Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Mike Luckovich

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Editorial cartoonist

Name
  
Mike Luckovich


Notable works
  
Editorial cartoons

Area(s)
  
cartoonist

Mike Luckovich Mike Luckovich cartoons on Osama bin Laden wwwajccom

Born
  
Michael Edward Luckovich January 28, 1960 (age 64) Seattle, Washington (
1960-01-28
)

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning, Reuben Award for Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year

Profiles


Education
  
University of Washington

Drawing attention cartooning with mike luckovich


Michael Edward "Mike" Luckovich (born January 28, 1960) is an editorial cartoonist who has worked for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution since 1989. He is the 2005 winner of the Reuben, the National Cartoonists Society's top award for cartoonist of the year, and is the recipient of two Pulitzer Prizes.

Contents

Mike Luckovich httpswwwwashingtonedualumnicolumnssept95l

Mike Luckovich shows how to make a great political cartoon PT 1


Early life

Mike Luckovich Drawing Attention Mike Luckovich

He was born in Seattle, Washington, attended Bishop Kelly High School in Boise, Idaho before transferring to Sheldon High School in Eugene, Oregon and graduated in 1982 from the University of Washington with a degree in political science. For two years after graduation, Luckovich sold cartoons on a freelance basis to the Everett, Washington newspaper while working as an insurance salesman.

Career

Mike Luckovich RealClearPolitics Cartoons Mike Luckovich 10042013

Luckovich began his career with The Greenville News in South Carolina in 1984, and moved to the New Orleans Times-Picayune later that year. In 1989 he began his career with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that continues to today.

Mike Luckovich Today39s Mike Luckovich cartoon 122 wwwajccom

In 2000, Luckovich started his comic-strip "SuperZeros", about a pair of dim-witted superheroes. It was distributed by Tribune Media Service and lasted a year.

In a September 2001 interview, Luckovich commented on his style of cartooning and how it changed after the 9/11 terrorist attacks:

Normally with my cartoons I try to use humor to get across my point. After Sept. 11th, you just couldn't use humor. The tragedy was so enormous, you couldn't be funny. It's almost like you have to come up with cartoons using a different part of your brain. I was just trying to come up with images that expressed the emotions that I was feeling and tried to focus in on different aspects of the tragedy that I thought were important.

In that same interview Luckovich cited Jeff MacNelly as his "biggest editorial cartoonist role model" and Mort Drucker as his "first hero."

Awards

While at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Mike Luckovich won several awards. He won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize and 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning. Luckovich also received the National Cartoonists Society Editorial Cartoon Award for 2001, with additional nominations for 1998 and 2002. He won the 2008 National Journalism Awards, for Editorial Cartooning.

Controversy

Luckovich attracted a great deal of backlash when the newspaper cartoonist drew a cartoon depicting Michael Jackson's death one day after his death. The comic strip illustrated the leaders Heaven and Hell flipping a coin to see where the late King of Pop would be after his demise. Many people, including Jackson's family, friends, and fans deemed the cartoon offensive.

Luckovich also recently generated controversy when depicting an image of two police officers, one holding a sign reading "Miranda Rights" intended for "white people", the other holding a sign reading "Last Rites" intended for "black people". The image was hosted in an August 2016 issue of the Boston Globe.

References

Mike Luckovich Wikipedia