Welcome to the fourth episode of The Funny Times Podcast!
This episode coincides with our March 2026 issue. If you're a subscriber, that issue should land in your mailbox by mid-February. It features Dave Barry's annual "Year in Review," along with our exclusive "Year in Review" crossword puzzle—a chance to look back, laugh, and say good riddance to 2025. But there's plenty to look forward to in 2026 as the ice melts to make way for spring, including hilarious full-page spreads on free speech, modern conveniences, magic words, and the future.
Speaking of melting ICE, the staff here at Funny Times continue to be inspired by the brave residents of the Twin Cities—and communities across the country—who are standing up to protect their neighbors and defend their cities from Trump's thugs. In this issue, cartoonist Keith Knight hilariously ponders the question "What Would Jesus Do?" if he were living in the US today. In his strip, a Black Jesus melts a group of ICE agents into a puddle of water…and then turns that water into a tasty bottle of "White W(h)ine." Ta-da! If only it were that easy.
At a moment when many corporate platforms are censoring what can be said, we're grateful to be 100% independent—and free to tell the truth, no matter how Orwellian things get. We hope our readers and listeners will continue to send us snapshots of your favorite protest signs, and we promise to keep printing the most biting satire and humor available to keep your spirits lifted.
To that end, we recently sat down with two of the country's leading editorial cartoonists: Ruben Bolling and Tom Tomorrow.
Rubin's award-winning weekly strip Tom the Dancing Bug frequently appears in our pages. Known for its shape-shifting style, the strip often parodies by borrowing from other visual traditions. Like his recent comic titled, "a busy, busy day in Washington, D.C.," drawn in the style of children's illustrator Richard Scarry. It depicts cheerful cartoon animals overlayed with grim political realities: a cute cartoon cat holding a sign that reads "I don't like Trump" is labeled "Antifa," while a mouse tagged "looks Mexican" flees an army of ICE agents. In the background, more whimsical characters—with labels like "tariff avoider" and "university president"—line up with bags of money outside the gates of the White House, now rebranded as the "Presidential Library Donation Center." Oof.
Meanwhile, Funny Times readers will recognize Tom Tomorrow, creator of the long-running strip This Modern World, which has been delivering subversive political commentary in a retro, minimalist style for nearly 40 years—almost as long as Funny Times has been in print. Kurt Vonnegut once called him "the wry voice of American common sense, humor, and decency," a combination that has only grown rarer, and more necessary, over time.
In our wide-ranging conversation with the two "Toms" who have been chronicling American absurdity for decades, we dig into how they keep making satire in a world that already feels like a parody of itself. They talk about cartooning as a form of sketch comedy, about borrowing and breaking visual styles, and about where they still find new ideas and inspiration—even when reality seems determined to beat them to the punch.