Judging a magazine by its cover

In a new issue that will hit newsstands today, the New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza has an interesting piece on the political identity Barack Obama forged in Chicago. It’s 15,000 words long, and adds details and insights I haven’t seen anywhere else.

But before anyone gets to the article, there’s the issue of the magazine’s cover to deal with.

As he flies around the country, Senator Barack Obama has a fondness for magazines. The New Yorker is often among the titles at the front of his campaign plane.

The issue this week, though, is not likely to make its way on board.

The cover of the magazine depicts Mr. Obama wearing a turban, while he offers a fist bump to his gun-toting wife. An American flag singes behind them in the fireplace.

Those closer one looks at the cover — entitled, “The Politics of Fear” — the more there is to find. Above the fireplace where an American flag burns, there’s a portrait of Osama bin Laden. Michelle Obama, carrying an AK47, is shown with her hair exaggerated into a ’70s-era afro. (I’m not going to post it here, but the cover is not hard to find. The Huffington Post published a large, easy-to-examine image of the cover.)

Asked about the cover, Obama demurred at a news conference, saying, “I have no response to that.” Soon after, campaign spokesperson Bill Burton said in a statement, “The New Yorker may think, as one of their staff explained to us, that their cover is a satirical lampoon of the caricature Senator Obama’s right-wing critics have tried to create. But most readers will see it as tasteless and offensive — and we agree.”

In a rare display of agreement between the two campaigns, McCain spokesperson Tucker Bounds told reporters, “We completely agree with the Obama campaign, it’s tasteless and offensive.”

Now, I know what the New Yorker was doing here. It’s intended as satire. The image isn’t endorsing the insane smears made against the Obamas; it’s mocking the insane smears made against the Obamas. I get it.

But there’s clever, poignant satire, and then there’s ham-fisted, garish satire that’s in poor taste. The New Yorker cover falls comfortably into the latter category.

Rachel Sklar noted:

Presumably the New Yorker readership is sophisticated enough to get the joke, but still: this is going to upset a lot of people, probably for the same reason it’s going to delight a lot of other people, namely those on the right: Because it’s got all the scare tactics and misinformation that has so far been used to derail Barack Obama’s campaign — all in one handy illustration. Anyone who’s tried to paint Obama as a Muslim, anyone who’s tried to portray Michelle as angry or a secret revolutionary out to get Whitey, anyone who has questioned their patriotism — well, here’s your image.

Exactly. Smear artists running a scurrilous right-wing magazine would presumably run the exact same image of the Obamas on their cover, too. That we know the New Yorker is poking fun hardly makes matters better.

Barry Blitt, the artist behind the cover, told the Huffington Post, “I think the idea that the Obamas are branded as unpatriotic [let alone as terrorists] in certain sectors is preposterous. It seemed to me that depicting the concept would show it as the fear-mongering ridiculousness that it is.” New Yorker editor David Remnick added that the cover targets the “absurdity” of the baseless rumors circulating about Obama.

I genuinely understand the concept; the problem is in the execution. The cover doesn’t really skewer anything — it just lists the attacks in cartoon form. Instead of highlighting the stupidity of the right-wing attacks against the Obamas, the cover advances the attacks. I’m hardly an art critic, but it seems to me that successful satire, especially in a single image, should surprise the audience with an image they hadn’t considered or thought of. The New Yorker cover falls short because it’s a cliche filled with cliches.

What’s more, there were ways to drive the point home. Kevin suggested, “If artist Barry Blitt had some real cojones, he would have drawn the same cover but shown it as a gigantic word bubble coming out of John McCain’s mouth — implying, you see, that this is how McCain wants the world to view Obama.” I was thinking something similar — maybe putting the image of the Obamas in a thought bubble above Rush Limbaugh’s head.

Instead, we see a clumsy cover that tells the joke without delivering the punch-line. I can appreciate what the New Yorker was going for, but I don’t think the editors thought this one through.

Post Script: Isaac Chotiner makes the case that the Obama campaign made a mistake in responding to the cover, thus making this a story. I’m not sure if that’s right. I don’t have an exact timeline, but I’m fairly sure that the cover was making the rounds among mainstream journalists and bloggers before the Bill Burton statement was issued. This one was going to be a story, whether the campaign commented or not.

“OBAMA BIN LADEN?”

Fix fast, please.

  • Presumably the New Yorker readership is sophisticated enough to get the joke

    I can only assume the same is true of the morning viewers of CNN and MSNBC, which have been discussing this endlessly this morning,

  • Isaac Chotiner makes the case that the Obama campaign made a mistake in responding to the cover, thus making this a story. I’m not sure if that’s right.

    I’m not sure either. The more I chew this over, the more I feel there’s actually some upside to all this, in that (1) it forces the media to confront the fact that these rumors about Obama are false — both the cable networks had angles to that effect, this morning — which is a silver lining, and (2) it lets Obama smack down the New Yorker, and thereby dispel the “elitist” nonsense.

    Hard to say whether those positives will outweigh the negatives, though.

  • I’m confident that in the spirit of even-handed jocularity “The New Yorker” will do cover of McCain aged to mummification slumped in a red white and blue wheel chair. I will not, however, hold my breath.

  • Poor widdle baby senator, unable to handle a fine piece of satire at his expense. Senator Clinton was portrayed as a liar, a triangulator and an endorser of McCain, and you all laughed and fist-jabbed each other because it was “only” a woman being mocked and trashed. Now someone has a little fun with the well-documented dangers of electing black people and everyone goes berserk. Your hypocrisy stinks.

  • Readers of The New Yorker may get it, but our brethern who watch The Colbert Report as the gospel truth will find a tailor made visual that nicely reinforces their muddled minds. -Kevo

  • I predict that magazine editors will soon discover that the only thing that sells more magazines than having Obama on the cover is having a controversial image of Obama on their cover.

    Expect more of the same cluelessness to come.

  • The way to understand the satirical element of this cover is to imagine it gracing a number of, say, The Weekly Standard. Would we be having a discussion of whether it was meant to be satirical?

  • Gee, I guess next week they’ll run a cover with a confused John McCain accidentally wiping his butt with an American flag, right?

    Nauseating is right.

  • Yeah, that was dumb. The mag is relying entirely on the context of the image to make the joke, but that’s not how it really works. The joke has to be part of the image.

  • And it fails as satire. Satire exaggerates. This image is just a visual catalog of every right-wing hit against Obama. The artist fails as a satirist, but succeeds as a right-wing propagandist.

  • Racer X said:
    Gee, I guess next week they’ll run a cover with a confused John McCain accidentally wiping his butt with an American flag, right?

    How about a cover showing a cadaverous John McCain, sitting in a wheelchair which has “wet start” style flames coming out the back that are torching his own advisers and an elephant?

  • Actually, I love this cover. It’s the perfect stealth tactic. Just think of all those right-wing scum who’ll see the cover, buy the thing, take it home, — and then read that 15,000 story. They’ll read it from word one to final punctuation, and then wonder — in that inner voice that only Clara Peller could have done in the old hamburger commercial — “Where’s the BEEF SMEAR?!?”

    Kinda like sneaking some truth about evolution into a creationist program—now isn’t it?

    *evil laughter ensues….

  • The cover is deeply offensive. Whoever approved the cover should be looking for a new job. It is very sad that Senator Obama has to run against “friendly” corporate press along with the republican press.

  • As I write, this image is being printed out and tacked up by wingnuts across the country to decorate their cubes. It won’t function as satire, merely as reinforcement.

    I don’t agree with sdh, though; I think the storm over this won’t be welcomed at The New Yorker offices. I wouldn’t be surprised if many retail locations refuse to display this cover, and I think it’ll go down very poorly with the magazine’s target audience. I’ve already heard a lot of talk of canceling subscriptions. Redstate types who will like the image aren’t likely to become The New Yorker subscribers to replace the ones this will drive away.

  • ” Racer X said: Gee, I guess next week they’ll run a cover with a confused John McCain accidentally wiping his butt with an American flag, right?”

    Either that or more likely the Constitution.

    How about showing McOld in a wheelchair shouting at the clouds?

  • Reminds me of when FoxNews kept saying- ‘It’s probably not a good idea for anyone to use Barack’s middle name HUSSEIN’… Well they kept saying it over and over in the guise of questioning if it was proper or not, by that time- “PERCEPTION CREATED and MISSION ACCOMPLISHED”. Despite the New Yorker’s attempt at addressing Obama’s media distortion by the right wing media, this has a similar overtone to it. “RE-ENFORCEMENT of already created DISTORTION”. This is very much the same.

  • This is a giant dead giraffe and the media is a pack of hyenas that will feast on this until the last bits of marrow are chewed out of the bones.

    Even shows that purport fairness will “analyze” the issue, endlessly displaying the image of the cover while their actual commentary drones on as ignorable babble to the masses, but there on the screen will be that easy-to-understand image. It reinforces all the destructive and dishonest smears about Obama, smears the media loves to mention and is always looking for new tweaks and angles, excuses to mention.

    I can see it now: BLITZER: “Obama says he’s Christian. Some disagree. More after the break…” *cue Pfizer commercial*

    The New Yorker is foolish for printing this. A curse of paper cuts upon them!

  • This cover is by the same artist who, a few months ago, showed Obama and Hillary Clinton in bed together, fighting each other for the ringing phone at 3 in the morning. That one made me laugh out loud in the bookstore. So does this.

    Did anybody think that was real? It’s a joke, folks, political cartooning bumped up a notch, directed to an audience smart enough to get it and make anyone who takes it seriously look ridiculous.

  • I FEEL THE ARTIST OF THE MAGAZINE COVER WAS JUST PUTTING INTO INK WHAT SO MANY AMERICANS FEAR. I AM NOT A SUPPORTER OF MCCAIN OR OBAMA. ITS A REAL SHAME IN A COUNTRY WITH OUR POPULATION AND SUPPOSED INTELLECT, THESE TWO MEN ARE THE BEST WE HAVE TO OFFER.

  • Back in the 70s there were a number of folks who thought Archie Bunker was a stand-up guy and that “All in the Family” was the best show on TV because it wasn’t afraid to let Archie Bunker tell the truth.

    Blitt really should have known better – the satire in this cover is too subtle. It fails the Archie Bunker test by miles and miles and miles. Reality these days is hard enough to satirize, but this wouldn’t have worked as broad satire even in the before our country went collectively batshit insane.

  • If the New Yorker wants to reach a balance in offensiveness with a McCain cover, my vote would be to show an incredibly old [i.e.: current] image of him restrained in a hospital bed attached to a number of machines which, upon close examination, are actually torture devices. His doctors and nurses could be Asian. By the bedside would be three portraits: one of his first wife in a wheelchair; another of his current wife and a portrait of a certain lobbyist. In a corner of the room would be a thousand journalists huddled around a barbecue pit.

    How’s THAT for offensive?

    New Yorker, I get the joke. But in an age where every fucking thing gets parsed to its atomic level, what on earth would make you think this was a good idea?

  • I understand the satire that The New Yorker attempted, but there are many in this country who will not. The same ones that put Bush in office…twice.

  • Wow, I find it surprising that I seem to be a minority of one on this.

    1) It is not the New Yorker’s job to consider the impact on Obama’s campaign. The New Yorker is not a partisan apparatus.

    2) Nonetheless, the New Yorker in fact has done the equivalent of the hypothesized covers about McCain several times over: few magazines have been as tough on Republicans and Republican policies, in a well-researched, well-reported way, as the New Yorker. I think they’ve hard-earned some goodwill assumptions of good faith.

    3) If the New Yorker dumbed its content – including the cover – down to the lowest common misunderstanding-proof level, it would be a far cry from The New Yorker.

    4) The satire — which I think is quite successfully evident on the cover art — is certainly given away by the title of the piece: “The Politics of Fear.” Indeed, taken as a whole – the art and the caption – I think it is brilliant. So everyone will say “but the people passing by the magazine rack won’t read the caption, which is inside the magazine!” And the laziness of non-subscribers is the New Yorker’s problem how, exactly? The magazine aimes purely at those who actually care enough to read long and literate articles. They shouldn’t care a whit about those too lazy to investigate what is really being said by the cover in the full context of the caption and the accompanying article.

    Really, it is unrealistic to think that every non-political outlet should be taking all steps to protect Obama’s campaign, and it is amazing that politicians and pundits of all stripes can take offense and slam on a magazine for illustrating the caricatures more than they have slammed on the actual caricatures – and sources thereof on the Right.

    This is a case of horribly misdirected offense. What is offensive are the rumors the New Yorker is trying to weaken by bringing them from the secret spam to the light of day. Go after the rumor mongers and Right-wing concocters of hate. Going after one of the few daring, in-depth, edgy magazines (who broke Abu Ghraib and numerous other Iraq stories, and now is at the leading edge of warning about Iran) will only result in everyone giving up and serving the public nothing by USA Today-style McNews.

    We are doing the Right Wing a huge favor by treating the New Yorker the way Obama treated Gen. Clark.

    For the love of a real press in this country, stop it!

  • Oh man. I ran out to buy the mag this morning. This cover’s gonna be a classic! woot :). I’m framing it and hanging it in my room, lol.

  • I’m just not getting it, sorry. It’s satire. It’s obvious satire. It shows up the sheer vacuousness and ridiculousness of the Right-wing smear machine. There’s virtually no chance of anyone seeing it and and seeing anything other than how ridiculous the smears are.

    I think Obama’s team are wrong to respond to this, not because it doesn’t deserve the oxygen of publicity or whatever cute phrase is used for “rising above” such things: but because they’re wrong. They’re expressing outrage at something that is not outrageous. And they look all the more stupid and humorless for doing so.

  • Anyone who reads the New Yorker on a regular basis, I am a subscriber, knows that its editorial side is a fawning Obama supporter. On the other hand, it is in the business of selling the publication. Ah, the horrors of the liberal elite showing their capitalist tendencies.

  • How did the satirist neglect to put a flag pin on, um, I’m not sure if there is a lapel…

  • Anything to sell a magazine. Can you imagine what the reaction will be in foreign countries? As if we don’t look bad enough these days.

  • Any decent commercial artist learns to step outside of his/her own ego and view the work as others might see it; the goal is communication, not self-expression. When self-critique fails, the process of editorial review is supposed to interject that outside perspective — and that’s where the New Yorker failed. When dealing with sensitive issues, you either make it absolutely clear it’s a spoof, or you start over.

  • You know, given the general reporting and the responses above, I’d say that the cartoonist has an amazing grasp of satire. You’re just wrong about the scale…

  • Anyone who holds up Kevin Drum as an expert on cojones must be sadly uninformed as to what those are. He’s just a slicker version of Richard Cohen or Yglesias, reflexively tacking toward a center that doesn’t exist while arrogating to himself the power, long exercised by the New York Times, to go out onto the sociopolitical battlefield and shoot the wounded, especially the ones “on his side”, for that is how one gains respect from our elites and their mandarins, and thus becomes eligible to join them.

    Cojones? If he has them he doesn’t know how to use them. He and the Washington Monthly, that staidly middlebrow gray journal, are perfect for each other.

  • The New Yorker ought to have a cover with Obama in a pair of track shorts going over first a red hurdle, then a blue hurdle, etc, etc… with the White House at the end.

    Run Barack! Run! Don’t let the bastards drag you down.

  • 1. Newsstand copies of The New Yorker have a second half cover advertising the major articles inside. Haven’t seen it, but I imagine “The Politics of Fear” is featured prominently.

    2. The New Yorker is hardly a “fawning Obama supporter,” in fact they published the first intelligently critical look at Obama in February of 07 (I believe by the same author as this piece, but would have to check), portraying him accurately as a process rather than issues candidate who would be unlikely to take any bold new steps to fix America’s many problems. Those who read it were alerted to what the rest of the liberal world has only discovered in the last few weeks.

    I still think he should hire the Edwards family to give him a sense of direction.

  • I made this post last night over @ americablog, but since I’m lazy and since I thought the same thing Kevin was thinking, AND because I’m redundant, AND because I’m redundant, here it is:

    As far as satire goes, I “get it.” What bothers me is that, as smart as the new Yorker staff seems to think it is, they should’ve known that this picture would resonate with low-information voters. And I don’t strictly mean low-information Republican voters, I mean just low-information voters. How many of them are readers of the New Yorker? How many of them really understand their breed of humor, of satire? I fear most people will take it on face value, and think it is a comment on the Obamas, and not on the cowards in the GOP who fuel these stereotypes on them.

    As someone who has tried (and failed) a number of times to be creative in a number of different disciplines, I know how obnoxious it is to hear someone tell you what would’ve made your play/monologue/song/production “better.” Now, having said that, imagine how all the ambiguity would’ve cease to be a factor had the Obama-as-white-America’s-nightmare image been drawn to look like a dream from a pants-wetting doughy white guy, his nightcap designed to look like a Klan robe, a double-barreled shotgun obviously under the pillow and a bedspread that looked suspiciously like the Confederate flag. I mean, they’re feeding every known stereotype of the Obamas in one image, so why not add in every known stereotype of the voter who’d believe those images to make the point crystal clear. As it stands, like many of us here, I worry that the image will be used as right-wing website wallpaper, copied and pasted, out of context, to mailboxes throughout America with comments like “Even the Jew Yorker gets what the Obamas are REALLY up to, wake up America! Vote McCain!” Why they’d publish a piece of “satire” that could so easily be used as recruitment propaganda by the very group they’re satirizing shows a lack of foresight I find quite troubling, as if they didn’t want to be accused of self-censorship by being too chicken to publish the image (of course, had they not published the image, who’d know beyond a few members of the staff?) I just find it a tremendous misstep, and even if they mount a tremendous effort to explain away the point behind the cartoon, publish it in their next issue, on their website, offer interviews with the publisher or editor or cartoonist, have critics weighing in with opinions on various talk shows, it won’t make a lick of difference. Low-info voters will remember the image, and it will resonate more than any subsequent discussion.

    I can only hope that there’s a followup image of McCain, and it’s equally as brutal. Otherwise, come November, the GOP just might be writing a big ol’ thank you to the New Yorker…before accusing them of being dangerous liberal media again.

    Sometimes, there’s a fine line between fearless and reckless. You can cross it without even knowing it. You can hope the people will get it, but it can awfully lonely when they don’t. Ask Lenny Bruce.

  • IFP @ 7–“Now someone has a little fun with the well-documented dangers of electing black people and everyone goes berserk.”
    Could we please have examples of these well-documented dangers?

    “There’s virtually no chance of anyone seeing it and and seeing anything other than how ridiculous the smears are.”
    If only that were true, we probably wouldn’t be in the mess we are today.

  • The American public generally is not clued into satire. When I first came to this country from Ireland, I was constantly having to say, ” I am not serious, I’m just having fun”. This could work in several European countries but not in the Untied States. The Republicans will take delight in this cover. I just recently heard on NPR the comments on some women who had been Democrats but were going to vote for McCann because of Obama being a Muslim etc, they believed all the nonsense that was “out there”. So this will increase the nonsense. I am a suscriber to the New Yorker , I have even cut out and kept the cover with Clinton and Obama in bed fighting for the “red phone” during the night”. I loved it. But this is a mistake I feel.

  • I have not changed my mind, for the first time ever I will not vote democratic. Obama and his hateful racist wife can take a flying leap.

  • Oh well. Everyday, another one bites it, and New Yorker editor David Remnick took a chance, and sucked it. This corrosive right wing weaponry is all fun and games until somebody puts several pairs of eyes out – and consequently loses thousands of subscriptions. I mean, here we are, on the brink of a freaking depression, and the New Yorker chooses to give fear and hate unnecessary momentum. The details are impressive. I mean, c’mon – American Flag burning in the fireplace? It is more than a shame that Remnick couldn’t find a better use of this one fine publication’s time, talent and influence. I love a good dose of satire. Thank God for Mad Magazine!

  • 44. On July 14th, 2008 at 10:51 am, Pat Doran said:
    The American public generally is not clued into satire.
    __________________

    Most recent exhibit: Georgette Orwell @ 43.

  • In the interest of freedom of the press this cover is an example of public discourse. Satire as understood in past centuries is alive and well in America. As it is understood in 2008 by the spoon fed listeners of America, its a nasty little cartoon. And make no mistake, we are are a nation of listeners not thinkers. We are trained to believe all the hipe of the advertisers about products spewed forth from a television screen. We have been trained to think “political kindness” about so many things we forget the emperor just might not be really clothed in truth and honesty, or that a thief is a thief, or that a bully is a nasty piece of work because he is a bully. If you select your magazine content by only its cover and never read the information inside then you are a listener. Freedom of the Press needs people who read not just view. Censorship will not be far behind if “political kindness” takes precedence over reading all sides of an issue and deciding for yourself. Please really listen to what you are hearing and make sure you are really seeing what you are looking at. Be a responsible citizen.

  • because everyone knows only a person who is running for president of the US really hates America.

  • The sad thing is that the ignorant majority who voted in the current captains of doom will look at the picture, go no further to either read the article or investigate the implications, but build up their own bliss of ignorance and no doubt look to Fox, the WWF of news, for reinforcement and surely get it….

  • Rick Hertzberg went on MSNBC this morning to defend the piece and there was a telling moment when the anchor showed him the recent Newsweek poll showing absurd levels of people believe Obama attended a madrassa as a child and swore in as senator on the Quran. He expressed dismay and befuddlement that so many people would believe things that are demonstrably untrue.

    And this is the problem with the whole decision-making process at the New Yorker over this cover. They sit in their offices in New York City surrounded by the urbane and satirical and think, “hey, what a great way to show up the right-wing smears.” THEY are the ones who don’t get it. They actually believed they were being clever like Colbert! Instead, the images come off as racist and smear-perpetuating. The whole thing is deeply disappointing from a publication I like and have subscribed to for years.

  • What a shameful and unworthy cover adorns the latest issue of NEW YORKER, a magazine with such a stellar reputation! The magazine cover tries to push the satirical envelope to the limit. What it achieves is an incendiary display of racial bigotry in one of its most perverse forms–sophisticated subtlety! How horrifying to see this hurtful work directed against Senator Obama and his wife published in our own cherished New York community. Sad. Shortsighted. Bigoted. Harmful. How shameful, NEW YORKER! How tearfully shameful! . . .

  • I think its funny. If they get all huffy puffy this early about satire then imagine what SNL has in store should he be elected. Is that an upside? Face it, either bothers you or it doesn’t. Would have been even funnier if the clintons were in it and michael moore was there with a camera. Could have read “post DNC clintons with thier family friends the Obama’s”. I think Dana Carvey nailed it in his latest HBO show. The guy has the most Unmarketable name for a presidential candidate. LOL @ Barack Hussein Obama!

  • Being from NYC I can swallow and digest the intent with this cartoon. But presently living in the rural south and having experienced receiving offensive emails that literally describe what this images is trying to spoof (but ends up implying) I don’t think that The New Yorker has any idea the effect this will have on ignorant areas like the one I presently live in.

    REDNECKS WILL LOVE THIS!
    WHY THE COVER?

  • I’m a little surprised that Liberals would think most Republicans would be happy about the add its tasteless. But now I understand. Liberals seem in fact to be fools. Filled with hate. Thanks for making it clearing things up.

  • Except for the “all caps” I have to agree with Aimee Hayes on this one. Insulting? Welcome to the American political arena. Insulting are those who assume that most Americans are not imformed, stupid and need someone else to tell them what’s going on, if you don’t believe me, just go back and re-read all the smug comments…..Left-wing? Right wing? I thought you needed both wings to fly?

  • Stupid, all the way around. Just like most Americans. Good job New Yorker, titillate all kinds of idiots! Nauseating indeed.

  • Geez, you lefties are a bunch of thin skinned pc nazi’s. Cover would have looked better on Vanity Fair. Everybody gets what the cover is supposed to mean. Typical elitest fashion, thinking that all americans should act just like them. Its called freedom of speach. Since when do magazines have a moral and ethical responsibility to supress what percieved southerners intelectual diet should consist of. Your level of imposed self importance is directly proportional to the magazine covers over achievment. There is the true portrait.

  • I am a suscriber to the New Yorker , I have even cut out and kept the cover with Clinton and Obama in bed fighting for the “red phone” during the night”. I loved it. But this is a mistake I feel.

    Of course you loved, it because it supported a phenomenon you find attractive: black men constantly seeking to sleep with white women who are their betters intellectually, socially and culturally, both to “stick it” to white men and to dominate white women. But when the same cartoonist addresses an equally credible stereotype — black people irresponsibly ruling America with an eye to oppressing white people through fear and aggression — you start huffing and puffing. Double standard.

  • Now wait just a minute here. I have been a reader of the NEW YORKER for many years, and it has been consistently perhaps the most progressive ‘general interest’ magazine out there. (Remember this is the magazine that not only broke the Aby Gharib story but — going back much further, broke the My Lai story. Sy Hersh has, in fact, been a staple of THE NEW YORKER. And it’s other political commentary has been consostently anti-War, anti-Republican, etc.)

    Yes, it HAS been consistently pro-Obama, but sensibly so, the entire campaign.

    Most of the covers it runs do not make political points — and frequently when they do, they get misinterpreted. Remember when Hillary made the “3 A.M.” claim, they ran a cover showing the two candidates in bed together, both reaching for the phone. (The title was “I’ll Get it!” It ran on the Mar. 17th issue, for those of you, apparently a majority, who don’t read it regularly — and are missing, among other things, a brilliant discussion on what is wrong with the Republican’s philosophy about health service.)

    The idea that this would ‘affect its readers’ is pretty laughable — the one group that would never read the NEW YORKER are ‘low-information voters.’ So is the idea that this was some ploy to get readers — or to appease the supposed ‘corporate masters’ that out more ignorant populist commenters continue to see lurking behind everything — is simply nonsense.

    As for its ‘effect on newsstand readers’, as someone pointed out, newsstand copies have a ‘half-cover’ that obscures the entire right half of any cover, and which have large-print headlines that are — as they are meant to be — the ‘attention grabbers.’ (And, like most magazines, the NEW YORKER depends for most of its revenue on subscription readers and ad sales, not on newsstand readers.)

    –Daze, you are not a majority of one. You got it right. Unfortunately the commenters here — who are getting more and more hysterical every day now that they are in the unusual (in fact unique as far as the “Left Blogosphere” is concerned since it created itself in response to GWB) position of having someone to say positive things about. Much more surprising is that it was Steve — who usually ‘gets things’ — who missed the boat on this one.

  • Smart people would get the joke, unfortunately considering the sheer number of people who believe in one, more, or all (not matter how contradictory) of these memes this cover may not have been the best executed.

    The nutjob paranoids on the right are going to use the cover (no matter the intent of the New Yorker) as their screen saver or dart board at best or as a genuine image to push the memes further at worst.

  • Prup, try to keep up. This cover has dominated every cable news show and every MSM website all morning, as it will throughout the week. This isn’t about newsstands and subscriptions, and it sure as hell isn’t about this cover’s effect on regular readers.

    People of good will and decent analytical skill can disagree on whether this cover is an example of effective satire. But let’s not be naive about the extent of who’s going to see it and what effect it’s going to have on a large proportion of those who do.

  • I recently did a presentation that included the New Yorker cover with Obama and H. Clinton in bed together (I held it up without comment and the room convulsed) and several cartoons from “The Art of Ill Will,” a history of American political cartooning. One was a Sydney Griffin cartoon from 1893 called “Between Two Loves,” depicting a tattered black man carrying two watermelons and staring at a chicken. I contrasted it with a New Yorker cartoon from 1934 showing a mother holding up her daughter to see over a large crowd. The caption was “This is her first lynching.”

  • I think when the New Yorker found out that the American people was not going stand for this piece of crap they printed, they changed it to, we just want to show how ignorant people are to think Obama is a Muslim. What about Mrs. Obama with the AK47, what does that depict. All of you racist out there I don’t even think any of this stuff is going to stop Obama from winning the election. But I was really offended with when I saw this on MSNBC this morning. What have our Country come to.

  • This cover is just a racist smear.

    Let’s not get carried away. “A really bad idea poorly executed” is much more accurate.

  • The number of people bringing up the 3 a.m. cartoon as though no one else has mentioned it is pretty strong evidence that many people aren’t bothering to read the other comments before charging into this thread.

  • Political satire is often way beyond the mental capacities of the uneducated. Back in 1964, a few of us in a splinter group called Americans to Defeat Goldwater staged a small public anti-Goldwater demonstration in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. One of the hostile hecklers called me a “nazi communist.” I thought, hmm, that just about covers everything… I learned back then that political satire on protest signs goes way past many people and often gives the wrong message.

  • As America is learning about Obama; something that is said against Obama or graphically displayed in what one could consider poor taste is judged by his associates as a political smear. For sure it was fun to smear Phil Gram but for anyone to make fun of Obama. Back off buster.

    Though, to be sure Obama and his wife are facing America’s “free based culture” of satire, good or bad, raises questions to bring reality in view. We all wonder what Colbert is smoking don’t we, or any of those writers and first line Journalist. They are the last persons really challenged to be drug tested. That with a giggle because remember this is a satirical critique.

    Here, very vividly in cartoon version the New Yorker does its job to jog your mind, and fuel the rhetoric along with sales. For me one thing stands out, and one can recall the cartoon of Iran’s leadership cartooned by some European news paper that infuriated the Islamic World. Then, a wave of controversy, and apologies transpired that even suggested satire like this is taken as a deep insult.

    Perhaps the effects of the world are really written on the subway walls, or cartoons like this are Gaffed truthiness that always punches through. Or worse this cartoon could easy mean “The Jihad Wants You” posted in Islam’s new version of the Quran. Yikes, with Michelle as munitions procurator of the Obama Empire. Holy smokes.

    So we could say many things have been accomplished beside trying to get the truth out, one could say the New Yorker, on their political hunting trip accidently shot Obama in the face. Or themselves in the head. Or, in sympathy with Jesse Jackson helped to cut off Obama’s nuts by illustrating how Obama talks down to Black America and the Farrakhan friends of the family. Sheesh and we wonder about the right wing grabbing this magazine. Hell the presses are rolling all over the Islamic world they are running out ink. Now we have another shortage, is that the real reason for war to drive the price up in rag ink.

    For me much of Obama saying of change is flying in the face of Obama. Case in point, seriously though, some things the “electorate should change” or given the opportunity is giving up any civil liberties while putting the Constitution to the test in War or Peace. It’s not Obama, or Bush and Company’s inherent right to do what they want in any intrusive way about my life especially when it concerns the public electromagnetic domain in War or Pease. America’s Constitution is the resilience to work either way. Obama and Bush have shown they don’t care what the electorate thinks.

    Voting for the FISA bill shows Obama’s deep depth of dismissal to the fundamentals of not only the citizen’s right to participate in the government it elected, but to “aid” in giving up the basics in “Oath” and “Affirmation” destroys the essence of the Constitution sets freedom back some say to the age before the Magna Carta. Here, the King was challenge in the age of 1215 people. Notably the writ of habeas corpus, allowing appeal against unlawful imprisonment. The Magna Carta was the most significant early influence on the extensive historical process that led to the rule of constitutional law today. Magna Carta influenced the development of the common law and many constitutional documents, such as the United States Constitution.

    Where as we the people are the fountain of power. So, this is my presentation and argument against either Obama or McCain to be president.

  • Just think of all those right-wing scum who’ll see the cover, buy the thing, take it home, — and then read that 15,000 story.

    You lost me at “read.” They don’t read anything and certainly would not read 15,000 words.

  • I get the point. It’s obviously satire. I guess my best response is that it is pretty hamhanded. I think the joke would have been far more effective to have that image on a sketchboard being drawn by some conservative with a few right-wing journals strewn about and Fox News on the TV.

  • Several people made the comments that I did as I wrote, but I have to make one thing a little plainer. For those of you who are going “Ohmigod, what will the rednecks say!” the answer is that they will never see this cover — unless they hear it discussed on the news — and apparently all of the discussion has been on how false the pictures are — the artist’s point.

    The fact is that, while THE NEW YORKER may have national newsstand distribution, it’s not the sort of magazine that’s sent to “Maw and Paw’s Country Store — vittles, bait and ammo” — to play the stereotype for all it’s worth. Nor, for that matter, would the people who shop there be likely to look at it — or fold back the cover — and be shocked. They are as unlikely to be interested in it as they would be in buying a house on Kiawah Island, renting an Italian Villa, or answering the other ads the magazine runs.

    (Btw, the idea that ‘Americans don’t get satire’ is belied every day, or every night when they listen to the ‘monologues’ which slash everyone pretty equally.)

    I just picked up the issue with the famous ‘In Bed” cover — which i loved, and which didn’t get the sort of furor that the writers here apparently would have expected. I turned to their opening “Talk of the Town’ section, mostly looking for ads to use above, and found the following — remember this was in March:

    Meanwhile he [McCain] can continue to tack between the two stylistic identities that have gotten him where he is today — the rebel and the regular… the ‘maverick’ and the ‘conservative’ — without veering so far to one side that he forfeits the advantages of the other.

    Over the years, McCain has performed this delicate task with some success, pairing up positions like Noah bringing animals aboard the ark. He plumped for lobbying reform but has lobbyists running his campaing. He opposed enacting Bush’s tax cuts for the rich but supports extending them indefinitely. He supported a ‘patients’ bill of rights’ but refuses to treat health care as itself a right. He voted against banning same-sex marriage in the Constitution but favors banning it state by state…

    no process for making one, ‘merely a process to find a process'” (emphasis mine))

    That sort of demolition of McCain has been standard, as was the pieces on Hillary that were probably stronger than the pieces here. But tell me how many ‘rednecks’ (in the stereotypical sense you’ve been using the term) would find such writing even comprehensible,or the reasoning followable. That’s why the magazine doesn’t pop up in newstands in the areas they live in.

    In fact, some of you live in rural areas, or in Southern cities. Will you kindly, if you are going shopping, try and find a copy of THE NEW YORKER and report back to us on your success?

    I keep on being amazed at the level of paranoia, conclusion-jumping, and willingness to attack people who are your strongest allies that i keep finding here.

    Over the years McCain has performed this delicate task

  • to megalomania,

    Well said. “We the people”. Who am I to stand against a tidal wave alone. Hell, look what happened to King. Choose your king. Interesting times we live in.

  • The New Yorker cover was “hateful” and disappointing. I am an Independant and this has made up my mind. I will vote for Obama! This country has spent too many years destroying the lives of African-American people, haven’t we? I will never buy a New Yorker again. I’m ashamed of the people that would allow this to be published. What does that say about the United States of America? I thought we were further along with race relations, I am ashamed of all the white bigots among us. Please know that we are all not racist and evil.

    Bonnie

  • First, oops for that last line floating loose, it was from the paragraph above.

    Second, the reason (responding to maria @69) so many people repeat the same thing is that it takes time to write a post and while you are writing it, other posts go up that you never saw — especially if you are as long-winded as I am.

    As for the comment from Maria @64, according to Steve — I’m too busy commenting — and changing the cat boxes, a lengthy process — to check the shows myself — all of the comments on them are stressing how false and ridiculous the accusations are. In short, this might just turn out to be a major weapon on our side, as I’d expect the cartoon editor realized. The simple level of exaggeration in itself makes the claims, singly and in toto, look as ridiculous as they are.

  • They’ll read it, looking for dirt on Obama in a Progressive magazine, gttim. Some of them might even get the message that the article seeks to deliver.

    As for the “low information voter” nonsense, are we so anxious to drift back to the old Big-State strategy? Because if everyone wants to start playing the intellectual litmus-test game, then Obama ought to just pack it in right now, and concede the election.

    Stop giving people reasons to vote for McCain by giving them reasons not to vote for Obama!

  • I have to make one thing a little plainer. For those of you who are going “Ohmigod, what will the rednecks say!” the answer is that they will never see this cover — unless they hear it discussed on the news — and apparently all of the discussion has been on how false the pictures are — the artist’s point.

    Prup, you appear to be oblivious to the scope and reach of chain emails and the significant effect they’re having on low-information voters’ impressions of and beliefs about Obama. I assure you that Obama is not; hence his attempts (which are, sadly, fated to be only mildly effective) to fight these below-the-radar smears via the special website.

    The New Yorker cover, minus the discussion of satire accompanying it on cable news, has already hit the email factories. No doubt you’ll condescendingly dismiss the significance of this because it’s yet another thing you’re not personally aware of. You’ll again be wrong to do so.

    (And lay off the patronizing insults, fella–you seem to have no idea how inappropriate pompous bombast is coming from someone who has to be corrected as frequently as you do…almost always without, I note, your acknowledgment of the correction, which further erodes credibility.)

  • Bonnie Lemmons, while I’ll always be glad to hear of anyone choosing to vote for Obama, will you kindly look at the cover, realize how satirical it is, and then will you pick up the magazine, or any past issue this year and read the political commentary. You will find a magazine that has been on the ‘right side’ of almost every issue it discussed — going back, as I say, to MyLai, which first came out in THE NEW YORKER, as did Abu Gharaib. They have destroyed the Republican position on health care — with facts and logic, not with the sort of name-calling that so resounds in these comments. In fact, I pulled out a small pile of recent issues, looking for the “3 A.M.” cover. (The picture — not cartoon but line-drawing — of McCain that was included in the article on McCain I mentioned is itself devastating, and I wish i could reproduce it here.)

    I’m going to take a little time and check these issues, pulled, literally at random, and report on just what the magazine HAS been saying.

    See you in a bit — with breaks for changing soakings, etc.

  • Here’s the deal. If you aren’t already a believer in the Obama is unpatriotic Osama supporting Muslim married to an angry black woman myth, then this cover isn’t going to suddenly convert to that point of view.

    If you buy the myth and use cover to try to convince other of the righteousness of your ignorance, you aren’t going have a higher success rate than if you stuck to chain emails.

    Where is the damage?

  • I agree fully with Steve@78.

    This was a really stupid thing for the New Yorker to do. “Satire” doesn’t play well outside of New York.

  • During the 2000 elections, I wonder if they would’ve considered running a similar satirical cover with the VP candidate Joe Lieberman showing all the bad, crude stereotypes of Jewish people as a way to lampoon all the anti-Semites and conspiracy theorists?

  • If the article was 15,000 words long – then a picture must be worth 30,000 words!

    And this is what Obama gets from what little there is of the ‘liberal’ media.

  • Just in the March 17th issue alone (to go through some NEW YORKERSas I promised to) we have a devastating portrait of Hillary’s campaigning against Obama. I wish i could take the time to copy the whole first paragraph, which ends “The charges might have been, at best, a distortion of Obama’s positions…”

    Then we have in the one page humor section “Shouts & Murmurs”

    SENATOR HOTHEAD: THE McCAIN QUIZ Every single answer, true or false, is vicious. (Among things referred to, sometimes in ‘wrong answers’ — meaning not referring to the person in the question — are McCain’s first marriage break-up, Cindy’s drug addiction and stealing drugs, McCain’s use of “Shut up, fucking jerk, and fuck you” (question: match the phrase to who McCain said it to), one question asks which of the following is true (The ‘correct answer to the question is “He used to be against Bush’s tax cuts and overturning Roe v. Wade and for allowing illegal immigrants to earn citizenship, but now he’s for extending the tax cuts and overturning Roe v. Wade and avoids talking about illegal immigrants earning citizenship.”) connections between Cindy and Charles Keating, the fact that, after condemning the ‘swift boat ads’ he hired the agency behind them, etc.,etc. even Pat Buchanan’s statement “He will make Cheney look like Gandhi”)

    That’s just one issue. Check out the article on waterboarding (in relation to the Phillipine insurgency of over 100 years ago — but it has it’s barbs for today) in the Feb 25th issue.Read the indepth (good and bad included — and explained) article on Trinity and Rev Wright in the April 7th issue.

    I can go on and on, but while they might not be perfect — hell who is, even I am occasionally wrong — that was a joke, Maria, btw — they are as consistently right at least as often as Keith is.

    Sorry i couldn’t take more time on this.

  • Where is the damage? — rege @81

    What if the cover depicted HRC killing Vince Foster?

    For that matter, what would the reaction have been to a cover depicting a wild-eyed Bush mowing down Iraqi civilians while shouting, “Freedom is on the March!” — which happens to be closer to the truth than this Obama cover.

  • rede @81: exactly, and thanks

    rufus starr @83: They didn’t run that particular cover — and there wasn’t a nationwide whispering campaign against Joe Lieberman using anti-semitic stereotypes to be mocked — but they have run several covers that have had them accused of anti-Semitism by people who did not see the satire.

    me (unimportant, but I hate doing this) please remove the apostrophe from ‘it’s’

    maria — please don’t confuse pompousness — I’d claim my age except that I was pompous in the 3rd grade — with patronizing. If I have been the latter, it wasn’t meant and I apologize.

  • again, who are we (and why would we want to) call on The New Yorker to dumb down their humor out of concerns about “what the rednecks will think” or “what the right-wing chain-email factories will do with it”? You can like The New Yorker or not, but this cover is pretty consistent with what The New Yorker has always been; no one should be in meltdown about it. But more important:

    1) Who gives a f*ck? The New Yorker doesn’t owe the Obama campaign anything. I can’t believe people here are acting like this is some kind of betrayal. Do people really feel such a sense of entitlement about Obama that he is immune from edgy coverage of his campaign as a current event?
    2) Why should The New Yorker dumb down its satire? I note that everyone here – educated, sophisticated lot that we are – seems to have gotten it whether they are pleased it ran or not. I don’t want a dumber New Yorker – we have more than enough simplistic media, thankyouverymuch.
    3) Rednecks and Right-wing chain mailers are not The New Yorker’s target audience, so why should The New Yorker care what they think?

    This outrage-based campaign season has gotten way out of hand. CNN Ticker had just run a headline over the weekend about whether Obama was coming off too preachy – this isn’t going to help. He had a great opportunity to go with the paraody, make it a teaching aid – “yeah, this is exactly how some Republicans describe me, and it is a cartoon, and they really have no credibility when they paint me as a cartoon but they do it because they’d rather not discuss the issues facing this country. . .”

  • daze,

    You are not getting it. It is tone deaf. It plays into the stereotype that blacks are not true patriots. Moreover, the exaggerated facial features of Michelle Obama reminds me of the Sambo illustrations. If the Britt wanted to lampoon the Right then depict Rush, Michael Savage, etc instead of the Obamas. It is very obvious that they were so enrapt with their cleverness that they didn’t realize that they had a dud in their hands.

  • it is only tone deaf if you think The New Yorker should worry first and foremost about Obama supporters liking the tone. I get perfectly well that some people will look at the cover and take it serioulsy and think “exactly! that’s why i’d never vote for him!” As rege said above, those people weren’t, under any circumstances, voting for Obama anyway. So no, I don’t really care about those people. But the art precisely captures what the caption promises: “The Politics of Fear.” everyone suggestingthe cover should have included Limbaugh, or McCain, or some conservatives – you know, if you have to explain the joke, it usually ceases to be funny. Putting those people on with a thought balloon totally dumbs down the satire – it becomes so obvious, requires so little thought, that is is beneath The New Yorker.

    Seriously, the commenters all seem to think The New Yorker is supposed to be some propaganda arm for the Obama Campaign, and should only do things that are typical political ads: simple, idiot-proof, mass-consumption sound-bites that unambiguously help Obama and hurt McCain. That isn’t The New Yorker’s role nor would I want it to be.

  • Steve,
    Right-wing scum don’t read. The picture tells the story–the story is untrue, and The New Yorker tells the lie via a piss-poor cartoonist who does not understand satire. Normally, I don’t criticize until I’ve had the time to read, peruse, and view…but in this case, the cartoon goes too far, misses satire, and I for one, will never put a penny of my hard earned cash or credit toward the purchase of this publication…I believe strongly in boycotts!

  • beep52, in response to my question, “where is the damage?”, you offer hypothetical questions which don’t seem to shed much light on your stance. Are you suggesting that the cover was in bad taste? Good satire almost always is.

    In fact, Hillary shooting Vince Foster might have made a good satire. Had enough people made fun of wingnuts ten years ago, we may not have to be dealing with their latest stupidity.

    Your Bush suggestion likely would not make good satire, since it would have been little more than an unsubtle propaganda poster.

  • see, this is exactly what I am talking about.

    if The Left boycotts the most thoroughly researched anti-BushCo periodical on the market — the magazine that has consistently offered the best researched critiques of Bush’s (il-)legal policies, the most prominent magazine sounding the early warning about the US “preparing the battleground” in Iran through covert operations, why should any media give a damn about The Left?

    When clueless reactionaries like Joyce drive The New Yorker out of business, all we’ll have left is Ron Fournier’s new AP. Then who will tell the truth about Abu Ghraib? Who will sound the alarm on Iran? (Sort of like Obama and Gen. Clark – who will call McCain on his irrelevant exploitation of his POW status now that Clark got neutered for his troubles?)

    Seriously, our side needs to get some perspective before we really screw it all up – this election, the media, any chance of being taken seriously.

  • I am squishily torn about this. I have to wonder if the Obama campaign could have set a different tone if it had responded by declaring the cover to be a satirical study of many of the detestable lies that are presently circulating about Senator Obama and his wife. Maybe they should put it on their fight-the-smear web site as a road map of the false fear mongering. Perhaps such a response would help to fix it the cover absolutely as satire in the media discussion.

    OTOH, I believe there are times when satire can reinforce conventional wisdom rather than spike it (Darrel Hammond’s representations of the sighing Al Gore in the first 2000 debate for example). I do not hold out any hope that anyone who is inclined to believe any one of the many lies depicted in the cover will pick up and read with any sort of open mind the article for which the cover was drawn. For the ditto heads of the world it will provide some gleeful afirmation of a decision made long ago and immutable. I am not sure the cover will be a deciding factor for those who honestly have not made a decision between Obama and McCain. My hope is that it will cause some discussion that will expose the absurdity of the lies Fox News and others in the media of the same ilk help to initiate and spread – however “subtly.”

  • I’m sort of with Steve #17 here, and no doubt some other less squeamish commenters I’ve had to jump over. Nice image of infiltrating the right-wing cubes with real truth about their hate object. May be optimistic but will do no harm.

    Basically, there are two approaches to smear — cover it up or blow it up. Clearly this cover blows it up. You grab your opponent’s whispered smears, amplify and broadcast them, and everyone shrugs and says “So what?”, and the smears die a natural death through exposure to sun and air.

    The alternative of “hush, hush; oh dear! how terrible; cover it up; it’s all lies” won’t work. It lacks the disinfecting potency of reductio ad absurdum, which the New Yorker makes a blunt stab at. Personally, I think the editor, David Remnick, got it right when he let this cover go though. It will kill those smears more surely than any long-winded intellectual debunking which no one is paying attention to anyway, simply by its blatant absurdity and impossibility.

    As time goes on, more sophisticated versions of the intention of this cartoon will emerge, but as an opening salvo it blows the smears to smithereens by rubbing everyone’s nose in them.

  • Maybe if the cartoon had zoomed out a little, showing Obama sitting in his living room, looking at the cover, somewhat puzzled. In the background, his wife reading something, his kids watching Access Hollywood of the Obama’s enjoying a normal July Fourth picnic. Burning in the fireplace, a stack of similar New Yorker magazines, fake emails, etc. On the coffee table, clippings from NYT and WaPo editorial pages, above the fireplace, a replica of the US Declaration of Independence.

  • 81. On July 14th, 2008 at 1:08 pm, rege said:
    Here’s the deal. If you aren’t already a believer in the Obama is unpatriotic Osama supporting Muslim married to an angry black woman myth, then this cover isn’t going to suddenly convert to that point of view.

    If you buy the myth and use cover to try to convince other of the righteousness of your ignorance, you aren’t going have a higher success rate than if you stuck to chain emails.

    Where is the damage?

    _____________________

    Well, for starters, it’s a distraction. News outlets have been discussing it throughout the day instead of more substantive issues (although, I’m sure, were it not for this imag,e they would’ve found some other distraction to use to avoid talking about the news). Second of all, it creates yet another lose-lose-LOSE scenario for Obama. To take offense at the picture means the right can attack him as a crybaby who can’t take a little good-natured ribbing…from the new Yorker no less! Why, they’re practically an arm of Obama’s campaign! But if he ignores it, then he’s askeered to address the issues the image provokes. And if he tries to have some fun with it, even at his own expense, the right wing media will spin it as Obama admitting all the things the image he says about them are true, why, if they weren’t, he’d be defending himself!

  • But the art precisely captures what the caption promises: “The Politics of Fear.”

    It does. And both the cover and the headline have fuck-all to do with the story, which you may figure out if you bother to read it. So the point of running them would be…?

    Seriously, the commenters all seem to think The New Yorker is supposed to be some propaganda arm for the Obama Campaign, and should only do things that are typical political ads: simple, idiot-proof, mass-consumption sound-bites that unambiguously help Obama and hurt McCain.

    There’s no “the commenters all think” in this thread, and clumsily conflating varying views doesn’t confer much weight to your argument. Indeed, while accusing others of going around the bend, you seem to be the most overwrought commenter in this thread–what’s up with that? As far as I’ve noticed, most people are simply questioning The New Yorker’s judgment in running this cover, not calling for boycotts or similar melodrama. Stop making silly sweeping statements, won’t you?

    I’m having trouble, by the way, reconciling your spirited defense of “perspective” with your extremely unrestrained attack on slappy magoo the other day, assuming that his somewhat anachronistic use of the phrase “retarded children” was an attack on the developmentally disabled despite the context seeming to indicate the opposite. Can we agree that powerful words and images evoke emotional reactions–and that those reactions may vary from person to person no matter how strenuously one argues that his interpretation is the only valid one?

  • re rege @ 92:

    For an attempt at satire to be successful (the threshold, I would think, for being considered satire), there must be evidence that author or illustrator is ridiculing or deriding that which is being portrayed. When such evidence is lacking or unclear, the attempt can actually reinforce what the author/illustrator actually disapproves of. That is the problem with the New Yorker cover — it exaggerates but does not ridicule.

    That was the point of my hypotheticals; that without revealing my intent, neither were satirical. On the face of each, however, I would interpret them differently than you did. The first (Clinton, Foster) I would label propaganda, since their was no underlying truth. The second (Bush) I would consider as in poor taste and approaching satire (the relationship between Bush’s claims vs the outcome portrayed), but not propaganda since Bush’s claim and the outcome are both based in observable fact.

    Lastly, I don’t see that the accompanying article nor other articles the magazine may have published in the past have anything to do with a critique of this cover, which like any other cover, should be able to stand on it’s own.

  • Second of all, it creates yet another lose-lose-LOSE scenario for Obama. To take offense at the picture means the right can attack him as a crybaby who can’t take a little good-natured ribbing…from the new Yorker no less!…But if he ignores it, then he’s askeered to address the issues the image provokes. And if he tries to have some fun with it, even at his own expense, the right wing media will spin it as Obama admitting all the things the image he says about them are true, why, if they weren’t, he’d be defending himself!

    Precisely. Which is why, all in all, Obama probably would have been best off taking TuiMel’s advice:

    I have to wonder if the Obama campaign could have set a different tone if it had responded by declaring the cover to be a satirical study of many of the detestable lies that are presently circulating about Senator Obama and his wife.

  • Sloppy writing from me at 98–should have been:

    I’m having trouble, by the way, reconciling your spirited defense of “perspective” with your extremely unrestrained attack on slappy magoo the other day when you assumed that his somewhat anachronistic use of the phrase “retarded children” was an attack on the developmentally disabled despite the context seeming to indicate the opposite.

    It sounded as though I were making the assumption–not so, and as far as I know no one but -daze was.

  • I’m pretty sure Obama and crew are having a good laugh at this cover today.

    And Michelle looks pretty hot.

  • If Obama can’t laugh at himself from a harmless satirical cartoon that’s meant to be funny, then he’s way too serious to be president of the U.S. As a Democrat, I have grave concerns over Obama’s ability to lead this country, especially through the war on terror. The fact that he’s unhumorous, and to be frank, rather grim at times, only confirms my belief. I don’t think I’ve seen the man smile more than once or twice. He needs to lighten up and learn to take a joke.

  • I believe The New Yorker is being far more shrewed than the obvious satire. All these lunatic accusations concerning Obama have been circulating just below the consciousness of Americans. These rumors were started by desperate and morally bankrupt Republican stratagists, rumors that sort of took on a life of their own and were passed almost as if by whisper looking for a foothold. None of these rumors where fully vetted in the main stream press until now. This cover on The New Yorker will, in my opinion, go a long way to kill the rumor mill because now the light of truth will be shown on them.

  • What bullshit! The mid-west won’t bother to read the article but will just glimpse the picture sitting there on the very visible news stand and imprint it in their minds. Obama = Osama.

    This was a shameless act of stupidity which would be as tasteful as a depiction of a yellow McCain having his toes tickled by his captors and laughingly singing out how much he hates America and how bad America is. Or a picture of Bush and McCain and OBL in bed under the sheets making love.

    It that were the picture on the cover of the NY we’d have Lieberman leading a sense of the senate vote condemning the NYmagazine as a terrorist organization.

    Where’s the condemnation similar to the Petraeus – Betray-us satire? Move on.org was after all being satirical too. To put the democratic nominee in a turban with the potential first lady brandishing an AK-47 and the flag burning on the front cover a national magazine and calling it ‘satire’ is pathetic and disgusting. There is no justification for this behavior and it speaks volumes to how low and embarrassing the media thinking has become to think this tasteless depiction was appropriate for the cover of a national magazine.

  • btw…one of the commenters at democratic underground posted a picture of OBL and Bush having anal sex and while I know it was satirical I cannot get the image out of my mind when thinking of the two of them.

    I wish I had the links to the photo/drawings of the “Mad Tea Party” of all the war enablers eating from a weapons pie or of Cheney’s head exploding with missiles etc which is also real satire which perhaps we could get the New Yorker to publish as a way of being balanced in their magazine cover satire.

  • Robert @104, perhaps you’d prefer McCain’s maniacal smile from his “That’s not change we can believe in speech?”

    You’re a democrat, but thinking about not voting for Obama because of his supposed inferior quantity/quality of smile?

    Idiot.

  • No, no, short fuse, you misunderstand Robert. Although he is definitely a Democrat, he’s having trouble with Obama failing to simultaneously grin widely and piss his pants over what Robert, like all good Democrats, straightfacedly calls the “war on terror.” In other words, Obama takes himself too seriously but he’s not serious enough. Did I mention Robert is a Democrat?

  • The issue with this attempt at satire is that with satire there is usually a hint of truth. There is nothing truthful about this portrayal of the Obamas.

  • “It tells us that the jewish people are sophisticated enough to get any jokes included jokes on the rabbis I am sure.” dominique lefort wrote.

    Yeah, like the Sharon cartoon that won a British Award and the Jews just loved.

    I recaptioned the toon,” Sorry, Chaim, we want Arab babies that taste good, not Feinschmecker Jews”.

    My site was Hacked twice and blocked by Google for a month.

    This is just one more Jew Garrote around the throat of the Democratic Party and our hopes for Justice in Palestine.

    Monte Haun mchaun@hotmail.com

  • kaysha has articulated the underlying reason for my concerna about satire reinforcing the subject of the satire rather than spiking it – hence, my personal sense of discomfort w/ the cover.

  • oh Maria. . . Maria Maria. . . did I accidentally run over your cat or something?

    As much as I usually enjoy your posts and consider you one of the bright spots around here, and have enjoyed several of the threads on which we have jointly participated, I’m not sure quite what happened with #98. I spent most of the afternoon tempted to let it go, but it is just so. . . unusually off base.

    I never said, or even suggested, that my reaction to the powerful words and images is the only right one. Indeed, I noted that people may like it or not. I don’t have a perfectly equal affinity for each and every New Yorker cover or cartoon, but I surely don’t condemn them everytime I dislike one. That kind of expectation would require it to be the New -Daze Magazine. Your basic premise — that there is a diversity in how people react to provocative expression — I agree with but I find that actually supports The New Yorker being different in its approach likely knowing that some will like it and some wont. As I (and a small handful of others) have said above, we don’t want The New Yorker second-guessing where the safest common denominator is.

    Which brings me to your attempted slam about had I bothered to read the story I’d see that the cover had “f*ck to do” with it. (Although at least you agreed the cover and the caption worked together.) It almost pains me to point out that if you were actually a New Yorker reader you’d know that the cover rarely relates to the specifics of a particular story (although it is not uncommon for it to relate thematically to a story). I do, in fact, read The New Yorker; I subscribe; I happened to think Blitt’s prior covers – including the one of Bush with a maid’s duster attending to a seated, cigar-smoking Dick Cheney – was dead-on (and really, where was all of this leftist outrage at that Blitt cover? or the one of the Bush team dillying in the oval office as flood waters rose around them after Katrina?) So your retort there kind of misses the mark.

    It is true that I overgeneralized in my “all the commenters.” Although given that I blog for leisure, I think you are being a bit pedantic. The point clearly was a direct response to Joyce, who had in fact called for a boycott (or the magazine on our side as opposed to say Human Events. odd.) Others said they’d cancel subscriptions, stop reading or never read, and Joey appears to think The New Yorker is some right-wing rag. (Again, odd for the mag that broke Abu Ghraib. but whatever. apparently context is not terribly important to having opinions.) It isn’t like there weren’t ample examples of what I was referring to. If my “all” offended you by sweeping you in, that surely was unintended.

    As for the other issue that really isn’t between you and I, if you really want to discuss that further I’d be happy to do that elsewhere. Although I will say in this context I thought it a cheap shot.

    Finally, I guess going around the bend and making silly sweeping statements is in the eye of the beholder. In making broad declarations about the writing of others and telling them to “stop” making “silly sweeping statements” (something I’ve seen you do with increasing frequency lately) you seem a little overwrought yourself. My views here may be a bit strong, but I am in the minority so there is a little more volume to speak over. As for the “silliness” of it, well, all I can say is I don’t come here to win some Survivor-type vote on who agrees; people whom I greatly respect like rege seemed to agree, so I am fairly comfortable that, while not universally held, my points weren’t “silly.” That is good enough for me.

    I don’t expect that I will always have the agreement of you or anyone else here or that I will agree with anyone else here. but I think you’d have trouble pointing to any time I’ve addressed one of your posts other than respectfully. but perhaps you’re right – maybe cartoons can have unexpected collateral damage after all.

  • America,

    Why is it so hard to believe that this is not the true obama and wife? Just listen to her words of hatred of America and his writings. He stated very clearly he would side with muslim terrorist against Americas if pushed.
    Is this the way islamic terrorist plan to topple America?
    My only shock was that this true to life picture came from a liberal magazine. Who would have thought they would actually have a conscience?
    Well it’s out now, and the hordes of Americans who have been hoodwinked by the person should wake up to a reality check, QUICK!

  • Maria #79 wrote: “you appear to be oblivious to the scope and reach of chain emails and the significant effect they’re having on low-information voters’ impressions of and beliefs about Obama”

    Absolutely correct, Maria. I have a relative who is fairly intelligent, who believes these chain emails. He sent me the one “In His Own Words” which snopes.com has debunked. (http://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/ownwords.asp) After I sent the snopes link to him twice he still apparently didn’t read it and told me he wouldn’t support Obama because Obama said “he would side with the Muslims” (part of the chain email that was debunked in the link I sent him). I told him that was not true, printed out the snopes thing and GAVE it to him and said “Read This!” and told him that most of these chain emails are lies, to which I got a response of “why would someone lie about him?” So I guess he’s not stupid, just incredibly NAIVE. (My response was “because they don’t want to see him get elected…” and so on).

    The other side knows how to fight dirty, that most people are gullible, naive, uninformed, etc. Even after being given information, they still don’t read it or believe it. I feel like tearing my hair out sometimes. Argh.

  • The increasing “right wing leaning ” articles of the NYM , weren’t enough to get me to stop
    reading it, but this hate and fear-mongering cover has.

  • It seems like the people who are offended by this cover get it, but don’t think others will. Sure, it’s safe for us city slickers, but what about Omaha?

    I’m not too worried about Omaha getting it, personally. Give them some credit.

  • On July 14th, 2008 at 2:55 pm, Goldilocks said:

    “I’m sort of with Steve #17 here, and no doubt some other less squeamish commenters I’ve had to jump over. Nice image of infiltrating the right-wing cubes with real truth about their hate object. May be optimistic but will do no harm.

    Basically, there are two approaches to smear — cover it up or blow it up. Clearly this cover blows it up. You grab your opponent’s whispered smears, amplify and broadcast them, and everyone shrugs and says “So what?”, and the smears die a natural death through exposure to sun and air.

    The alternative of “hush, hush; oh dear! how terrible; cover it up; it’s all lies” won’t work. It lacks the disinfecting potency of reductio ad absurdum, which the New Yorker makes a blunt stab at. Personally, I think the editor, David Remnick, got it right when he let this cover go though. It will kill those smears more surely than any long-winded intellectual debunking which no one is paying attention to anyway, simply by its blatant absurdity and impossibility.

    As time goes on, more sophisticated versions of the intention of this cartoon will emerge, but as an opening salvo it blows the smears to smithereens by rubbing everyone’s nose in them.”

    I respectfully disagree. You are assuming that others have a certain amount of critical thinking skills when they do not possess any. Everyone will not shrug and say “So what?”

    The editors of the The New Yorker knew EXACTLY what they were doing–they are far too savvy for any other possibility. The MSM has been continuously turning rightward, so why not The New Yorker? And for those who claim that TNY is not responsible for their political antics, why are they rolling around in the partisan mud by publishing a cover of Obama as Terrorist? I will be anxiously waiting for that satirical McCain/Cindy cover, hopefully to be published very soon.

    This is a not so clever attempt to vilify Obama, while PRETENDING that it is somehow satirical. If it is meant as blatant satire, it is certainly unrefined and rather crude. In order for this to have been a satire, another approach needed to be implemented–interesting artwork aside.

    Clearly David Remnick has another agenda, and “blowing up the smears to smithereens by rubbing everyone’s nose in them”, is not it. However, corporate profits–IS, as well as pandering to powerful right wing racists, who are more than likely pulling the strings.
    I wonder who the real “editors” are at the New Yorker?
    It’s going to be a very long and hot summer, as this is just the beginning.

  • I’m not too worried about Omaha getting it, personally. Give them some credit. — colin @ 117

    I might be inclined to agree with you but this is the country that thought a drinking buddy (an alcoholic no less) was a qualification for president, that believed Gore was an elitist but Bush was a regular guy, and as a result allowed Bush to get close enough to take the oath in January 2001. This is the country that believed Iraq had something to do with 9/11, that thought the housing bubble would never end, and that tax cuts are all good all the time. This is the country that paid outrageous sums for luxury gas-guzzling SUVs that never saw a snowflake or a mud puddle. After the disaster of Bush’s first term, this is the country that re-elected him, that thinks John McCain is strong on foreign policy, and a straight shooter. This is the country that elects Republican presidents when they overwhelmingly prefer liberal policies, the country that lent Fox News eyeballs, that still harbors bigotry and prefers religious beliefs to science. I could go on…

  • Hi, -daze.

    I never said, or even suggested, that my reaction to the powerful words and images is the only right one.

    That’s true; you didn’t say so. It’s an impression strongly given off, however, by the perplexing rage you worked yourself up to in this and at least one previous thread, in which your comments, at least to this reader’s eyes, grew increasingly hostile as others declined to adopt your analysis of those words and images. Of course I accept your statement that that’s not what you meant.

    Indeed, I noted that people may like it or not. I don’t have a perfectly equal affinity for each and every New Yorker cover or cartoon, but I surely don’t condemn them everytime I dislike one

    Nor, as far as I know, does anyone here. If you have evidence to the contrary, I’d be glad to hear about this brigade of sourpusses raising a stink at every single cover for which they lack an “affinity.”

    As I (and a small handful of others) have said above, we don’t want The New Yorker second-guessing where the safest common denominator is.

    I’m not sure how you got from a) a lot of people think this particular cover showed poor judgment and said so to b) people saying so means we’re in danger of The New Yorker constantly and quality-killingly second-guessing where the safest common denominator is, but it represents another fantastic leap you have not supported.

    Which brings me to your attempted slam about had I bothered to read the story I’d see that the cover had “f*ck to do” with it.

    “Fuck-all” is the expression. It doesn’t mean the same thing as “fuck.”

    (Although at least you agreed the cover and the caption [sic] worked together.)

    Of course I did, although that’s not particularly a point in your favor since we all know the text appears inside on the TOC where the vast majority of people viewing the image won’t see it.

    I It almost pains me to point out that if you were actually a New Yorker reader you’d know that the cover rarely relates to the specifics of a particular story (although it is not uncommon for it to relate thematically to a story).

    This will probably pain you more, then. I do read about two issues out of four of this mag–have done for 20-plus years–and so can state with confidence that, while TNY’s covers are often stand-alone affairs, they rarely touch on–perhaps collide with is a better term–the contents of a story so starkly oppositionally. Relate thematically, yes, but rarely does a cover metaphorically turn its back on a story’s message to this degree. It’s happened. But it’s not the norm at TNY, and when it does happen, it quite naturally invites questioning, particularly when the cover’s message is so strong.

    including the one of Bush with a maid’s duster attending to a seated, cigar-smoking Dick Cheney – was dead-on (and really, where was all of this leftist outrage at that Blitt cover? or the one of the Bush team dillying in the oval office as flood waters rose around them after Katrina?)

    Had progressives been in the habit of systematically spreading rumors (perhaps just before the 2004 election? Perhaps in chain emails?) that the president enjoys dressing in domestic help drag in his spare time, or were Bush’s lassitude in dealing with Katrina a figment of the left’s imagination, as the Obamas’ status as unpatriotic, terrorist-loving revolutionaries most certainly is a figment of the right’s, you might have a couple of analogies there. As it is, the only point you seem to be making is that you didn’t find this cover any more eyebrow-raising than these other two. That is, of course, your privilege, but I’m not sure why you’re surprised that others should feel differently.

    I’ll also note, not because it’s particularly important to the discussion but because you keep referring to Blitt as though these are independent efforts of his, that this is less about Blitt’s work than it is about editorial decisions. Editorial cartoonists don’t work and make content decisions on their own. Particularly for cover work, editors and art directors set the direction for the work and the cartoonists, with various amounts of leeway, produce the cartoons to fit those parameters.

    It isn’t like there weren’t ample examples of what I was referring to. If my “all” offended you by sweeping you in, that surely was unintended.

    It didn’t offend me, -daze; nothing about this conversation offends me. It simply struck me as an unnecessary and hyperdramatic generalization. It sounds as though I may have missed a few drama queens on the other side, however, so thanks for bringing those comments to my attention.

    As for the other issue that really isn’t between you and I, if you really want to discuss that further I’d be happy to do that elsewhere. Although I will say in this context I thought it a cheap shot.

    It isn’t between you and me; nor is it solely between you and slappy–you lost that option when you sailed into him on a public forum with prayers for his painful death. As for cheap shots, I hope you’ll get over this apparent notion that what you say in a blog comment thread is only suitable for reader reaction if you later deem it so, while other people’s emotional reactions to possibly charged language or images are fair game for dissection. It seemed, and still seems, to me that these two situations have some similarities, both in their potential for varying interpretations of the issue and in your reaction to them.

    Finally, I guess going around the bend and making silly sweeping statements is in the eye of the beholder. In making broad declarations about the writing of others and telling them to “stop” making “silly sweeping statements” (something I’ve seen you do with increasing frequency lately) you seem a little overwrought yourself.

    I’m really not clear from this construction whether you’re suggesting I’m stepping up the frequency of telling others to stop making silly sweeping statements or making more of them myself. Since I’ll freely cop to doing both on occasion, I suppose it doesn’t matter.

    I’ll add, just in case you haven’t determined this by now and are still interested, that I don’t much care for the idea of boycotts or subscription cancellations on the basis of this cover; that strikes me as overkill and more harmful than helpful to what we might loosely term as our shared political interests here. But nor am I willing to write off as childish, unsophisticated, humorless, self-destructive, irrational or good magazine-destroying (no, I’m not accusing you of having said all these things) many readers’ assessment that this cover crossed the line and represents a very unfortunate error of judgment on the part of the editors. It seems to me that this kind of binary, you’re-with-us-or-you’re-against-us thinking has done more than enough damage over the past eight years.

    See you on the threads.

  • Prup, I didn’t see yours at 87 until just now. Thanks much. See you on the threads, too.

  • The Obama cover is satire in the same vein as the famous New Yorker cover of the map of the United States. Certainly some people may have construed that 30+ year old cover as an endorsement of the view that the New York is the United States, but that wasn’t its intent or how most people saw it. It was poking fun of New Yorkers’ limited view of the country. I know many New Yorkers that displayed posters of that cover in self-mockery.

  • are you serious munchkinpup #118? (and Maria, this is a good example of what I have found so frustrating about much of this thread)

    do you know much about the NYM that you just accused of having a secret right-wing agenda? do you know about the Sy Hersh piece they printed just last issue??? the Jeff Toobin piece within the last month explaining how wrong the Supreme Court has been? The piece Prup cited at #85 (which in its entirety was hilarious)?

    the knee-jerking “NYM bad!” reaction is so unbecoming the community that allegedly is reality-based, thinks, actually has the tools to think with, and appreciates complexity. and there has been a ton of it today and here and all over the media on this issue.

  • Unfortunately, this reminds me of Nazi art or the vicious anti-Semitism of Russia where Jews were crudely drawn caricatures to demean them or “Negro art” during Jim Crow days. I know it’s supposed to be satire on that but where’s the difference?
    Satire pokes fun at the object of the satire but here the object of the cover is not the object of the satire. And it seems the perpetrators of this sublime ridiculousness are wonderfully oblivious to their own racism. It’s like telling racist jokes to poke fun at the absurdity of racism. Or mimicking the Nazi art of crudely drawn Jewish caricatures to say one is making fun of the Nazis. Oh really? And who beyond a few effete snobs who see everything as caricature would buy that?

  • The whole cover — and the joke — would have been ever so much better (and clearer) had the focus been on a richly tattooed and body-pierced “brave” biker cowering from the image (a bubble, of the very same cartoon, emerging from his forehead)…

    Oh, and BTW… Now that I’ve finally seen the cartoon… The “low info voters” everyone’s so worried about taking a peek at the cover (without ever reading the text) and having all their worst fears confirmed? I think people who are *that* stupid, probably wouldn’t have recognised the Obamas from the cartoon, had everyone else not made the fuss about it. If, that is, they got to see the cover in the first place; as someone up-thread pointed out… New Yorker isn’t, precisely, the standard fare on WalMart shelves or at grocery check-out lines in small-town America.

  • The cover is badly executed satire.

    Subtle satire is difficult to carry off in the U.S., where most people think that Johnathan Swift was just a writer of children’s stories — if they know who he is at all. It’s perfectly alright to use satire to take on controversial or even ugly topics. In fact, that’s often the best way to attack ugly ideas. But when certain subjects are satirized and the satire misfires, then it’s inevitable that people are going to be upset and offended.

    It’s like the difference Mel Brook’s movie Blazing Saddles and Michael Richards’ unfortunate stand-up routine from a couple years ago. Both used humor to address the topic of race and both used the word n*igger — a lot. The difference was that no one could possibly think that Blazing Saddles was meant to be taken seriously while no one could be sure that Michael Richards’ epithet-laden improvised attack on some black hecklers wasn’t a racist rant.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Richards

    For satire to work, the audience has to have enough information to recognize the satire. No one in the audience knew Michael Richards well enough personally to recognize that he wasn’t serious. But people knew enough to recognize that Blazing Saddles was nothing like the real West of the 1800s.

    I love the movie American Psycho because I can appreciate the irony of a Reagan-era, Wall Street yuppie putting an axe through someone’s head while he is expounding upon the brilliance of the band Genesis. But it’s not a movie I recommend to someone unless I’m sure they’d “get” the humor.

    The New Yorker’s readers may be informed enough to “get” that the depiction of the Obamas in the magazine cover was nothing like the real Obamas. But most of us know people who actually believe some of what the cover cartoon makes fun of. Thatt is, itself, an ironic situation. But the irony is tragic rather than humorous.

    The outrage was predictable.

  • Where are these people who have seen the cover and think Obama is, actually, an American-hating muslim with a militant wife, having previously not thought anything of the sort?

    Who are these people? Who would actually think like that? And why would someone who believes one or more of these smears not see the cartoon and believe it’s aimed at ridiculing them and their views, not Obama?

    I’m finding the hysteria over this cartoon beyond comprehension.

  • squiggleslash said:
    Where are these people who have seen the cover and think Obama is, actually, an American-hating muslim with a militant wife, having previously not thought anything of the sort?

    Who are these people? Who would actually think like that? And why would someone who believes one or more of these smears not see the cartoon and believe it’s aimed at ridiculing them and their views, not Obama?

    An oft-quoted Newsweek poll this week said that 12 percent of Americans believe Obama is a Muslim. They are probably part of the 30 percent who believe — despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary — that Bush is doing a good job.
    http://www.newsweek.com/id/145737

    My suspicion is that there are a lot of people out there, maybe as many as 20 percent of voters, who simply don’t want to vote for a black man. . As long as the myths persist that Obama is a Muslim, that he attended a Madrasa school in Indonesia and that he took his oath as a Senator on the Qur’an, then they will feel justified in voting for the white guy.

    A more general problem is that as long as Obama has to try to convince Americans that he is not a Muslim, like that’s a bad thing in and of itself, the argument will harm relations with Muslims inside and outside the United States.

  • An addition to my comment #129:

    It’s not the New Yorker magazine’s responsibility to debunk the myths about Obama. That’s his campaign’s job.

    They need to hit back hard at the Republicans and the conservatives for helping to perpetuate this these myths. Yesterday, John McCain didn’t condemn the cover himself, as was widely reported. Instead, he said, “I can certainly see why Obama supporters would be offended.” (my emphasis) The Obama campaign should blast the “straight talker” for such a mealy-mouthed reaction. And they need to demand that the McCain denounce and boycott the members of the right-wing media who continue to suggest that Obama is a Muslim.

    At the same time, the Obama campaign needs to emphasize that there is nothing in Islam that prevents the 3 million Muslims in the United States from being good, patriotic Americans. And they need to press the McCain campaign for an unequivocal statement — by McCain — that says the same thing.

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  • Steve T said in #131 that it is Obama’s campaign’s job to debunk the myths. They are playing their part in that effort but it is absolutely the duty of each American to debunk racism, anti-Semitism, sexism and any other oppressive and demeaning attitiude or behavior which are embedded so deeply in our Nation’s character. That can NEVER be just the job of a campaign, as it infects the religious, educational, moral, economic and a multiplicity of other arenas, not just the political.
    This was a highly offensive stab at humor from a highly insular and narrow-minded point of view from people who think it’s acceptable to debase the As (any oppressed people) in order for the Bs (the elite effete) to gain some internal self-satisfaction that they are “better than” the Cs, (those who espouse the oppression).

  • “I’m finding the hysteria over this cartoon beyond comprehension.”

    I’m late to this party but given that the hysteria over this is still going strong I’ll just add that I agree completely with squiggleslash and -daze. Grow a sense of humor, people.

  • I hate being the brown noser but dang, CB. You laid out every thought I had about this sophomoric stunt, elegantly.

    The New Yorker staff will likely ask themselves over the course of the week, “What were we thinking? This is so not us.”

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