Jim Borgman has been the Enquirer's editorial cartoonist since 1976. Borgman has won every major award in his field, including the 1991 Pulitzer Prize, the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben Award for Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year in 1993, and most recently, the Adamson Award in 2005 as International Cartoonist of the Year. His award-winning daily comic strip Zits, co-created with Jerry Scott, chronicles the life of 15-year-old Jeremy Duncan, his family and friends through the glories and challenges of the teenage years. Since debuting in July 1997, Zits has regularly finished #1 in reader comics polls across America and is syndicated in more than 1300 newspapers around the world.
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4 Comments:
Wow... This cartoon really "clicks" and drives the point home. Everything on it works visually. Great cartoon.
You could even say they get to keep their major sports contract. How many more Hancocks have to die before sports wakes up and realizes that these guys are not invincible?
how about a cartoon of nancy pelosi using her hands as a scale, weighing two undesirable options. on one hand, bush's veto of the iraq timetable. in the other, the bipartisanship necessary to overturn the veto. just what she wants, right?
Nicely done. The red really makes it; disturbing and effective without being gruesome.
A technical question: was this a print cartoon as well? Can you do the two-color thing in your paper?
JGM
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