And every time the world goes, you know, down the toilet, that cartoon begins to show up all over the internet. And it was so upsetting getting up every day and reading the paper, something we're familiar with right now. I never can remember where it first started, but I think it was during the whole Bosnia problem. SIPRESS: I wrote that sometime during the '90s. GROSS: That has been true for so many years right now (laughter). ![]() And the woman is turning to the - well, she's sort of looking up at the sky and saying, my desire to be well-informed is currently at odds with my desire to remain sane. It's two people walking down the street, a woman and a man. Would you describe it?ĭAVID SIPRESS: Yeah. Let's start with your most published and tweeted cartoon. The book is illustrated with his cartoons.ĭavid Sipress, welcome to FRESH AIR. His new memoir - "What's So Funny?" - is about his life and about cartooning. ![]() He did daily cartoons again in 2014 and twice in 2016, during the presidential primary and the campaign. In 2012, during the presidential campaign, he became the magazine's first daily cartoonist on The New Yorker website. Since 1998, he's been a staff cartoonist at the magazine, where he's published about 700 cartoons. ![]() If you're a fan of New Yorker cartoons, you've probably seen and enjoyed the work of my guest, David Sipress.
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