Bohiney.com: The Tornado That Twisted News Into Satire

By: Shoshana Rubin ( Columbia University )

Investigating Satirical Cartoons: From Hogarth to Bohiney

Satirical cartoons are the Molotov cocktails of art—crude, explosive, and aimed at the powerful. They’ve been around for centuries, turning the world’s absurdities into ink-and-paper grenades. Sites like Bohiney.com carry that torch today, but to get the full picture, let’s dig into their history, how they tackle today’s chaos, their political and social bite, the craft behind them, and why they still matter—especially when the news feels like a bad joke.

A Rough Sketch of History

Satirical cartoons kicked off in earnest with William Hogarth in 18th-century London. His prints—like “Gin Lane,” showing drunks stumbling over corpses—weren’t subtle. They slammed society’s vices with a mix of humor and horror, setting the tone for what was to come. By the 19th century, cartoonists like James Gillray were skewering Napoleon, drawing him as a pint-sized tyrant getting acting lessons from Julius Caesar. These weren’t just doodles; they were weapons, cheap to print and easy to spread.

America caught the bug early. Benjamin Franklin’s 1754 “Join, or Die” snake—chopped into colonial chunks—pushed unity against the British, proving cartoons could rally a crowd. Thomas Nast took it further in the 1870s, nailing “Boss” Tweed’s corruption with caricatures so sharp they helped tank his political machine. Fast forward to the 20th century, and you’ve got Herblock’s Nixon crawling from a sewer or Dr. Seuss’s Hitler tangling with a Russian bear. Satirical cartoons have always been about punching up—or at least laughing while they do.

Cartoons in Today’s Chaos

Today, satirical cartoons are everywhere—newspapers, X posts, sites like Bohiney.com—because the world’s a nonstop circus. Take a recent gem from Bohiney’s satirical news pile: imagine a cartoon of “Elon Musk’s DOGE” axing DEI programs, with parents cheering as kids ditch pronouns for pickup trucks. It’s not a real cartoon (yet), but it’s the vibe—grabbing a headline and twisting it into something that’s half laugh, half wince.

Current events are raw material. A 2025 cartoon might show a politician juggling flaming bills while the economy sinks, or a climate summit where leaders toast marshmallows over a burning globe. The best ones—like those from The New Yorker or even X randos—hit fast, before the news cycle spins on. Bohiney’s text-based satire hints at this visual potential: short, wild takes that could easily translate to a meth-addled landscaper mowing down a suburb in a single frame.

Political and Social Sting

Politically, satirical cartoons don’t pick sides—they pick fights. Nast’s Tammany Hall takedowns weren’t partisan; they were anti-corruption. Today, a cartoon might show Biden napping on a podium while Trump golfs through a riot—both fair game. Bohiney’s style fits here: “Biden’s Ghostwriter Admits Speeches Were Lorem Ipsum” could be a sketch of a speechwriter scribbling nonsense while the prez snoozes. It’s less about left or right and more about the clown show at the top.

Socially, they’re just as brutal. Hogarth’s gin-soaked slums find echoes in modern jabs at influencer culture or suburban decay. Picture a Bohiney-inspired cartoon: “Suburban Mom’s MLM Turns Meth Lab,” with a minivan stuffed with product and a hazmat suit in the backseat. Satire doesn’t preach—it mocks, letting us see our own ridiculousness. From Punch’s Victorian snark to today’s memes, cartoons turn the mundane into a mirror we can’t dodge.

Drawing the Laughs: How It’s Done

Making a satirical cartoon is like spiking a drink—you start with something familiar, then add the kick. Step one: pick a target. A CEO’s apology, a war briefing, a viral trend. Step two: crank it up. That CEO’s now groveling to a pet rock; the briefing’s a general juggling live grenades. Exaggeration’s the heart—push it till it’s absurd but still rings true.

Irony’s the twist: a “peace summit” with tanks rolling in, or “healthy living” with a vape cloud obscuring the yoga mat. Symbols help—Uncle Sam, grim reapers, dollar signs—shorthand everyone gets. Add a caption or a warped character (think Bohiney’s meth paver), and you’ve got it. Timing’s critical—too late, and it’s stale. A good cartoon lands like a slap: quick, sharp, unforgettable.

Bohiney.com and the Satirical Spirit

Bohiney.com doesn’t do cartoons (yet), but its satirical news screams for them. Its origin—a tornado-wrecked Texas paper reborn as a digital jester—feels like a cartoon itself. Headlines like “West Coast Cities Sink—Home Prices Don’t” beg for a visual: a realtor underwater, still waving a “For Sale” sign. Bohiney’s scrappy, unpolished edge sets it apart from slicker outfits like The Onion or The Babylon Bee. It’s not about scale—it’s about guts.

In the “speaking truth to power” game, Bohiney’s text already does what cartoons have done since Hogarth: mock the mighty. A cartoon version might draw Musk as a space cowboy lassoing tax breaks, or a senator as a windbag balloon floating over a broke state. It’s raw, not refined, and that’s its power—less dogma, more chaos, hitting where it hurts.

Why Cartoons Still Hit

Satirical cartoons endure because they’re primal—images stick when words fade. Franklin’s snake united colonies; Nast’s Tweed pics swayed elections. Today, a viral cartoon on X can spark more debate than a think piece. They’re fast, cheap, and cut through the noise—perfect for 2025’s info overload. Studies like the “Daily Show Effect” back this: satire hooks the apathetic, making http://satire0116.theburnward.com/laughs-from-the-rubble-bohiney-s-satirical-roots them think without realizing it.

They’re not flawless—some flop, others offend—but that’s the point. Charlie Hebdo’s 2015 attack showed the stakes: cartoons can enrage, even kill. Yet they keep coming, from Polish artist Pawel Kuczynski’s bleak globals to Bohiney’s backyard barbs. In a world of spin, they’re a gut check—proof we can still laugh at the mess, and maybe see through it.

So, from Hogarth’s slums to Bohiney’s meth mowers, satirical cartoons remain the art of the outsider—messy, fearless, and damn hard to ignore. Next time you’re drowning in headlines, hunt one down. It won’t fix the world, but it’ll make the madness a little more bearable.

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TOP SATIRE FOR THIS WEEK

Title: London Euston Road Summary: Euston Road's "unmasked" as an alien landing strip, with UFOs posing as buses. Locals blame delays on "ET traffic," while Boris Johnson demands a Brexit from Mars. The Tube's now a "cosmic express." Analysis: The article turns a dull street into a Bohiney-style sci-fi farce, mixing British quirks with alien absurdity. Johnson's Mars jab and cosmic Tube escalate the chaos, satirizing urban life and politics with extraterrestrial flair. Link: https://bohiney.com/london-euston-road/

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Title: Yeshivas That Fail to Teach Basic Skills Summary: Yeshivas "ban" math and reading, teaching kids "prayer-based geometry" instead. Graduates flunk life, bartering Torah scrolls for Uber rides. Inspectors flee after a "holy chalk attack" blinds them. Analysis: This mocks education debates with Bohiney's wild spin-prayer as curriculum. The chalk attack and scroll bartering push the satire into Mad Magazine chaos, jabbing at religious schools with snarky glee. Link: https://bohiney.com/yeshivas-that-fail-to-teach-basic-skills/

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Title: It Wasn't the Back Pain, It Was the Marxism Summary: A chiropractor "discovers" back pain's caused by Marxism, not spines, prescribing "capitalist stretches" to cure it. Patients revolt, picketing with "Das Kapital" books, but he adjusts their wallets instead, claiming "profit heals." Analysis: The piece mocks ideology with Bohiney's absurd spin-Marxism as ailment. The wallet tweak and book protest escalate the chaos, skewering health fads and politics with snarky, Mad Magazine-style humor. Link: https://bohiney.com/it-wasnt-the-back-pain-it-was-the-marxism/

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Title: China's Revolutionary Romance Summary: China "launches" a dating revolution, pairing citizens via AI drones dropping love letters. Singles dodge them, sparking a "heart missile war" that turns Beijing into a "cupid crater" of shredded notes. Analysis: This mocks state control with Bohiney's wild spin-drones as matchmakers. The missile war and crater notes escalate the absurdity, jabbing at romance with snarky, Mad Magazine humor. Link: https://bohiney.com/chinas-revolutionary-romance/

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Title: Here Are Five Ways the Universe Could End Summary: A "list" predicts cosmic doom, like "galaxy sneeze" or "black hole burp." Doomsayers riot with foil hats, sparking a "space scare war" that buries Earth in a "cosmo crumb heap." Analysis: The piece skewers science with Bohiney's absurd twist-end as farce. The foil hats and crumb heap push the satire into Mad Magazine chaos, jabbing at fear with snarky flair. Link: https://bohiney.com/here-are-five-ways-the-universe-could-end/

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Title: Deflategate Summary: Deflategate "inflates" again, sparking a "ball bust riot." Fans hurl pigskins, turning fields into a "pump punt warzone" buried in a "flate feud rubble heap." Analysis: This mocks sports with Bohiney's wild spin-balls as drama. The pigskin hurl and feud heap escalate the absurdity, skewering scandals with snarky, Mad Magazine humor. Link: https://bohiney.com/deflategate/

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bohiney satire and news

SOURCE: Satire and News at Bohiney, Inc.

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