Doonesbury In Trouble Again - Page 2

It was amazing how many people took a comic strip so seriously. Newspapers dropped it like a hot potato. Comments like, “It’s not the place of a comic strip to find a man guilty or innocent...” appeared in editorials through out the country in explanation of Doonsebury’ssudden disappearance from the daily funnies. The irony of course is that by censoring the cartoon they increased it’s impact and audience.

When Mitchell was cut loose a short time later by the administration in an attempt to protect Nixon and other higher ups and then found guilty, Trudeau and his comic strip were elevated to a status unprecedented for a cartoon strip. Only Pogo had ever managed to integrate political commentary into a daily comic strip with such effectiveness. But the little opossum and his buddies never reached the same level of popularity asDoonesbury

Nixon and Ford came and went and Jimmy Carter proved that Trudeau didn’t just target Republicans. Billy Carter was an irresistible target for every comedian and satirist in America at the time and Carter was no exception. But he didn’t find himself running afoul of the authorities until the next administration.

When Ronald Reagan was elected president he brought with him his associations with Hollywood personalities. One that stood out above others was Frank Sinatra. Regan went so far as to award him a Congressional Medal of Honour for his work.

Now, there have always been rumours about Mr. Sinatra’s ties to certain criminal elements. From the novelGodfather, with it’s character loosely based upon Sinatra, his associations with convicted mobsters, and his connections to the hierarchy in Las Vegas people have always commented and speculated.

When that was combined with reports of Sinatra’s boorish behaviour at the time (trying to get a dealer at a casino fired because he was losing), Trudeau couldn’t resist. He ran a series of strips dealing with Frank’s supposed dealings with the mob.

While Sinatra’s own comments rivalled Hunter S. Thompson’s “I’ll rip his lungs out” (about the character Duke who’s name is derived from an alter ego used by Thompson occasionally and loosely based on Thompson), it was the response of legislators that was most over the top. How often are motions of censure proposed for a cartoonist?

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2 — Page 3

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Article Author: Richard Marcus

Richard Marcus is the author of the recently published What Will Happen In Eragon IV? and has had his work published in print and on line all over the world. The not so long-haired Canadian iconoclast writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Bill Bacon

    Jul 27, 2005 at 9:42 am

    Its damn difficult, if not impossible, for a public figure to sue anyone for libel. Even in our litigious society, you rarely see anyone in politics sue someone for libel - you have to prove not only the falsehood of the statement, but that the author knew it was false and spread it with malicious intent. In politics, it would be the kiss of death to try to sue someone for libel, even if one lost.

  • 2 - Aaman

    Jul 27, 2005 at 9:49 am

    Here is the actual comic strip

  • 3 - Mark Sahm

    Jul 27, 2005 at 10:17 am

    What a ultra-sensitive society we live in where a phrase like 'turd blossom' is considered libelous. That premise is funnier than the actual strip.

  • 4 - Bennett

    Jul 27, 2005 at 11:07 am

    Thanks gypsyman, nice retrospective. And thanks Aaman for the link!

  • 5 - Matthew T. Sussman

    Jul 27, 2005 at 11:27 am

    I agree it's all a matter of taste.

    Shock value is too easy to recreate. I've done it before.

  • 6 - JR

    Jul 27, 2005 at 11:29 am

    Where does "turd blossom" come from? I heard it in reference to Karl Rove weeks ago on The Daily Show; they implied it was Bush's actual nickname for Rove.

  • 7 - Natalie Davis

    Jul 27, 2005 at 11:36 am

    Yes, that particular phrase is new to me too. Surely I can imagine the first word applied to Rove, as well as to Bush and the whole Bush Brothers Banana Republic kkkrew, but "blossom?" Perhaps Jon Stewart can enlighten us.

  • 8 - DJRadiohead

    Jul 27, 2005 at 11:41 am

    Nothing about calling someone a "turd blossom" will prove enlightening (no matter how deserving he/she may/may not be of said name).

  • 9 - ClubhouseCancer

    Jul 27, 2005 at 11:42 am

    Mr. Bush has an unfortunate habit of degrading peple with "hilarious" nicknames. This is a common practice among those who meet a lot of people and cannot or don't care enough to learn all their names. "Turd blossom" is actually a nickname Bush has for Rove (whose re4al name he presumably knows), because Dubya admires his apparent ability to make something good out of something bad.

  • 10 - Derek Mailloux

    Jul 27, 2005 at 12:32 pm

    It can't be libel because that would imply that the nickname "turd blossom" is false. In fact, our president himself gave the monicker turd blossom to Mr. "frog-march" Rove.

    As someone who reads one of the newspapers who edited the strip (Providence Journal), I've already called to complain. This statement isn't off-color or innacurate. Polical censorship should never be accepted.

  • 11 - Matthew T. Sussman

    Jul 27, 2005 at 1:12 pm

    For God's sake nobody's calling this libel!

  • 12 - AmeriPundit

    Jul 27, 2005 at 5:49 pm

    Good post.

    I hope this helps with the comments:

    "Bush's other nickname for the Boy Genius is 'Turd Blossom' - a Texanism for a flower that blooms from cattle excrement". Guardian

    There are many more references to "Turd Blossom" as being Bush's nickname for Karl Rove much earlier than the Doonesbury's.

    In the interests of keeping up the running commentary which seems to overlook the seriousness of the piece, I think that the focus on the phrase "Turd Blossom" is unwarranted.

    The phrase that everybody should be alarmed by is "double super-secret background". Cooper told the grand jury that the "double super secret background" that Rove referred to and spoke to him under was not an official White House or Time magazine security designation, but a reference to the movie Animal House, more specifically, to the "double secret probation" imposed on the fraternity the movie was about.

    If that isn't bothersome, it's hard to imagine what is. I mean, Karl Rove, in the White House, referencing as cover an action taken against frat boys from a disgraced frat house. That is not to be forgiven. After all, the frat boys had a plan beyond deny, deny, deny.

    Oops. Correction, the White House had/has a plan as well. Actually it was/is very much like the frat boys plan: Deny, deny, deny, destroy, destroy, destroy, breaking a lot of moral and legal rules is involved.

    However one takes that, can anybody honestly say that they're not bothered by the fact that a discussion of a CIA agent's standing between, arguably, the 1st, 2nd, or 3rd most powerful man in the country and a journalist contained a joking (or not) reference to Animal House?

    Looking over the record perhaps nobody should be surprised.

    Maybe "Bluto", "Otter", "Pinto", "Flounder", and "D-Day" had a larger impact on our society than some among us thought.

    For those unconvinced of the parallels, and the dangers, consider that our Commander- in- Chief thinks the following is appropriate (and endearing or demeaning): (from Wikipedia)

    Self- Dubya, 43

    Foreign Leaders

    Pootie-Poot - Vladimir Putin, President of Russia
    Landslide - Tony Blair, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
    Dino (short for Dinosaur) - Jean Chretien, former Prime Minister of Canada

    Staff

    Big Time- Dick Cheney
    Boy Genius (positive), Turd Blossom (negative) - Karl Rove, Senior Advisor
    The World's Greatest Hero (positive and negative) - Colin Powell, Secretary of State
    Big O (current), Pablo (former) - Paul O'Neill, Secretary of the Treasury
    High Prophet, Hurricane Karen - Karen Hughes, Special Advisor; Director of Communications under Texas Governor George W. Bush
    The Blade - Mitch Daniels, Director, Office of Management and Budget
    Big Country - Joe Allbaugh, FEMA director
    Fredo- Alberto Gonzales

    Politicians

    Pablo - Paul Wellstone Democratic Senator, Minnesota
    Big George - George Miller, Democratic Congressman, California
    Freddy Boy - Fred Upton, Republican Congressman, Michigan
    Congressman Kickass - John Sweeney, Republican Congressman, New York
    Big O - Olympia Snowe, Republican Senator, Maine
    Nellie (former), Benney (former), Benator (current) - Ben Nelson, Democratic Senator, Nebraska
    Ellis - Chuck Schumer, Democratic Senator, New York
    Mayor- Dennis Kucinich

    Journalists

    The Cobra - Maureen Dowd
    Stretch/Little Stretch - David Gregory, NBC
    Stretch - Dick Kyle, Bloomberg News
    Super Stretch - Bill Sammon, Washington Times
    Factor (current), Big O (former) - Bill O'Reilly
    Major League Asshole - Adam Clymer, New York Times

    Alberto Gonzales better hope this gang never saw the "Godfather".

    For more and/or alternate nicknames thought up by Phi Beta White House click here.

    Once satisfied by the "zaniness" of the current occupants of the White House, perhaps stepping outside of Blutto's, Otter's, Flounder's, and D-Day's world will allow for a serious analyis of what "security", "values", and "character" really mean.

  • 13 - gypsyman

    Jul 28, 2005 at 1:50 am

    Aaman thanks for putting the link to the strip. I blanked out on that one completly. I haven't read Doonesbury in years, the paper I read doesn't carry it, so my brain didn't even make the connection.
    I've got to wonder even more about why they pulled the strip when it's an actual name the man is called by George Bush. Are they going to start pulling George's comments on principal now because he is a potty mouth?
    Oh well political leaders have a history for "colourful language" Who could forget Canada's Pierre Trudeau(no relation to Gary)saying that what everyone heard him say was actually "fuddle duddle" or giving the finger to a bunch of Western Canadian farmers.

    When do you think the frat boys are going to have their next panty raid...?
    And which soriety... Iran or Syria..?

  • 14 - Cathy Hatch-Righi

    Aug 02, 2005 at 6:00 pm

    On a recent visit to my mothers in Maine(I live in Syracuse NY), I was delighted to read your strip dated July 24,2005 on the pretend speech by Pres. Bush to the nation via TV. I wrote a similar speech back in May for my Speechwriting class and would love for you to read it. Please let me know how I may send it to you.

  • 15 - Scott Butki

    Feb 16, 2006 at 2:05 pm

    Cathy, can you post a link to it?

    Great piece on Doonesbury. I'm catching up on his latest books this week.

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