"Commentary On The Commute" features roughly 95 pieces in the New York Transit Museum's Grand Central Gallery, with no ...
Cartoonist Will Santino‘s funny one-panel comics blend humor, whimsy, and just the right amount of nonsense, creating the ...
To celebrate the magazine's 100th anniversary, the iconic weekly partnered with J.Crew to drop a line of stylish sweaters, hats, and totes — grab them while you still can ...
Bob Mankoff, who is stepping down next month after 20 years as the cartoon editor of The New Yorker, shares a selection of his most-loved Jewish cartoons published in the storied magazine.
The New York Transit Museum is celebrating The New Yorker’s centennial with an exhibit called Commentary on the Commute: A ...
The WSJ posted a caption-less classic from The New Yorker's cartoon editor Bob Mankoff on Facebook and Twitter. Bob sorted through the responses, picked his favorites and discusses them with The ...
In 1974, Bob Mankoff began creating original cartoons and submitting them to magazines around New York City. In 1977, he sold his first cartoon to The New Yorker, and within three years he became ...
Everyone knows the New Yorker cartoons, but less certain are the stories of the people behind them and how they actually get in the magazine. One of the more recent cartoonist sensations in the ...
It's even harder to be funny and get paid for it. But the cartoon editor of The New Yorker, Bob Mankoff, has made a living making people laugh for decades. He says there are a lot of scientific ...
Thousands enter each week, but only one caption makes the cut. Asheville’s Thomas Roth cracked the code — on his third try.