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Jul 18, 2008 8:24 PM | last updated Jul 18, 2008 5:28 PM
New Yorker cover of 20080721.
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Lesson in laughter

By Floyd McKay

Controversy this week over the current New Yorker cover, showing Barack and Michelle Obama in all the worst ways the paranoid right could imagine, proves two basic lessons from the history of journalism.

The first is that a medium that is in the process of being overrun by emerging new media had better understand what that involves. In this case of The New Yorker, a whole new audience encounters something aimed at the magazine's narrow, sophisticated readership. The broader audience includes clueless kids and Limbaugh dittoheads. Not to mention, of course, those who already believed to be true that which the magazine cover depicts as satirical fiction.

The second lesson is that political satire, and even gentle humor, often goes down wrong. Many people — maybe a majority, who knows? — have little sense of humor. Ask anyone who has written political commentary. I would happily be Exhibit A. They will tell you that it really does take a Mark Russell or a Capitol Steps to make it work, and lesser mortals will take their lumps. Politics, in the eyes of most, is serious business.

New Yorker readers — there are more than a million — might gasp, chuckle, or grimace at the image, as they have over the years at the magazine's brilliant covers. But open the flood gates of the Internet and reaction will range from the horrified politically correct to the smarmy smiles of the politically incorrect.

Lost in the shuffle, of course, will be the magazine's excellent coverage of the campaign, and politics in general, including an article in this issue about Obama's Chicago connections. Oh, well!

Here is, in any event, another case of the clash of old and new media. The content of old media becomes currency for new media and arouses passion from all sides that might in earlier days have been confined to a few harrumphs and an articulate letter to the editor.

Comments
Good for arousing passion...
Report a violationPosted by: Benjamin Lukoff on Jul 18, 2008 10:53 PM
Crosscut Writer...I hope incidents like this don't scare editors into dumbing down their publications and eschewing satire in favor of pap.
Dear Exhibit A
Report a violationPosted by: Cameron on Jul 19, 2008 8:25 AM
The reason your political satire often falls flat is that you are not funny. You are often wrong in your analysis and no amount of Mark Russell or Capital Steps harmony can fix that. This particular piece does allow a certain amount of elitism, smarm and superciliousness to shine through.
"smarmy smiles of the politically incorrect"
Report a violationPosted by: kieth on Jul 19, 2008 8:47 AM
So now it is the politically incorrect who are the smarmy ones. I admit I have always been a little hazy on "smarmy" but I thought it was the teachers pet who was smarmy.

People are obviously annoyed at The New Yorker because some brainless someone, somewhere may actually miss the satire and be encouraged to think bad thoughts about Obama. This is hard for the congregation to tolerate. I sympathize.
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