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Random Thots is brought to you by Graeme MacKay, Editorial Cartoonist at the Hamilton Spectator, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Website: mackaycartoons.net.

"The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter."
Winston Churchill

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From a Global Warming Skeptic
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Nice Way to Start the Year
A Year in Review II
A Year in Review
Cartooning Stephane Dion
Stephane Dion
Farewell Paul Martin
Stan Keyes Weighs in?
Missing the boat
Turkey time
Outrage and Congratulations
Worth Repeating: Justin Trudeau
Harper and the Chinese
Evolution of a cartoon
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Failing to Predict an Upset
Executing a Hanging
Income Trust Glaze Over
A lefty rant... against guess who?
Rant, Rant, Rant...
Oh Puh...lease
Iraq's Turning Point
Caledonia Cartoon Outrage
Drawing from life
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NDP Stupid Gas
Happy Anniversary
The loosened tie of Dalton McGuinty
Joanna Chapman
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Canada's Buffoon Leader
Cartooning the Future
...And another Pet Peeve...
Icicle Lights Rant: 2006 Edition
"Entertainment Tonight" news
What the?
A Three Cartoon Day
Fairy Tale Series
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Measured cartoon
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Not so nuanced on complainers
A nation of complainers
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Still recovering after Denver
A half baked Cartoon
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Who's Dog the Bounty Hunter?
Heightened Editorial Sensitivity
Go ahead and 'Bite Me'
The Beginning

My 5 year old daughter's art work. "Jasmine" - I think it's fantastic.


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Thursday, August 31, 2006
...And another Pet Peeve...

Garage doors. I hate 'em.

I originally drew this cartoon in April, 1999. The house indicated in Fig. 2 is the ranch style house I lived in while growing up in Dundas, Ont. It had a carport, which my dad couldn't stand. I was glad to see a critique on garage doors as the lead story in today's National Post. There's hope for humanity.


Door closing on 'dull' design  
Melissa Leong -- National Post

Last week, Carl Zehr drove through a new subdivision in Kitchener and saw a wall of garages.

He looked at the rows of semi-detached homes with double-car garages in front, separated by swatches of concrete and small tufts of grass.

"When you looked at these in multiples, side by side if you were looking [down the street], you saw nothing but garage doors," said Mr. Zehr, Kitchener's Mayor.

"There has to be a better way."

On Monday, the city's municipal council voted unanimously to ban two-car garages in front of semi-detached homes, beginning in 2007. Mr. Zehr said the new zoning bylaw is not simply about ridding communities of what urban planners and architects call "snout houses."

"It's about quality of life, eyes on the street and making sure that people could interact in their front yards," Mr. Zehr said.

Kitchener is the latest example of Canadian municipalities launching attacks on the garage in an effort to create more livable, sustainable communities.

Avi Friedman, an architect, planner and professor at McGill University, said more towns and cities are taking their inspiration from places such as Bois-Franc in Montreal, Garrison Woods in Calgary and Cornell in Markham. They have attractive streetscapes with trees and porches, and few front-facing garages.

"When you build garages, what you get is not only an unpleasing building that looks at times like a car wash, you also create a situation by which a large segment of the sidewalk is paved -- not leaving room for trees," Mr. Friedman said.

"The street is, therefore, very dull. Developing something like this is an anti-social statement."

Valerie Shuttleworth, director of planning and urban design in Markham said the town was one of the first in Greater Toronto to wage war on the garage.

In the mid-'90s, the town set limits on the size of garages and began developing communities with lanes to access detached garages behind houses.

She said she didn't get to know her neighbours until she moved to an area without front-facing garages.

Going back to suburban development in the 1920s, garages or sheds were found at the back of the home, planning experts say.

As society increased its reliance on cars, the garage began to creep around to the front of the home.

As more households required multiple vehicles, the garage grew to two, three and four-doors. And as land values rose, people wanted to maximize space by building on top of and around the garage.

"What consumers wanted was the convenience of having a garage attached. They wanted to increase the size of the outdoor space at the back of the house for their enjoyment," Douglas Stewart, president of the Waterloo Region Home Builders' Association, said.

"It's convenient, it's efficient and it improves the overall urban design," he said of front-facing garages.

With increasing restrictions on garages, some builders and real estate agents lament the reduction of choice for the consumer.

"If builders are coming forward with houses and designs, it's because they've got a demand out there that they're trying to meet," said John Kenward of the Canadian Home Builders' Association.

"It's all very well for somebody to stand back and say, 'Frankly, I don't like the look of it,' but ... I think the customer has to have a say in this at the end of the day."

Eastforest Homes Ltd. built 52 semi-detached homes with double garages in a Kitchener subdivision, which was the cause of concern for the city.

But Dave Steinbach, a real estate agent with Peak Realty in Kitchener, said the houses sold "like crazy."

They cost about $217,000 each. A single detached home with a two-car garage in the same neighbourhood starts at $295,000, he said.

"Today everybody's a two-car family," he said. "The city tends to think you use your driveway for a car and the garage for a car. But unless you build a shed in your backyard, where do you put the lawnmower and the kids' bikes?"

Kitchener tightened garage rules for single-family homes in 2000 (the width of a garage is limited to 70% of the home's frontage) but did not include semi-detached homes until now.

As municipalities become stricter on what can be built, the building industry has had to modify how it designs homes.

Garages are being pushed back into the house; municipal planning departments need to be consulted on colour schemes for homes.

"They've turned the construction market upside down," Mr. Steinbach said. "All these restrictions add to the final cost of the house."

Restrictions are the result of municipalities learning to manage the pressures of growth and urbanization or communities being proactive in their planning, design experts say.

"If the Mayor of the community doesn't think of himself as the chief urban designer of the city then no improvement is possible. It has to be led by the top echelons," said Toronto-based architect Peter A. Gabor.

"You would be astonished at the range of measures that are controlling development all across the region. Council gets very inventive."

But planning experts argue that if the goal is to create a better public realm, kicking massive, front-facing garages to the curb is a timid first step.

To reduce the focus on the car, local officials need to develop more compact communities, better public transit and live-work-play areas, Ms. Shuttleworth said. She added that Markham is planning a major employment centre near its Cornell community.

"This issue of the garage is really a symbol or a sign of a much deeper underlying problem," said Ken Greenberg, a Toronto-based urban designer.

"At the rate Southern Ontario is growing, we have to find new paradigms of handling that.... I think there's a huge pent-up desire in the public for alternatives to the conventional form of low-density sprawl."

Posted at 09:59 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comments (2)  

Icicle Lights Rant: 2006 Edition

In my last blog entry I railed against rubberneck news, or useless news which becomes widely known and discussed among the masses. Here's my ongoing useless rant against useless things in the world: icicle lights.

For over 5 years I've obsessed against those white dangling icicle lights, especially when homeowners decide to keep them up all year round. It's quite ironic that a device designed to light up and beautify a house for the festive Christmas season at nighttime can actually do the complete opposite during the daytime making a house or window look absolutely hideous. Pretty...

What's worse is when people think they can get away with decking their house for Christmas and leave the lights up until they actually fall off, or disintegrate. Venture about in any Canadian city and it won't take long to find a house at the end of August decked out with drooping icicle lights. Go through the real estate pages and you may come across a few houses for sale pictured with the decorations still up as if they make for a nice selling feature.

Through the years I've done the following cartoons:

  

If you're ever inclined to send a message to a neighbour who thinks celebrating Christmas is a year round thing I've given you a licence to make it known to those people that their decorations are ruining your property values:

Posted at 12:26 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comment (1)  

Wednesday, August 30, 2006
"Entertainment Tonight" news

For weeks the media has been obsessed by the circus surrounding the arrest and transfer of John Mark Karr, who confessed to the 1996 killing of JonBenet Ramsey. DNA tests prove he's not the killer. In the lead up to the results 24 hour network news tracked each nauseating detail of Karr's arrest, flight from Bangkok to LAX (including everything he ate on board), and his journey on to Boulder, Colorado. Columnists and irate callers to talkline shows went on for days on how horrible it was to transfer such a dangerous man with business class treatment. Many of my own compadres in the editorial cartooning field felt it necessary to weigh in on John Mark Karr.

So, ten years after the initial media circus surrounding the death of a little girl, the world was treated to another media circus surrounding the arrest of an obviously disturbed man. For what purpose? The legacy of this whole story may very well be the frenzy surrounding this story. Media frenzies have become the mainstay of 24 hour news coverage and they often result from isolated occurence when nothing else seems to be happening or when it's deemed necessary to break from constant and rather fatiguing news stories. Was the media collectively getting a little tired of covering the ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel before John Mark Karr's creepy face appeared on tv screens? I'd say so.

OJ Simpson, Michael Jackson, Gary Condit, Elian Gonzalez, Terri Schiavo and JonBenet Ramsey are people whose names have inspired so much coverage and so much air time not just on FOX and CNN, but also on the covers of People and the National Inquirer. All to the benefit of rubberneckers. Even the recent silly antics of Mel Gibson and Tom Cruise have been deemed significant enough by media outlets to warrant them #1 news story placement. I guess it's what the surveys show people want to hear about.

Next year at this time they'll still be talking about Israel and Hezbollah. John Mark Karr's name will be a distant memory.

Posted at 09:58 am by Graeme_MacKay
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Monday, August 28, 2006
What the?

Does it look too wierd? From time to time I like to focus on subject matter from different angles. Todays was from directly above. I don't know how effective it comes across but it took a lot of work and self doubt before it was finally done.

It shows Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty swimming in surplus cash. While green money is distinctive of American dollars it still makes sense, to me at least, to represent Canadian money as green as well, despite in reality it's multicoloured. For those who thought I painstakingly drew each and every bill you'll be disappointed to find out that it's simply a multitude of the same image, cut and copied, slightly rotated, and pasted:

...with a few individual bills applied randomly. Here's a smaller scale of the tile pattern:

The tragedy in all this is that I forgot to send it into the image archives of the Spectator before leaving work last Friday. A free lance cartoon ran instead.

Posted at 11:40 am by Graeme_MacKay
Comment (1)  

Friday, August 25, 2006
A Three Cartoon Day

It was a hectic day of cartooning yesterday. I drew three cartoons, and I'm only used to drawing one a day. Here's what happened. I came into work thinking I'd do something on all the attention Tom Cruise was getting from the media who were suggesting he had met his "fall from grace" after having his ties cut with Paramount Pictures. I'm still wondering why so many even care about that story. Anyways...a new story broke by mid-morning when Astronomers meeting in Prague announced that Pluto would no longer be listed as a planet. It tied in nicely with the demotion of Liberal Borys Whats-his-name at the Party's associate Foreign Affairs critic after his Hezbollah flag waving stunt last week while visiting Lebanon:

Incidentally, many U.S. cartoonists compared Tom Cruise's demotion to that of Pluto's.

While I was drawing the above cartoon thoughts swirled in my head about the people responsible for all the hype about Pluto, so I decided I had to draw something about them:

This isn't the first time I've targetted nerds in an editorial cartoon. (Note the hate mail I received about this one on the right side of the page.) So wary of another assault on me by Hamilton's nerd community I opted to keep this off the local paper and sent it out to the syndicate instead.

By 5:00, I was packing up and ready to go home when word came in that Hamilton's Mayor, Larry DiIanni, had plead guilty for violating the Municipal Elections Act for allowing donors to overcontribute to his last election campaign. The sort of stuff that's causing the more 'Activist' elements of Hamilton to scream "Corruption" when in fact all this is over mere technical oversights... but anyway... one of the mayor's punishments is to write an essay:

And to those who were wondering, yes, the background was prefabricated thanks to a previous cartoon...

...featuring Stephen Harper well over a year ago.

Posted at 12:06 pm by Graeme_MacKay
Comments (5)  

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