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Jim Borgman

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Name
  
Jim Borgman

Role
  
Cartoonist

Education
  

Jim Borgman JIm Borgman cartoon from the Enquirer Yelp

People also search for
  
Jerry Scott, Lynn Goodwin, Suzanne Soled, Bill Watterson, Dylan Borgman, Chelsea Borgman

Spouse
  
Suzanne Soled (m. 2003), Lynn Goodwin (m. ?–1999)

Children
  
Dylan Borgman, Chelsea Borgman

Parents
  
James Borgman, Marian Borgman

Books
  
Zits: Supersized: Spring 20, Crack of Noon: A Zits Treas, Random Zits: A Zits Treasury, Jeremy and Mom: A Zits Ret, Alternative Zits: A Zits Treasury

Celebrating jim borgman


James Mark Borgman (born February 24, 1954) is an American cartoonist. He is known for his political cartoons and his nationally syndicated comic strip Zits. He was the editorial cartoonist at The Cincinnati Enquirer from 1976 to 2008.

Contents

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Jim borgman creates


Biography

Jim Borgman Jim Borgman Flood of 1997 The Enquirer

Borgman was born in Cincinnati, Ohio to James and Marian Borgman, where he began his career in journalism as a student at Elder High School. He then attended Ohio's Kenyon College where he started as an English major, then switched to being an art major. He graduated in 1976 with Phi Beta Kappa honors.

Jim Borgman The Framery

Borgman met his first wife Lynn Goodwin during his senior year of college at a class called "Jesus and the Gospels". They had two children named Dylan and Chelsea. Lynn died in 1999 from a blood clot following a surgery to ease chronic neck and shoulder pain. In 2003 he married Suzanne Soled, an educational psychologist and professor at Northern Kentucky University.

Career

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At Kenyon College, Borgman drew editorial cartoons for the Kenyon Collegian.

He became The Cincinnati Enquirer's editorial cartoonist in 1976. Since 1980, his editorial cartoons have been nationally syndicated, at first by King Features Syndicate. In 2007, Universal Press Syndicate took over the distribution of his editorial cartoons. In 2008, he took a voluntary buyout offered by Enquirer parent Gannett Company but continued to work on Zits after leaving the paper.

Wonk City

His body of work has included the weekly comic strip "Wonk City," which ran from 1994 to 1996 on the editorial pages of The Washington Post. A surreal send-up of inside-the-beltway mores during the administration of Bill Clinton, many of the cartoons featured a cat involved in behind-the-scenes political skullduggery.

Zits

While on vacation in Sedona, Arizona, Borgman met up with fellow cartoonist, Jerry Scott. Scott pitched the idea of a cartoon about a teenager and thus the comic strip "Zits" was born, debuting in July, 1997, with Borgman cartooning and Scott writing.

"Zits" is syndicated in over 1500 newspapers around the world and is translated into nine languages, including German, Chinese, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Spanish, Dutch, Portuguese, Finnish and Polish

Awards

In 1991, when Borgman was 37 years old, he won the Pulitzer Prize. He has also won the National Cartoonist Society Editorial Cartoon Award for 1986, 1987, 1988, 1994, and 2006, their Newspaper Comic Strip for 1997, their Newspaper Comic Strip (with Jerry Scott) in 1998 and 1999 for Zits, and their Reuben Award in 1993. Borgman also won the Reuben Award for editorial cartooning in 2006, and has achieved a great deal of recognition for his work.

References

Jim Borgman Wikipedia