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  2. Climate change in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_change_in_popular...

    A satirical cartoon about sea level rise.. References to climate change in popular culture have existed since the late 20th century and increased in the 21st century.Climate change, its impacts, and related human-environment interactions have been featured in nonfiction books and documentaries, but also literature, film, music, television shows and video games.

  3. Tom Toles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Toles

    He received the National Cartoonist Society Editorial Cartoon Award for 2003 and the Herblock Prize for 2011. In 2016, he co-authored with Michael E. Mann The Madhouse Effect, describing the global warming controversy. [5] On October 30, 2020, Toles retired from political cartooning after serving 18 years as a Washington Post political ...

  4. Joel Pett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joel_Pett

    He received the 1995 Global Media Award for cartoons on population issues, and the 1999 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for cartoons highlighting the plight of the disadvantaged. He is a past president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, and a past Pulitzer juror. He has conducted three overseas seminars on editorial ...

  5. Mad (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mad_(magazine)

    In 2008, the magazine got national coverage [85] for its article "Why George W. Bush is in Favor of Global warming". Each of the piece's 10 punchlines was illustrated by a different Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

  6. List of editorial cartoonists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_editorial_cartoonists

    This is a list of editorial cartoonists of the past and present sorted by nationality. An editorial cartoonist is an artist, a cartoonist who draws editorial cartoons that contain some level of political or social commentary. The list is incomplete; it lists only those editorial cartoonists for whom a Wikipedia article already exists.

  7. Climate fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_fiction

    A controlled experiment found that reading climate fiction short stories "had small but significant positive effects on several important beliefs and attitudes about global warming – observed immediately after participants read the stories", though "these effects diminished to statistical nonsignificance after a one-month interval".

  8. Henry Payne (cartoonist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Payne_(cartoonist)

    In addition to his editorial cartoons, Payne also writes columns for various conservative publications, including the National Review and the Weekly Standard. Payne is known for his libertarian views, he has criticized the mainstream media as corrupt, and is an outspoken critic of what he claims to be corruption in global warming reporting.

  9. Climate change art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_change_art

    Climate change art is art inspired by climate change and global warming, generally intended to overcome humans' hardwired tendency to value personal experience over data and to disengage from data-based representations by making the data "vivid and accessible".