This presidential election is proving itself to be historic and unprecedented in the number of twists and turns that occur in the story. This week I chose for a political cartoon to be my piece of visual media. The cartoon depicts a few different things; one is of Hillary Clinton who is being fed Anti-bodies and Bernie Sanders’ supporters’ tears through an IV drip, the next is of a debate moderator who is putting starch on his back bone, afterwards there is a voter who is literally picking their poison, and finally we have Trump tweeting and practicing his pronunciation of the word “huge” which often comes out as “yuge”.
This cartoon was drawn by a man named Nate Beeler. He is a cartoonist as well as a journalist and won the 2009 Thomas Nast Award from the Overseas Press Club and the 2008 Berryman Award from the National Press Foundation along with other awards. This cartoon is definitely catered to a wide audience. I’d believe that its audience is anyone who wants to get the current gist of what is going in the 2016 Presidential election. I’d say its a pretty accurate and humorous depiction of the current standings of this election. People are feeling trapped between two candidates who are extremely different and equally unlikeable.
Every humorous cartoon will have to, in some way or another, use allusion in order for the audience to “get it” or have something to “get”. This cartoon features indirect references to the plight of Bernie Sanders’ supporters not getting their candidate and being forced to vote for Clinton, a reference to Hillary Clinton’s imperfect health, the common predicament of undecided hopeless voters to find the lesser of two evils, and a few others. What these references do for Beeler is to show that he understands what we’re going through as a nation, and while he may not offer any solutions in this piece, he can still empathize with us and knows where we’re coming from.
As you can see, upon deeper investigation, this is a well rounded cartoon. Beeler is able to cover all of the major parties involved, show the audience what’s going on and how a large percentage of people feel about it, and also convey all of this in a humorous tone. I think the major key in this is to do all of this while being humorous as this is the general attract for cartoonists. When all of this is considered, I’d say Beeler definitely accomplishes his purpose.
