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Zonker doesn’t tan, but strip still skewers

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Associated Press

Not long after the dust settled from the Iraqi explosion that took “Doonesbury” comic strip character B.D.’s left leg last year, the Pentagon was on the phone.

The frequent target of “Doonesbury” creator Garry Trudeau, the Defense Department offered the satirist extensive access to soldiers wounded while fighting in Iraq and the doctors and caregivers trying to put their bodies -- and psyches -- back together.

“There are so many ways to get it wrong,” Trudeau said of portraying the soldiers’ struggles accurately during a recent meeting of the American Assn. of Sunday and Features Editors. “They figured, correctly, I could use all the help I could get.”

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It also spoke to the fact that “Doonesbury,” an often funny, sometimes frustrating and frequently controversial comic strip born in syndication 35 years ago, is still considered weighty enough to get the government’s attention.

Over the years, the strip -- born out of a cartoon that Yale graduate Trudeau, 57, wrote for the college paper -- has used humor and biting commentary to address a broad sweep of society, including race relations, AIDS, same-sex marriage and stem cells.

His characters have aged along the way: Mike Doonesbury, the strip’s lead character, has gone from idealistic college student to befuddled dad of a college-age daughter; Zonker Harris, the former professional tanner, is now a nanny; Uncle Duke, the Hunter S. Thompsonesque mercenary, ran for the presidency in 2000 and, until recently, was serving as mayor of the fictional Iraqi city of Al-Amok.

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But he has always come back to raw politics, taking a page of Walt Kelly’s “Pogo,” which pioneered the use of poking fun at politicians on the funny pages. Most recently, he has relentlessly hammered the war and President Bush.

“Well, it’s a humor strip, so my first responsibility has always been to entertain the reader,” Trudeau said in response to e-mailed questions. “But if, in addition, I can help move readers to thought and judgment about issues that concern me, so much the better.”

Many times, those efforts have gotten him in trouble with newspaper editors who have pulled or edited his strips because of salty language, uncomfortable images or controversial subjects.

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His strips have also attracted the ire of his subjects, who claim he’s unfair and trying to score political points for liberals.

Trudeau, who describes his politics as “stone dull moderate,” said he’s supported Republicans in the past but has felt compelled to go after “mindless ideologues like the ones who’ve had a stranglehold on power the past five years.”

Some observers say the war has given “Doonesbury” a new energy, one that they say was largely absent during the 1990s, when American politics and culture didn’t deliver the high-stakes issues that experts say satire needs to thrive.

“I think ‘Doonesbury’ was really of the Vietnam generation and became a voice of the Vietnam generation, and what’s interesting to me is that decades later [Trudeau] tapped into that exact same thing with the Iraq war,” said Matt Davies, a Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist for the Journal News in Westchester, N.Y. “Because of his reputation and perhaps his infamy, he rose to the challenge with the Iraq war and was back throwing barbs on the comics page.

“He’s still got it. He’s still an angry young man.”

Of course, “Doonesbury” is no longer the oddity it once was. In the 1970s, the idea of using humor to skewer the political and social issues of the day was still rare in popular culture.

“Those were very self-serious times,” said Trudeau, who won a Pulitzer in 1975. “The end of the Vietnam War changed all that. The nation exhaled, ‘Saturday Night Live’ hit big and satire really took off.”

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Now “Doonesbury” has been joined by politically minded strips such as the racially charged “The Boondocks” and the conservative-leaning “Mallard Fillmore” and “Prickly City.”

Internet blogs broadcast a wide range of perspectives, and TV viewers can tune in nightly to Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show With Jon Stewart.”

While circulation of the strip has increased in recent years to 1,500 newspapers worldwide and Trudeau has been a finalist for two more Pulitzers, is “Doonesbury” still relevant?

“That’s for the readers to adjudge, but I will say that in general public commentators have nowhere near the clout that we enjoyed 35 years ago, the age of four TV channels and no Internet,” Trudeau said. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s all good. You can’t have too many voices in a democracy. Talented people will find their audiences.”

Others say Trudeau is too modest.

Christopher Lamb, an associate professor of communication at the College of Charleston in South Carolina, dedicated a chapter to “Doonesbury” in his book “Drawn to Extremes: The Use and Abuse of Political Cartoons.”

“Satire is ephemeral. It doesn’t last. For Trudeau to do it for so long is just incredible,” Lamb said. “He may be competing with satirists like Mark Twain, Ambrose Bierce and H.L. Mencken.”

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