SATIRE: Reimagining the Conservative leader’s recent press conference—and the dogged effort to get him to utter two simple words
If Tories are looking for a middle-aged male leader who took law at Dal, followed his dad into politics, served in the Harper cabinet, likes pipelines, struggles with French and recognizes Pride Month, we have wonderful news
Marie-Danielle Smith: The PM appeared before committee for the first time. Here is an approximation of what happened, in language we can all understand.
Sacha Baron Cohen’s new series cracks open a core illusion of American democracy—that it, and the ‘popular will,’ even exists at all
Armando Iannucci’s ‘Death of Stalin’ achieves the remarkable: hilariously skewering a murderous dictator. But even he thinks Trump may reveal comedy’s limits
Satire made in The Daily Show’s image made politics seem like entertainment, lulling viewers and voters into complacency
How Mexico’s version of ‘The Onion’ has became one of the most scathing critics of a corrupt ruling class
Quotes and ideas on satire and free press in the aftermath of the Paris attacks on Charlie Hebdo
Facebook’s ‘satire tag’ is just the latest, saddest defanging of the comedic form, lowering the bar for all
Sensitivity only reinforces stereotype of Muslims as violent
Why cartoonists are proving to be a powerful force in one of the world’s most repressive regimes
Entertaining, if you don’t take it too seriously