Main Page | Alphabetical index | English Encyclopedia

Ted Rall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Ted Rall (born 1963 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) is a left-wing columnist and editorial cartoonist. Unlike many editorial cartoonists, his political cartoons often appear in a traditional comic-strip format.

He attended Columbia University, where he contributed cartoons to the campus newspapers, and graduated in 1991 with a bachelor of arts with honors in history. Rall says meeting Keith Haring in 1986 inspired him to pursue cartooning.

Table of contents
1 Style
2 Controversies
3 Publications
4 Blog
5 External links

Style

Rall is one of a new breed of editorial cartoonists who began in the alternative weeklies during the 1980s and early 1990s with wordy, abstractly drawn strips about politics and social issues. Syndicated since 1991, he enjoyed success in mainstream newspapers like the New York Times and Washington Post with his merciless attacks and unorthodox politics. He was, for example, one of the few liberal cartoonists to call for Bill Clinton's impeachment for lying under oath.

Controversies

In 1999, Rall stoked controversy among cartoonists when he wrote a controversial article damning Maus creator Art Spiegelman in the Village Voice for his lack of talent and allegedly controlling who gets high-profile assignments from magazines like The New Yorker. He was heckled publicly after the article, most blatantly by the conservative New York Press and pornographic illustrator Danny Hellman. Hellman carefully copied Rall's voice and style in a phony e-mail sent to at least 35 of Rall's fellow cartoonists and editors in an attempt to sabotage Rall's career. When Hellman refused to back down and sent out yet another e-mail impersonating Rall, Rall responded with a lawsuit for libel per se and other charges related to impersonation.

Rall has caused considerable controversy with several of his cartoons. One in particular, the "Terror Widows" cartoon, which ridiculed the greed of some of the widows of men killed in the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks, was called offensive by some, brilliant by others. Rall's response to the criticism: "I've done a few lousy cartoons in my time that I'd love to take back, but this isn't one of them."

Rall raised hackles with his May 4, 2004 Op/Ed "AN ARMY OF SCUM: Or, We're Looking For a Few Good Homosexual Rapists", in which he wrote about the Abu Ghraib scandal, "American troops occupying Iraq have become virtually indistinguishable from the SS".

and George W. Bush. Bush is always portrayed as Generalissimo El Busho - a vicious military dictator in Rall's comics.
Another controversial Rall cartoon was his posthumous critique of Pat Tillman, whom his comic described as an "idiot" and "sap" for abandoning his NFL career to fight in both the war against Iraq and the US invasion of Afghanistan. A year later, in another cartoon dated May 21, 2005, under the titles "Here's where we'll get more troops" and "Reanimate dead soldiers", a drill sergeant shouts to a uniformed living dead, "And duck the friendly fire this time, soldier Zombie." [1]

A June 8, 2004 Op/Ed piece (site) by Ted Rall published shortly after the death of former President Ronald Reagan claimed that Reagan is "turning crispy brown right about now," implying that the former president is burning in hell.

He created controversy with his July 5, 2004 cartoon (link) depicting Condoleezza Rice going to a "racial re-education camp" and referring to her as a "house nigga." Rall, a white man, was accused of racism by some critics.

A November 8, 2004 cartoon (link) depicting mentally disabled children drew complaints from advocates for the disabled and led to his cartoons being dropped from The Washington Post's website. Rall responded in his blog saying: "I regret hurting people who I have nothing against. I do want to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable, and I think I failed in that with this cartoon. Not to mention that the cartoon failed--too many people got bogged down in the analogy and the main point got lost."

Ted Rall is a frequent guest on "Hannity and Colmes".

Publications

Blog

Ted Rall is also the author of Search and Destroy: Ted Rall is America's BS detector (see external links)

External links

Editorials News articles Transcripts from Hannity & Colmes Blog



Limit search to: Body and Title Deutsche Seiten Path

Websites for Ted
Showing page 1 (1 - 10 of 858 hits) Next »
... and numbered scuplture celebrating the hitting career of Ted Williams. Includes profile and information about Ted's modeling for the sculpture. Highland Studio of ... and numbered scuplture celebrating the hitting career of Ted Williams. Includes profile and information about Ted's modeling for the sculpture.
ZDTV article describing his work on Xanadu. ZDTV article describing his work on Xanadu.
Hyllningssida till Ted och officiell webbplats för föreningen. Inneh� ... biografi, tidningsartiklar, texter, minnessida och bilder. Hyllningssida till Ted och officiell webbplats för föreningen. Inneh� ...
Ongoing collection of news articles, commentary, photos and multimedia about the U.S. Senator for Alaska. Ongoing collection of news articles, commentary, photos and multimedia about the U.S. Senator for Alaska.
Message board for viewers who like the celebrity. [Yahoo! registration required.] Message board for viewers who like the celebrity. [Yahoo! registration required.]
Ted Brava Online - Een Camarilla Maastricht site Ted Brava Online - Een Camarilla Maastricht site
Movie review, filming locations, pictures, trivia, soundtrack information and links. Movie review, filming locations, pictures, trivia, soundtrack information and links.
Audio clips from the series. Audio clips from the series.
TED case studies on effects of trade on species loss and habitat destruction. TED case studies on effects of trade on species ...
Growing biography, with links to many related topics. [Wikipedia] Growing biography, with links to many related topics. [Wikipedia]

Next »

Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor
Free thumbnail preview by Thumbshots.org

Search for products at amazon.com:
Search:
Keywords:
amazon.com books on 'Ted Rall':
Search at Google.com:
Google
WebCalSky.com Encyclopedia

Im Artikel erwähnte Literatur