Results tagged “Barack Obama” from Modern Mythology

JESSE WASHINGTON
AP National Writer

News Corp. has agreed to form an external diversity council after meeting with civil rights groups about a New York Post cartoon that critics said likened President Barack Obama to a dead chimpanzee.

NY Post Cartoon_Meek.jpgThe company will form a "diversity community council" in New York City that will meet with senior company executives twice a year, News Corp. and the NAACP said Wednesday. It also will include a statement of commitment to diversity in its annual report.

There was an immediate outcry after the Post, a News Corp. subsidiary, published the cartoon in February. The tabloid offered a qualified apology on its Web site, and News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch published a fuller apology in the newspaper, but pressure for further action continued.

NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous called the cartoon an "invitation for assassination" and urged a boycott of the newspaper and the firing of the editor and cartoonist. The Rev. Al Sharpton asked the Federal Communications Commission to review policies allowing News Corp. to control multiple media outlets in the same market.

After the protests died down, there were discussions between community groups and News Corp., which culminated in a meeting on May 19.

The meeting included representatives from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Sharpton's National Action Network, the National Urban League and 100 Black Men of America.

The heads of those organizations were not present at the meeting, nor was Murdoch, according to a person who was there. The person was not authorized to discuss the matter and asked not to be identified.

The four groups will be represented on the new diversity committee, said News Corp. spokesman Jack Horner. The membership was still being finalized, but Horner said it would also include organizations such as the Hispanic Federation, Alianza Dominicana and the New York Gauchos, which offers after-school programs and is best known for its top-flight youth basketball teams.

Horner said Sharpton, a longtime adversary of the New York Post and the subject of recent critical stories by the paper, will not be on the panel.

Committee members are not paid, Horner said, and no donations are part of the agreement.

Similar diversity advisory boards already exist in Chicago and Los Angeles, Horner said.

"This is an expansion of what we've had elsewhere," Horner said. "The key is we're always responding and learning from our communities."

The cartoon, by Post provocateur Sean Delonas, appeared as Obama's stimulus bill moved through Congress and after a violent pet chimp was killed by police in Connecticut. It depicted the body of a bullet-riddled chimp and two police officers. The caption read: "They'll have to find someone else to write the next stimulus bill."

It was unclear what effect the agreement would have within News Corp., whose New York Post and Fox News Channel properties have been persistently criticized by minorities as insensitive or sometimes racist.

The Rev. Jacque Andre DeGraff, of 100 Black Men, attended the May 19 meeting and said part of the results will be "what you don't see ... a heightened sensitivity to the concerns of our community." DeGraff also hoped that they would "cast a wider net" in hiring.

Ultimately, though, "the proof is in the pudding," he said. "Our community has good reason to be skeptical, and not just about News Corp."

Maurice Cox, vice president for diversity at PepsiCo Inc., said his company established similar external advisory committees about 10 years ago. "They have paid significant dividends for us," he said.

The relationship is often tense because the advisers don't have to worry about offending company executives, Cox said.

"There has to be huge trust" for the committees to be effective, he said. "You have to feel comfortable, your CEO has to feel comfortable sitting across the table from someone who might stare him or her down."

Obama Cartoons_Meek.jpgThis illustration provided by Mike Lester shows a political cartoon by Mike Lester depicting President Barack Obama, right, and Michelle Obama. (AP Photo/Mike Lester, Rome News Tribune, 2009)

By JESSE WASHINGTON
AP National Writer

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- 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 kerfuffles 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.

NY Post Cartoon_Meek.jpgOn 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 protesters 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 News in Alabama, 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," Lester said. "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."

___

On the Web:

Lalo Alcaraz: www.myspace.com/laloalcaraz

Mike Lester: www.mikelester.com

Ted Rall: www.rall.com

Scott Stantis: http://blog.al.com/stantis

conan.jpgIt's not enough that these guys at The Onion are funny when it comes to President Barack Obama's fanboy-ness, they have to toss the Conan details in there to really hammer it home.

Via The Onion...

Obama Disappointed Cabinet Failed To Understand His Reference To 'Savage Sword Of Conan' #24


...Obama, whose upcoming challenges include organizing a massive effort to rebuild the nation's infrastructure, was reportedly unprepared for the confused silence he received upon suggesting that his cabinet "team up with Taurus of Nemedia" to secure the necessary funding from Congress.

"If my inner circle of advisers can't even communicate about the most basic issues, how are we going to tackle the massive problems our nation faces?" Obama said during a press conference. "When I tell my cabinet that getting bipartisan support is exactly like the time Conan got Taurus to help him steal Yara's jewel, they need to understand what I mean."

After receiving no reaction from the assembled reporters, Obama added, "Because a giant spider is protecting this chamber full of precious jewels, just like Congress is protecting its.... God, how are you people not seeing this?"


Read the rest here.


spider-obama.jpgThis is the one everybody wants a date with.

At least that's the case right now with The Amazing Spider-Man #583. After speaking with three different comic store associates yesterday, I got the impression there will be plenty of copies for readers who aren't concerned with having a first printing of the issue; they just want one as a keepsake.

But that second printing is probably going to move fast too so...

Amazing #583 is going into its third printing so Marvel Comics can meet the overwhelming demand and make sure a copy gets into the hands of just about anyone who wants one. For collectors and fans there's a local signing by some creators who worked on Amazing #583 tomorrow in Manhattan Beach you may wish to attend.
 




Thumbnail image for dragonblue.jpg

For those who didn't know, Erik Larsen's Savage Dragon placed President Barack Obama front and center before Spidey did. Recall that cover where there was an endorsement by the "Dragon?"And now there will be a story with a guest appearance by the President that will push the main character back into active police duty.

More details about issue #145 of Savage Dragon can be read here. And while there will be many who won't care about what goes on behind the scenes in the comics business -- they just want their comics -- there are the happy few who may want to know about the little dustup between Dragon creator Erik Larsen and a Marvel editor over who had their account of the Obama story first. Read the piece in the Robot 6 blog.



youngblood08_obama.jpgI have not read much about this or even the actual comic yet, but Rob Liefeld, creator of Youngblood, is releasing his own segment featuring the 44th President in a six-page story that will appear in Youngblood #8 written and drawn by Liefeld himself.

Liefeld is taking a bit of a beating in the Newsarama comments section for releasing his own Obama guest appearance comic but if other savvy creators are doing it to boost sales and interest then why not get in there? (President Obama even made the cover of Ms. magazine for goodness sakes!) This is part of a Youngblood tradition according to a press release reproduced in part on Newsarama -- apparently former President George W. Bush has appeared in the Youngblood universe as well.






Obama pic.JPGQuietly sticking around (at least when I saw it on the shelves of one retailer) is the IDW published bio-comic Ryan Riley reviewed about Barack Obama written by Jeff Mariotte with art by Tom Morgan.

There was a John McCain comic issued by the same publishers during the election and both were pretty well done. No major super-powered villains, just stories of two human beings leading very incredible and inspiring lives.

One comic store owner told me that President Obama's IDW biography is the best read of this comic book bunch so far.

See 12 pages from Presidential Material: Barack Obama by clicking here.






BaracknMichelle.jpgI have learned that noted artist and writer Kyle Baker will be pulled off his current assignment to work on a biography graphic novel about the 44th President. Baker worked on Truth: Red, White & Black the story about the unknown African American Captain America  -- so this comic will be something to see.

Anything I missed? Drop me a line when you can and we'll put it up here.

   

  



Pulp Fiction in Long Beach still has about 15 copies of The Amazing Spider-Man #583 available that store owner Mike Lerner pulled off eBay and decided to offer in his store instead.
spideycover2.jpg
He has the variant edition with the cover of President-elect Barack Obama featured with old web-head in the background. Lerner said he is offering it for $59.99. As I mentioned yesterday, eBay is offering the fast-selling comic for prices ranging from $50 to $150-$200.

The first printing of the regular edition of Amazing #583 (with cover art by John Romita Sr.) flew out the door at Pulp Fiction just as fast as the Phil Jimenez cover edition, said Lerner. The numbers of actual copies of regular Amazing were ordered some time before there was an announcement of the Obama appearance and were based on the usual orders Lerner makes for Amazing Spider-Man every month.

"The regular one is probably going to end up being just as hot, I mean everybody wants the Obama cover if given the choice, but the other one is going to be just as hard to get too," Lerner said.
#583 Cover By John Romita Sr.

Most comic store associates I spoke to said they are expecting the second printing to be on their shelves next week.



Cover Image Courtesy Marvel Comics
Thumbnail image for spider-obama.jpgIt's been a good day for comic retailers who managed to secure and sell copies of The Amazing Spider-Man #583, which features a cameo by President-elect Barack Obama.

In a very short period of time after opening, only a couple stores in my vicinity had some copies of the regular and variant #583 -- Pulp Fiction comics in Long Beach and Comic Bug in Manhattan Beach. I called Comic Bug and was told they basically sold out by 10 a.m. Amazing Comics in Long Beach only had the regular edition and they sold out by 1 p.m.

I spoke with owner-operator Mike Lerner at Pulp Fiction this afternoon and he said he still had a couple dozen copies of the variant cover by artist Phil Jimenez which has the likeness of the President-elect prominently featured. (Keep in mind that conversation was a couple hours before this post.)

Lerner's price for the variant first printing was about $50 and he was also offering his few remaining copies of the regular edition packaged with the variant for about twenty dollars more.

Bug said they had the variant for around $35 (note: That was the price before they sold out).

On EBay first printing copies of the variant were going from $50 to $150-$200. 

Geoffrey's Comics had no copies of either printing available when I called. I was told that customers can prepay and reserve a copy of the second printing which is expected to be available next Wednesday Jan. 21.

Sales associates with Comic Bug, Amazing and Pulp Fiction all said they expect the second printing in stores next week as well.  
spider-obama.jpgApparently the soon-to-be inaugurated President-elect Barack Obama and comics are a natural fit. Not long ago I posted a link to a story on Erik Larsen's Savage Dragon getting some face time with the future President.

And now... the one and only Spider-Man. Check out the USA Today story -- it also has a preview of some panels from this historic meeting.

...and the astute Ryan Riley dropped by my desk to remind me I should tell everyone it goes on sale next Wednesday — so visit Pulp Fiction, Geoffrey's Comics, Amazing Comics, The Comic Bug or set your sites on any local comics retailer near you to grab yourself a copy before it swings out the door.

obama-dragonA.jpgThis is via the Red Eye's Geek to Me blog and courtesy Erik Larsen of Image Comics and writer-artist on "The Savage Dragon." I can only show you some detail of the comic page but see the entire thing here.

'Dragon' was one of the comics that depicted President-elect Obama on its cover when the Savage Dragon endorsed him.

(Editor's note: There is more!)

Readers of the Savage Dragon who were looking to be surprised are like "Hey, isn't that the Dragon back in his police uniform?"

dragonblue.jpg
Yes it is. So the hero is not only tapped to do some sort of task for the new President, he is also back with the police force. Creator Erik Larsen told the Chicago Tribune that it has been more than 12 years since his character has been on the force. (I can't believe it's been that long!)

"What I hadn't counted on was just how much readers identified him as a police officer," Larsen told the Tribune.

Issue #145 of "The Savage Dragon" will be on sale in February just in time for the new president to give fin-head his orders. 
 

Art courtesy Erik Larsen/Image Comics
Colbert_Loses_sm.jpgAfter winning the popular vote, Stephen Colbert fell short of making his case for the Presidency to the denizens of the Marvel Universe.

The Daily Bugle initially reported Colbert as the winner. Election results later indicated that Democrat Barack Obama actually won.

President-elect Barack Obama  will be making plans to move into the White House in the Marvel Comics Universe as well our actual one. All that campaigning at the Comic-Con in San Diego last July apparently paid off.

Congratulations to President-elect Obama and my condolences to Colbert. Comic readers should keep your eyes on the Comedy Central star in 2012.


Newspaper Images Courtesy Marvel Comics and the Daily Bugle 

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