm sorry, but when it comes to
African-Americans, you just don't draw monkeys."

Ted Rall, president of the American Association of Editorial Cartoonists,
said that Obama's race has affected how his colleagues do their jobs:
"Without a doubt, people are stepping more gingerly. People are tiptoeing
their way through this."

Rall, who is liberal, said it's harder to take shots at Obama because he's
smart, charming and handsome, "so when you attack the personality, people
suspect there's only one reason: It's gotta be his race. My conservative
cartoonist friends find it very frustrating."

One of those conservative friends, Mike Lester of the Rome News Tribune in
Georgia, said that when he was growing up, "if we didn't make fun of you, we
didn't like you."

Perhaps race relations would improve, Lester said, if black people lightened
up a bit: "They're not too good (at being) made fun of. We can all take a
joke."

Lester said Rall told him before the election that an Obama presidency would
be good for conservative cartoonists, but "it's been just the opposite. I
find myself having to temper my comments. I'm tired of it. (Obama) wants my
money, he wants me to pay for my neighbor's foreclosed house that he can't
afford.

"Race has nothing to do with it."

That's what Delonas said about his cartoon in the Post. So as the nation's
edgy fraternity of editorial cartoonists continues to unload on Obama, lines
will inevitably be crossed again.

"Being an editorial cartoonist is a high-wire act," Rall said. "If you're
any good, you're taking lots of chances all the time. When you take chances,
you fall and you screw up."

-- 
"I'm selfish, impatient, and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of
control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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