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SAVE MALLARD FILLMORE IN THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW
Spokane Spokesman-Review

Posted on 04/09/2003 11:41:37 AM PDT by ACOOPER

SAVE MALLARD FILLMORE IN THE SPOKANE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW!

The editors of the Spokesman-Review have taken the conversative duck out of their pages! Other papers have returned Mallard to their pages after hearing from fans, including the Seattle Post-Intelligencier, the Denver Post, the Wichita Eagle, the Roanake Times... just to name a few. We need to laugh! We need the duck! We need a conservative comic strip! Tell the editors to return the Mallard Fillmore to their newspaper! Write the paper at editor@spokesman.com .


TOPICS: Announcements; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections; US: Idaho; US: Washington; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: brucetinsley; comic; conservativecartoon; mallardfillmore; mediabias; spokane; spokesmanreview

1 posted on 04/09/2003 11:41:37 AM PDT by ACOOPER
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To: ACOOPER
Uh....I will gladly send an email to keep Mallard, which I love...but I live in Roanoke and our liberal Roanoke Times has NOT put Mallard back, after removing it.....who told you that they have??
2 posted on 04/09/2003 11:55:56 AM PDT by Gopher Broke (Peace through superior firepower)
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To: All
Byrd Says "Free Republic is Pretty. Pretty Pretty Pretty Pretty. But I want it to be a figment. A Fig Leaf! Fie on Free Republic! Fie on Conservatives!

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3 posted on 04/09/2003 11:57:37 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Gopher Broke
SAVE THE DUCK!
4 posted on 04/09/2003 12:01:32 PM PDT by RAT Patrol
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To: Gopher Broke
Sorry Gopher Broke- I thought Roanoke had put Mallard back like the other papers I listed because their website has a link to Mallard. But I guess they just link to the King Features website. http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/comics/
5 posted on 04/09/2003 12:04:17 PM PDT by ACOOPER
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To: ACOOPER
You are right about the Denver Post. There is a nice article about it by Sue O'Brien floating around the net somewhere. The Wichita Eagle never actually removed Mallard; they asked for reader's comments because they were considering removing the strip. They decided to keep the duck by popular demand.

It is funny how mad people get when a comic strip says in pictures the very same things other people say in words.

6 posted on 04/09/2003 12:10:46 PM PDT by RAT Patrol
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To: ACOOPER
See Mallard F. courtesy the Jewish World Review at
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/strips/mallard/2000/mallard1.asp
7 posted on 04/09/2003 12:13:36 PM PDT by Redbob
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To: ACOOPER
I love the duck. He points out the absurd in such a unique fashion. Beats Gary Trudeau's Doonesbury anytime, anyplace, but I noticed the Review took out Doonesbury too. In fact with those two missing on the "Letters to the Editor" page, the newspaper doesn't print any poltical toons. Definitely will protest to the editor over the duck. Unfortunately, haven't read the paper for several days. Too busy reading the news on FR and watching FOX. Thanks for the heads up.
8 posted on 04/09/2003 12:19:03 PM PDT by lilylangtree
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To: ACOOPER
Denver Post One man's satire is another's outrage

By Sue O'Brien
Denver Post Editorial Page Editor

Sunday, June 02, 2002 -

"Mean-spirited."

The word was used repeatedly last week by readers angered by Mike Keefe's May 17 cartoon.

It's also been used repeatedly over the years to describe Bruce Tinsley's daily "Mallard Fillmore" cartoons.

Mike's cartoon, as everyone in town surely knows by now, parodied what President Bush might have been saying in the Sept. 11 Air Force One photo that has subsequently been used in a GOP fund-raising campaign.

If there's one thing I've learned in my six years working on these pages, it's that one man's satire is another man's outrage.

Readers taught me that in 1996 when, inspired by a rash of equally indignant letters deploring Mallard's depredations, I tried to cancel the "Fillmore" strip. I was wrong, and to the tune of cacophonous reader anger, we reversed the decision. But the lesson was clear: Both ends of the political spectrum deserve their place here. Unfortunately, what's seen as appropriate commentary by one side is sacrilege and slander to the other. Our taste for irony is clearly linked to our political appetites.

It all depends, as the poet said, on whose ox is being gored.

For the record, although letter writers persist in referring to Mike as "O'Keefe," we aren't political clones. I don't share his annoyance at the Bush campaign's fund-raising use of the Air Force One photo. Had the Kennedys been as inventive as the Bushes, I'm sure we'd have seen similar use of the marvelous photo of Jack and Bobby anguishing during the Cuban missile crisis. Such exploitative campaigning may be in questionable taste, but it doesn't send me into moral paroxysms.

I let the cartoon run because, once the Air Force One photo was used to troll for campaign contributions, it forfeited the iconic status of those few national symbols we protect from parody. The White House let that cat out of the bag. Keefe just caught it.

Perversely, the same concerns that had led me to try to dump the duck figured in the Keefe controversy. Writers during Bill Clinton's administration were saying something fundamentally wrong was going on in Tinsley's "Mallard Fillmore" strip. They used words like "twisted reasoning," "denigration of our elected leaders" and "encouraging a lack of respect for our government."

In the current dispute, Bush loyalists worry that the authority of the presidency is being undermined: "We are at war," wrote William D. Porter of Parker. "The politically motivated hate and hubris in which you wallow is not only unseemly, but downright detrimental to our war effort and the much-needed unity of the American people."

As I said, I've learned a lot from readers since the Mallard controversy of 1996. The best delineation of our marching orders came in May 1998 from Jeff O'Reilly of Denver, responding to another writer's claim that The Post had been "bigoted" in an editorial on affirmative action:

"I have felt much the same. It got so bad, I almost canceled my subscription. The reason I didn't was it was hard to figure out which way The Post was bigoted. Were they for whites, blacks, reds, yellows, purples? Were they left or right?

"... I came to the conclusion that The Post is everything. ... You will read it all in The Post. You'll get every view, in all their opposing biases. I guess that's why I haven't canceled my subscription. See, I get The Post so I'll be informed. Not just about regular news, but about what our society is. What better way than to print every view and let the readers decide?

" ... It's like straddling a barbed-wire fence. Better them than me. I'm just glad I can get society delivered to my doorstep in harmless printed paper form, instead of the actual people and events."

Speaking of letters to the editor, we've been asked several times why we haven't run more e-mails from readers on Chuck Green's resignation from The Post. We've printed a few, but most of the others came as one-liners without the address and phone number we need to verify authorship.

It's too bad, because no one deserved a fond farewell from readers more than Green, who I count as a long-time colleague and longer-time friend. For many years, he's been the person people around the state first think of when they think of The Post. In addition to his six-year gig as a metro-front columnist, he served as copy boy, reporter, city editor, editorial page editor and editor.

No one has contributed more to The Post than Chuck. We'll miss him.

Sue O'Brien (sobrien@denverpost.com) ) is editor of The Denver Post editorial pages.

9 posted on 04/09/2003 12:19:35 PM PDT by RAT Patrol
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To: RAT Patrol
Great column from the Denver Post, RAT Patrol! Let's hope the Spokesman-Review can learn from its readers, too.
10 posted on 04/09/2003 12:35:53 PM PDT by ACOOPER
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To: ACOOPER
I'd be willing to trade Mallard for the removal of the liberal cartoons on the comic page.

Frankly, they all belong on the editorial page.
11 posted on 04/09/2003 1:33:43 PM PDT by sharktrager
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To: sharktrager
To sharkrager- in the Spokesman-Review, both Mallard Fillmore and Doonesbury were on the op-ed page, not the comics.
12 posted on 04/09/2003 1:47:52 PM PDT by ACOOPER
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To: Gopher Broke
Some papers moved him to the classified section. The Seattle paper is one that I can think of.
13 posted on 04/09/2003 3:32:53 PM PDT by TheErnFormerlyKnownAsBig (.45 .46, whatever it takes)
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To: ACOOPER
Freeped!
14 posted on 04/09/2003 3:37:48 PM PDT by YoungKentuckyConservative
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bump
15 posted on 04/12/2003 3:50:56 PM PDT by aposiopetic (editor@spokesman.com needs to be Freeped!)
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To: aposiopetic
bttt
16 posted on 04/12/2003 5:14:25 PM PDT by aposiopetic (yes, editor@spokesman.com needs to be Freeped!)
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