Drawing a few lines in the sand
TONY DODERO
Cartoons.
My, how they can get the blood boiling.
I know they do for me from time to time. I’ll see one that gets my
goat and I grouse and grumble about it for hours. On the flip side,
when I see a good one, especially one that makes me laugh, I’ll
remember it forever.
There’s just something about a political cartoon that hammers home
the point and there’s some politicians who still hold grudges because
of cartoons that ran years ago.
Now there’s a bit of a storm brewing over a cartoon we published
in the March 21 edition of the Pilot that featured a caricature of
Greenlight activist Phil Arst and the title “Pain in the Arst,” below
it.
First a little background on our political cartoonist and how his
work appears in the paper.
Steve Bolton is a freelance artist and graphic illustrator who
draws cartoons for the Pilot once a week, and for our sister paper
the Huntington Beach Independent. He is not a member of the staff and
does not take orders from me or any other editor on how or what to
draw.
He reads the paper voraciously, decides his own topics and then
sketches a number of different ideas that reflect his opinion. He
then provides me and other editors with about a half dozen raw
sketches.
We then pick the one cartoon we like, usually with him urging us
to choose his favorite. Some cartoons get the thumbs down, for a
number of reasons. But mostly there’s a clear consensus among the
editors on which cartoon to go with.
Finally, every cartoon that appears in the paper must be approved
by me or Managing Editor S.J. Cahn.
In the case of the Arst cartoon, the buck stops right at my desk.
I approved the cartoon and make no apologies for it.
Actually, I should rephrase that. I am sorry that the cartoon
appeared to have personally offended a couple of Greenlight folks,
whom I have much respect for, namely George Jeffries, a retired
Corona del Mar attorney and former member of the Newport Beach
library board, and Rick Taylor, also a local attorney and airport
activist and Greenlight-sponsored candidate in the 2002 elections.
I also hear that Arst wasn’t too happy with the drawing and truth
be known, I like him too, personally.
But I don’t regret running the cartoon. And there’s nothing
personal about it.
Cartoons are meant to be a parody. This one was no different and
an argument can be made that the cartoonist was more in admiration of
Arst being a thorn in the posterior of developers and city officials
than being judgmental. I don’t know, I didn’t ask him.
The thing to remember, though, is that the cartoons are Bolton’s
opinion. His opinion may not mesh with some readers, but that’s the
essence of free-speech commentary.
Still, my friend Jeffries called the cartoon “mean spirited,” and
took me to task for allowing the cartoonist to use the phrase “Pain
in the Arst,” pointing out it was inappropriate for this newspaper
and its readers, particularly young ones.
“There is plenty of room for humor in your newspaper, but not in
the way it was presented,” he wrote me in an e-mail message. “As a
pun it was immature at best. It is also illogical. Any pain was not
his but others. I do not know whether it was more demeaning to its
subject or your paper. How would you explain this cartoon to your
5-year-old child?”
That’s also a good point.
I always remember the wise words of my former Editor Bill Lobdell
back when I was the night editor here at the paper, when I often was
the last set of eyes on the headlines and front-page stories.
“You are the last purveyor of taste between us and the readers,”
he told me.
I took that seriously and still do. We are a family paper and I
guess the cartoon just didn’t strike me as being offensive to readers
young or old.
Taylor was so incensed by the cartoon that he fired off a letter
to the editor that we published on March 25 titled “Cartoon a
disservice to paper’s credibility.”
“The play on words, as offensive and undeserving as it was, was
the latest escalation in a very obvious attempt to discredit Phil
Arst, and the organization he represents, Greenlight,” Taylor wrote.
“In the past few months, Arst has been personally attacked, in print
and at council meetings, by those who disagree with his basic right
to engage in an open and frank dialogue -- without fear of
repercussion or reprisal -- about the city’s future.
“By pandering to the powers that be, with this tasteless
editorial, the Pilot weakens its own credibility and journalistic
integrity -- particularly as it pertains to the Pilot’s ability to
monitor and report, in an unbiased manner, on issues that pertain to
city government,” he continued. “The Pilot is clearly working very
hard not to offend someone -- and it’s not Arst.”
Now we are accused of a lot of things around here, but stifling
one’s basic right to engage in an open and frank dialogue is not one
that sticks.
Nor is the idea that somehow we are conspiring with the developers
or other powers that be to conspire against Greenlight.
Just about a month ago, I was at a luncheon where a local business
leader verbally accosted me over a letter co-written by the very same
Taylor and Arst that appeared in our Forum pages.
I found myself trying to explain to him the same thing I’m
explaining now. Everyone has a right to an opinion.
And he isn’t the only one. Business and city leaders have often
implied that we give too much ink to Greenlight.
They may be right. But who am I to cut off the supply of ink,
whether it is for Greenlight letter writers or clever cartoonists?
Our news pages should reflect the valid stories of the day and our
Forum pages should be a sounding board for all, not just those that
pander to the editor’s point of view.
I also find it ironic that Arst and his defenders have suddenly
developed a thin skin.
A quick search of the name “Phil Arst” in the Pilot’s database
that dates back to 1999 reveals 236 opinion pieces or articles that
bear his name, some with comments by Arst that could be categorized
as incendiary.
Here’s an excerpt from one letter that ran on Sunday, Dec. 22,
2002, co-written by Arst and Greenlight member Tom Billings.
“Given the lack of both legitimacy and representation for the
residents in the newly elected city council, Greenlight is needed
more than ever to protect the will of 63% of the electorate,” they
wrote. “Our biggest threat is that the ‘Team Ellis’ council majority
will pay back developer contributors by sneaking excessive large
developments into the coming general plan update. We will be on watch
for their attempts to overdevelop the city and will keep you informed
so you can help us maintain Newport Beach as the best place to live
anywhere.”
Who can quarrel with that last line? But whether Arst is fighting
for all the right reasons is not for me to debate.
And I find it hard to believe that someone who is clearly capable
of throwing verbal stones at his opponents would be so shocked when
they come back at him.
That doesn’t mean that Arst is fair game for the newspaper to
allow or even generate mean-spirited name calling responses or
accusations or cartoons directed at him.
I just believe our cartoon was a fair comment as is other
commentary that has appeared on our pages both pro- and
anti-Greenlight.
So, can you dear readers trust I will carry the mantle my former
editor gave me and be the traffic cop for taste and decency? Yes.
But I will not censor valid opinions and commentary in any
circumstance, even those that might cut to the quick.
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