Animated political cartoons are the evolution of the
Editorial cartoon. The animated political
cartoons are normally written in
Flash.
Emergence
With the
dot com crash at the turn of the
millennium, artists and animators were among the first to be let go at online news sites. Early pioneers such as
Pat Oliphant stopped adding content shortly after.Others, however, have carved out a market for their trade.
JibJab is the most notable, making Internet history with their cartoon
This Land! in 2004.
Mark Fiore's animations have appeared in
SFGate for years, he appears to be the most successful animator, currently publishing his cartoons once a week.
Zina Saunders creates regular animations for
Mother Jones.
Examples
Innovative new
cartoonists, such as
J83 (independent), and
Shujaat Ali from the
Aljazeera news website, are also appearing and making inroads in this evolving medium.
Peter Nicholson, of
The Australian newspaper, publishes a new animation fortnightly, featuring the voices of mimic
Paul Jennings. In Britain,
Matthew Buck launched the first regular animated political cartoon for
Tribune magazine in May 2007 and subsequently started to work, weekly, for Channel 4 (News website). After the Channel 4 work ceased with the financial problems at ITN, his work -
The Opinions of Tobias Grubbe - reappeared at the Guardian during the UK General Election of 2010.
In 2010, Ray Griggs, a right-wing commercial producer released a preview of , a full length feature...
Read More