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Mallard Fillmore and God

A computer science professor at NC State University writes:

1. Does God exist?

2. What is dark matter? 

3. Why is Mallard Fillmore on the comics page and Doonesbury on the editorial page?

My answers: Yes, I believe God exists....I'm not sure about dark matter (physics wasn't my strong suit) but I think it's the part of the turkey I don't eat.... 

And now for the really tough third question, I will refer you to a 2008 column I wrote on Bruce Tinsley, who draws the Mallard Fillmore strip. The link to that column is broken but here is the relevant part of the column: 

Some of you have complained that our two most politically oriented strips, "Mallard Fillmore" and "Doonesbury," run in different places. Garry Trudeau's left-leaning strip has run on The N&O's op-ed page for decades.

Tinsley
prefers his work run on the editorial or op-ed pages. That would be a
better showcase, he said, and he believes his commentary on social
issues at times doesn't fit on the comics pages.

But Steve Ford, who oversees our editorial pages, likes keeping "Doonesbury" on the op-ed page. And he doesn't want "Mallard."

Ford says "Doonesbury" is a longtime staple that fits the mission of the op-ed page. Adding "Mallard" to the op-ed page would give less room for opinion pieces.

Ford
and I don't tell each other what to do. To keep news and commentary
separate, we each report to Publisher Orage Quarles III. Ford doesn't
influence our news coverage, and I don't influence editorial opinions.

That
usually works well. This is one instance where, in my view, it leads to
a problem. But it's a minor problem. While some of you have viewed this
as one of the great journalistic issues of our era, I don't see it that
way. I think each strip should run in The N&O, and it doesn't
matter that much that they run in different places.

--John Drescher

'Mallard' makes a mess -- again

Periodically, the content of the “Mallard Fillmore” strip on the comics pages sparks a run of letters from readers asking why “Mallard” is on the comics pages and “Doonesbury” on the Other Opinion page.

“Mallard” arrived at The N&O when our features department was revamping the comics pages, and the initial decision to add the strip to The N&O was made there. Later, when the department again was tweaking the comics, readers were allowed to vote on their favorites, and “Mallard” showed enough of a loyal following to warrant inclusion.

When readers began complaining about the strip, specifically that “Mallard” was in the comics while “Doonesbury” was on the op-ed page, The N&O’s former public editor Ted Vaden wrote two columns about it. In the first in January 2008, Vaden came down on the side of keeping the arrangement, saying, “The main argument for putting the two strips under the same roof is that treating two political strips separately is inconsistent. This is the place to trot out the old Emerson aphorism: ‘A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.’ There are in comics several other strips with political commentary — ‘Candorville,’ for just one example.”

In an August 2008 column, once the election campaign was in full swing, Vaden decided The N&O should “pluck the duck,” saying  “[Bruce] Tinsley’s cartoon has morphed from political satire to political propaganda, and the prospect is that it will get more partisan as the presidential campaign intensifies.”

In an October 2008 column, after readers voted on the comics, Executive Editor John Drescher took up the issue again, saying: “While some of you have viewed this as one of the great journalistic issues of our era, I don’t see it that way. I think each strip should run in The N&O, and it doesn’t matter that much that they run in different places.

“ ‘Mallard’ has earned its place in The N&O. Tinsley enjoys tweaking liberals and the media (he would say they are one and the same). That’s OK by me.

“When it comes to working in the public arena, he and I share the same philosophy. He doesn’t want to have a nice, quiet comic strip. And I don't want to have a nice, quiet newspaper. The more voices, the better. Let the duck quack and quack and quack.”

Click read more to read recent letters on the subject.

Pluck the Public Editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 "Pluck the Duck" - that was the headline on my column Sunday urging The News & Observer to get rid of the "Mallard Fillmore" comic strip. The comic had become stridently anti-Obama - 15 strips in the month of August - and that isn't fair in the context of the political campaign, I argued. Here's the column.

But after reading that, a lot of readers wanted to tar and feather me. Here are some examples:

  • "While The Duck may have become overtly political in recent weeks, he is not always this way, and will not be this way three months from now when all the campaigning is over and done with. Should you opt to cancel 'Mallard Fillmore,' you will have capitulated to the whinings of the left over a temporary situation while eliminating a strip that, by your own admission, has among the highest positive votes among readers."

Mallard ruffles feathers of Obama fans

 

A cartoon duck has been skewering Barack Obama lately, and Obama partisans don't think it's funny.

The "Mallard Fillmore" strip by Bruce Tinsley has been lambasting Obama for flip-flopping, his celebrity image and other ills perceived by Republicans. N&O readers don't think it's fair that the partisan strips run on the comics page with non-political cartoons. Better to put it on the op-ed page with "Doonesbury," they say. Or don't run it.

 "When Mallard Fillmore continually - week in and week out - demeans and ridicules Barack Obama ... its placement in your comics pages implicitly frames those sentiments as mainstream humor - and not political opinion in the same way as Doonesbury or your editorial cartoon are called out as political opinion," wrote Peter Orton, of Hillsborough.

Judith Fertitta, of Durham, writes: "Can't you see how tremendously unfair this is - in this election year -  to allow one-sided attacks on only the Democratic presidential candidate?"

This is an ongoing controversy that's bothered readers since we introduced the Fillmore strip last year. Here's a column I wrote in January.

It's a tougher question now because of the election season context, and I agree that the complainants have a good point. Debra Boyette, features editor who oversees comics, says individual strips are alway up for review, and you can leave your opinion at forums.triangle.com or e-mail us directly at comics@newsobserver.com.

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