1 | * It's not uncommon for political cartoons to have a simple message with each side, country, ideology or issue explicitly labeled. However, this does not necessarily mean the cartoon is of low quality: in most cases it's done to avoid ambiguity or at least the kind of miscomprehension that leads to angry letters to the editor. |
2 | * Creator/BillWatterson admitted that the GreenAesop in a ''ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes'' story where Calvin and Hobbes took a trip to Mars was "pretty heavy-handed." |
3 | ** Still, [[http://www.platypuscomix.net/otherpeople/watterson.html his unpublished political-style cartoons on his anti-commercialist views]] need to be seen to be believed. Watterson was under constant pressure to sell out during the original run ''Calvin and Hobbes'', something that embittered him quite a lot. |
4 | ** An in-universe example is Calvin's story "The Dad Who Lived to Regret Being Mean to His Kid", which he asks his dad to read to him. |
5 | * Sometimes ''ComicStrip/{{Mutts}}'' doesn't have a joke. Instead there's an ad for some save-the-animals cause, one that doesn't even feature the regular cast of the strip. It's like if the last five minutes of ''Seinfeld'' were replaced with a PETA infomercial. |
6 | * Hey, ''ComicStrip/{{Nemi}}''-readers? Being cruel to animals is bad, okay? Got that? Too bad, because we're gonna repeat it a hundred times anyway. |
7 | * ''ComicStrip/MallardFillmore'' wants you to know that liberals are bad, bad, stupid, stupid, bad, bad people. And they're stupid and bad, MMKAY? |
8 | * And Ted Rall wants you to know the same thing, except about conservatives. |
9 | ** Same goes for Tom Tomorrow. Many of his cartoons don't even contain jokes, they're just quoting something stupid a Republican politician or Fox News host said (or a strawman approximation thereof), or an offensive part of GOP policy, with an optional riff on why it's stupid. |
10 | * Spoofed in one ''ComicStrip/BloomCounty'' arc where Milo has a nightmare about being a cartoonist with a black-hooded TortureTechnician as his "boss", punishing him for typos and the like. After he [[CatapultNightmare wakes up]], he starts to deliver a speech about how great is is that we have cartoonists, only for Opus to walk in with a level glare on his face and say "Oh, just stop." |
11 | ** On multiple occasions, ''Bloom Country'' would let the anvils drop. One strip in particular was a parody of ''Franchise/StarTrek'', and basically ranted about the shrinking amount of space available to newspaper comics. |
12 | * ''ComicStrip/{{Doonesbury}}'' is so heavy with some of its political commentary that some newspapers put it on the editorial page. |
13 | * Though ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' cartoonist Scott Adams is known off the comics page for all sorts of controversial opinions these days, historically the strip was often criticized for only having one message: “management is bad.” Some early strips can be quite heavy-handed about hunting and eating meat, of all things, as Adams is a passionate vegetarian. |
14 |
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