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July 15, 2008

The Controversy Over the New Yorker Cover of the Obamas

Original By now most of you probably will have seen the cover of the latest New Yorker.  And most of you will have noted the brewing storm.  Bill Carter in the NYT:

The New Yorker faced a different kind of hostility with its cover this week, which the Obama campaign criticized harshly. A campaign spokesman, Bill Burton, said in a statement that “most readers will see it as tasteless and offensive — and we agree.”

Asked about the cover at a news conference Monday, Mr. McCain said he thought it was “totally inappropriate, and frankly I understand if Senator Obama and his supporters would find it offensive.”

The cover was drawn by Barry Blitt, who also contributes illustrations to The New York Times’s Op-Ed page. David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, said in an e-mail message, “The cover takes a lot of distortions, lies, and misconceptions about the Obamas and puts a mirror up to them to show them for what they arBlog_new_yorker_obama_remixe.

“It’s a lot like the spirit of what Stephen Colbert does — by exaggerating and mocking something, he shows its absurdity, and that is what satire is all about,” Mr. Remnick continued.

[Kevin Drum's reaction at Washinton Monthly]:

I had two reactions, myself. To be honest, my first one was that it was kinda funny, a clever way of mocking all the conservative BS that's been circulating about the Obamas.

But at the risk of seeming humorless, that reaction didn't last too long. Maybe it's because this kind of satire just doesn't work, no matter how well it's done. But mostly it's because a few minutes thought convinced me it was gutless. 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.

Posted by Robin Varghese at 11:40 AM | Permalink

Comments

Here is Art Spiegelman on NPR talking about the recent Obama cover and his own controversial one (his was awesome!) from 1993. Spiegelman seems to like the Obama art work. But the commenters are not so sure.

Forget the humor of the NYer for a minute. I have also been wondering whether Obama himself has a sense of humor. I am beginning to suspect that he may not although I am not sure. Or should that even matter in a president? Is there a correlation between sense of humor and performance in office? Charming though Obama is, I have not seen any evidence of quick wit à la Ronald Reagan (who was a bit stagey), Bob Dole (truly funny) or even G.W. Bush (flippant - doesn't care if the world goes up in flames). McCain too is quite funny at times in a biting, jaw clenching, W.C. Fields type of curmudgeonly way.

Besides high IQ, people skills and eruditeness, the lack of spontaneous funniness is another similarity between Obama and Bill Clinton who couldn't tell a joke if his life depended on it. I dont' know if that is a common drawback of those who take themselves and their power to bring about change too seriously. (Jimmy Carter is another humor challenged president) But I don't know for sure about Obama's true ability to laugh at himself or others, if necessary. The harsh glare of public scrutiny during a campaign may cramp the style of an otherwise humorous person. Bob Dole came across as plain crabby throughout his campaign and Al Gore, who was so wooden and earnest in 2000 was one of the funniest politicians to appear on Saturday Night Live, once he came to grips with his loss.

That is the real problem with the current NYer cover - it is too earnest and self conscious. It doesn't have the light touch or the good eye of Spiegelman to take a tense and ugly topic and defuse it - not with more tension and superior seeming anger but a slightly absurd comic touch.

Posted by: Ruchira | Jul 18, 2008 2:01:18 PM

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