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Political 'Satire' Or Tasteless Junk?

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Political 'Satire' Or Tasteless Junk?

Cover Of New Yorker Magazine Draws Anger From Candidate's Camp

Calls Risky Illustrations 'Tasteless And Offensive'

WASHINGTON (AP) ― A satirical New Yorker magazine cover cartoon depicting Barack Obama and his wife as flag-burning, fist-bumping radicals drew outrage from the Democratic presidential candidate's campaign as it appeared on newsstands Monday.

The illustration, titled "The Politics of Fear" and drawn by Barry Blitt, depicts Obama wearing traditional Muslim clothing -- sandals, robe and turban -- while his wife, Michelle, has an assault rifle slung over one shoulder and is dressed in camouflage and combat boots with her hair in an exaggerated Afro.

With a flag burning in the fireplace behind them, the pair are exchanging a fist bump, the affectionate greeting they used onstage the night Obama clinched the Democratic nomination, which a Fox anchor later referred to as a possible "terrorist fist jab."

The cartoon, which the Obama campaign said was "tasteless and offensive," is not explained inside the magazine. The issue, dated July 21, also contains a 15,000-word story about Obama's political education and early years in Chicago.

The cartoonist's previous covers include a drawing of President Bush and his inner circle floating up to their elbows in water inside the Oval Office, an issue that came out just after Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans.

In a statement, the magazine said the Obama cover combines "fantastical images about the Obamas and shows them for the obvious distortions they are."

"The burning flag, the nationalist-radical and Islamic outfits, the fist-bump, the portrait on the wall? All of them echo one attack or another," the statement said.

Obama, who is Christian, has long fought rumors that he is secretly a Muslim, a whisper campaign that still persists on the Internet and in e-mail chains.

His wife has endured her own attacks, including ones that claimed there was a videotape of her criticizing "whitey" from a church pulpit. The Obama campaign says there is no such "whitey" tape, and seeks to debunk that and other lies on its recently launched Web site, fightthesmears.com.

The magazine said satire is part of what it does, to bring things out into the open, "to hold up a mirror to prejudice, the hateful, and the absurd.
And that's the spirit of this cover."

New Yorker editor David Remnick told the Huffington Post that the cover was not intended just to get attention, but was chosen because it had something to say.

"I can't speak for anyone else's interpretations, all I can say is that it combines a number of images that have been propagated, not by everyone on the right but by some, about Obama's supposed 'lack of patriotism' or his being 'soft on terrorism' or the idiotic notion that somehow Michelle Obama is the second coming of the Weathermen or most violent Black Panthers. That somehow all this is going to come to the oval office," Remnick said.

Asked about the cover on Sunday, Obama said "I have no response to that."

But Obama spokesman Bill Burton said the magazine's defense of its cover did not appease the campaign.

"The New Yorker may think, as one of their staff explained to us, that their cover is a satirical lampoon of the caricature Senator Obama's right-wing critics have tried to create," Burton said. "But most readers will see it as tasteless and offensive. And we agree."

Obama's opponent, Republican John McCain, concurred that the cover was out of bounds, saying in Arizona that it was "totally inappropriate, and frankly I understand if Senator Obama and his supporters would find it offensive."

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an Independent who has come out in support of Obama's fight to debunk the siege of rumors and innuendo, said Monday that even humorists need to be careful.

"We all have to watch very carefully what we say -- our attempts at humor, our attempts at informing people -- because some of what we say can be misinterpreted and do real damage," he said.

(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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