The Newfoundland Cartoonist Who Documents Provincial Politics with Sharp, Salt-Tinged Humour | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: Walrus
Author: Kevin Tobin
Publication Date: October 24, 2025 - 06:29

The Newfoundland Cartoonist Who Documents Provincial Politics with Sharp, Salt-Tinged Humour

October 24, 2025

For four decades, starting in the mid-’80s, Kevin Tobin has been Newfoundland and Labrador’s sharpest editorial cartoonist. He can collapse a week’s worth of headlines into one perfectly barbed scene. From Donald Trump to the province’s chronic doctor shortage, from Mark Carney’s ascent to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, his thousands of caricatures for the Telegram have spared no target. Each one—signed “KT”—brims with satire, empathy, and the province’s own unmistakable, salt-tinged wit. Almost always hovering in his panels is a tiny fly—his alter ego—taking it all in. Describing himself as a “notorious doodler,” Tobin collects the high points of his years at the drawing table in his new book, Fly on the Wall. We’ve picked pieces that showcase his range: from the quick jabs to the slow burns. Paired with choice quotes, they offer a visual scrapbook of moments that have shaped Atlantic politics—and the country. —Carmine Starnino

“I have fond memories of my father reading the Western Star daily newspaper after supper, and I particularly enjoyed the coloured comic strips in the Saturday-morning edition, the sweet smell of newsprint and ink coming from the pages.”

“Most people have heard the phrase ‘ink in the blood.’ It means to have a predisposition toward or passion for the written word and the way it captures life. For me, the ink in my blood is what gives life to the cartoons I draw.”

“Flies are industrious. Flies turn poo into stock feed, and they are live food and fuel for birds, frogs, and lizards. They serve as pollinators for a variety of plants. They also buzz around humans and cause us to wave our arms about to shoo them, thus encouraging physical activity.”

Excerpted, with permission, from Fly on the Wall by Kevin Tobin, published by Breakwater Books Limited, 2025.

The post The Newfoundland Cartoonist Who Documents Provincial Politics with Sharp, Salt-Tinged Humour first appeared on The Walrus.


Unpublished Newswire

 
British Columbia Premier David Eby, facing criticism for his massive deficit spending, offered a road map this week that lays out how his province will find its way out of a fiscal bog.Through legislation tabled Monday, the province’s Crown corporation, BC Hydro, will build a new transmission line for northwestern B.C. that is expected to secure up to 14 major private-sector investments including mines, liquefied natural gas plants and an expansion of the Port of Prince Rupert.
October 25, 2025 - 08:00 | Justine Hunter | The Globe and Mail
Joe Carter was 33 years old when he stepped up to home plate on an October night during Game 6 of the 1993 World Series. The city of Toronto was 159. Both had been waiting for this moment for a very long time.Mr. Carter grew up in Oklahoma City, Okla. His father owned a downtown gas station where young Joe would pump gas as a kid. He had 10 brothers and sisters. The family was crazy about sports. To feed them all, his dad hunted quails, pheasants and rabbits.
October 25, 2025 - 07:35 | Marcus Gee | The Globe and Mail
Canadians are talking a lot these days about building housing. But what will that housing look like? The country lacks specific visions for the apartments, blocks and cities of tomorrow. A recent publication by the Neptis Foundation, Impossible Toronto: On the Courtyard, answers that need. Led by Studio VAARO and Gabriel Fain Architects, this is not a vague aspiration; it is a specific, provocative proposal for how Toronto might evolve. The project aims to imagine a city that is currently impossible, and articulates the regulatory reasons that make it so.
October 25, 2025 - 07:30 | Alex Bozikovic | The Globe and Mail