Annual Convention

Annual Convention September 11-14, 2025

The AAEC will be joining the line-up at this year’s Small Press Expo as part of our annual convention in September 2025. Registration is now open.

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Bill Schorr Back

After one of the briefest retirements on record, Bill Schorr has returned to editorial cartooning. Daryl Cagle, whose syndicate, Cagle Cartoons, Inc., will now carry Schorr’s work, made the announcement on his blog in August.

“We’re very excited,” Cagle told E&P Online. “He’s a star. I read him as a kid growing up in L.A., and we’re delighted to have him.”

The news is a swift turnaround from this past March, when United Media, Schorr’s previous syndicate, announced that Schorr would no longer draw editorial cartoons, though he would continue to draw his comic strip, “The Grizzwells,” which is syndicated by United Media.

“It was nothing personal against United,” Schorr told E&P. “The editorial cartoons just weren’t bringing in any income. My client list got cut back severely — probably they all went over to Daryl — and it just wasn’t generating any income. By the end, I was only making a couple hundred dollars a month.”

However, Schorr says that life away from editorial cartooning didn’t quite suit him. “At first I was relieved. I don’t think I read a newspaper or watched a political show for about three weeks [after leaving]. It was a nice breather. But very quickly I found that I was starting to miss politics.”

Schorr and Cagle crossed paths at the National Cartoonists Society Convention in late May in Los Angeles. “He told me he missed it,” said Cagle, who convinced Schorr that latching on with his syndicate could be more profitable. After sending Cagle two months’ worth of test drawings and evergreen panels, Cagle announced Schorr’s return to editorial cartooning Monday.

“[Cagle] made me an offer I couldn’t refuse,” said Schorr with a laugh. “It’s a chance to work at my pace, without the pressure of just starting out. We’ll see how it goes.”

Schorr began his career as a cartoonist for the Kansas City Star in 1973 before joining the Los Angeles Herald Examiner in 1978. After returning to the Star in 1988, he joined New York’s Daily News as a staff cartoonist from 1997 to 2001.

— Source: E&P, August 11, 2009

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OUR MISSION

The mission of the AAEC is to champion and defend editorial cartooning and free speech as essential to liberty in the United States and throughout the world.

The AAEC aims to be an international leader in support of the human, civil, and artistic rights of editorial cartoonists around the world, and to stand with other international groups in support of the profession.


The Daily Cartoonist

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LOCHER FELLOWSHIP

The AAEC John Locher Memorial Fellowship is awarded each year to one early-career cartoonist whose work demonstrates clear opinions and strong artistry on political and social topics. Deadline to be considered is the end of March.

The Locher Fellow will receive a one-year Regular membership in the AAEC, be a guest of the CXC Festival — held every fall in Columbus, Ohio —  and have the opportunity to meet with editorial cartoonists during the year of the Fellowship for portfolio reviews and career advice.


CARTOONS FOR THE CLASSROOM

Cartoons in Education

Every two weeks throughout the year, The Learning Forum and the AAEC offers CARTOONS FOR THE CLASSROOM, a free lesson resource for teachers discussing current events.  Visit NIEonline.com for more lesson plans.