France One example is
Maurice Joly's 1864 pamphlet entitled
The Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu (
Dialogue aux enfers entre Machiavel et Montesquieu), which attacks the political ambitions of
Napoleon III. It was first published in
Brussels in 1864. The piece used the literary device of a
dialogue between two diabolical plotters in
Hell, the historical characters of
Machiavelli and
Montesquieu, to cover up a direct, and illegal, attack on Napoleon's rule. The noble baron Montesquieu made the case for
liberalism; the
Florentine political writer Machiavelli presented the case for cynical
despotism. In this manner, Joly communicated the secret ways in which liberalism might spawn a despot like Napoleon III. The literacy rate in France was roughly 30 percent in the 19th century making it virtually impossible for people of lower classes to engage in political satire. However, visual arts could be interpreted by anyone, and a man named Charles Philipon took advantage creating two weekly magazines, La Caricature and Le Charivari – the cheaper of the two. Philipon used his papers, which had become more and more popular across France, as a threat to the King, Louis-Philippe, as the papers used satire and humor to criticize the government and King. Several attempts to suppress the two magazines were made by the monarchy which would only make the articles more critical. Philipon was eventually taken to court and sentenced to 13 months in prison following several more arrests. The drawings that originally sent Philipon to court were drawings that turned the King into a pear over the course of the drawings. The people of France began to recognize that King Louis-Philippe really did look like a pear and could not separate the two. People began to sarcastically state that pears should be banned in the country as cutting one would be a threat towards the King, Louis-Philippe. "Nietzsche's satire" was aimed at Lutheranism. Kladderadatsch and Simplicissimus were two sources of political satire in Germany during the 18–19 century, both of which show how satire can be used to see cultural history in societies. Popularity in press and satirical jokes flourished in the 19th century as thousands of new magazines emerged in Germany. Magazines and newspapers began to exceed the consumption of books and became one of the most popular forms of media in Germany at the time.
United Kingdom The UK has a long tradition of political satire, dating from the early years of English literature. In some readings, a number of
William Shakespeare's plays can be seen – or at least performed – as satire, including
Richard III and
The Merchant of Venice. Later examples such as
Jonathan Swift's
A Modest Proposal are more outright in their satirical nature. Through the 18th and 19th centuries
editorial cartoons developed as graphic form of satire, with dedicated satirical magazines such as
Punch (launched 1841) appearing in the first half of the 19th century. A local satirical newspaper,
The Town Crier, launched in
Birmingham in 1861, has been described as setting out, through humour, to compare "municipal government as it was – in incompetent hands – with municipal government as it might be". The early 1960s saw the so-called "
satire boom", of which the most prominent products were the stage
revue Beyond the Fringe (debuted 1960), the fortnightly magazine
Private Eye (launched 1961) and the
BBC TV show
That Was the Week That Was (1962–1963). More recent examples have included topical television panel shows such as
Have I Got News for You and
Mock the Week, and television series such as
Ballot Monkeys, The Mash Report and
Spitting Image. Key political cartoonists in the United Kingdom include people such as
Peter Brookes who has been a political cartoonist for
The Times since 1992 and
Nicola Jennings who features regularly in
The Guardian. Comedian Tom Walker is famous for playing a political correspondent under the name of "
Jonathan Pie".
Street art Street artists like
Banksy have used dark political humor and witty political and social commentaries, primarily through
graffiti, to comment on various themes such as capitalism, imperialism and war. Banksy's pieces which feature street art on political satire include "Stop and Search" which illustrates the character
Dorothy from
The Wizard of Oz being searched by a police officer. Banksy mocks politicians opinions on
police brutality as innocent Dorothy is being questioned by the police which is a representation of police brutality. "Bomb Hugger" is another one of Banksy's pieces which displays a young woman hugging a bomb which was dropped by military planes. He criticizes the nature of war and the opinions of politicians on the subject as the woman represents innocence being directly impacted by the "dark" bomb symbol. Founding father
Benjamin Franklin was a notable political satirist. He employed satire in several essays, including
Rules by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One and
A Witch Trial at Mount Holly. Cartoons continued to provide commentary on American politics. In the late 1800s, editorial cartoonist
Thomas Nast employed political satire to tackle issues like corruption. Satire became more visible on American television during the 1960s. Some of the early shows that used political satire include the British and American versions of the program
That Was the Week That Was (airing on the
American Broadcasting Company, or ABC, in the U.S.),
CBS's
The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, and
NBC's ''
Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. During the months leading up to the 1968 presidential election, Richard Nixon appeared on Laugh-In'' and repeated the program's catch-phrase "Sock it to me." Other forms of satire of the 1960s and early 1970s typically used the sitcom format, such as the show
All in the Family. When
Saturday Night Live debuted in 1975, the show began to change the way that comedians would depict the president on television.
Chevy Chase opened the fourth episode of the show with his impersonation of a bumbling
Gerald Ford. Chase did not change his appearance to look like President Ford, and he portrayed the president by repeatedly falling down on the stage. Some of the other famous presidential impersonations on
Saturday Night Live include
Dan Aykroyd's
Richard Nixon and
Jimmy Carter caricatures,
Dana Carvey as
George H. W. Bush,
Darrell Hammond and
Phil Hartman as
Bill Clinton,
Will Ferrell as
George W. Bush,
Jay Pharoah and
Fred Armisen as
Barack Obama. Hartman was the first in a long string of cast members to impersonate
Donald Trump, who was most famously impersonated by
Darrell Hammond and
Alec Baldwin, and currently
James Austin Johnson impersonates him. Johnson also impersonates
Joe Biden, who was also impersonated by
Jason Sudeikis and
Jim Carrey. Political elites like Hillary Clinton are also famously impersonated on
Saturday Night Live. During the
2008 presidential campaign,
Saturday Night Live gained wide attention because former cast member
Tina Fey returned to the show to satirize
Republican vice presidential candidate
Sarah Palin. In addition to Fey's striking physical resemblance to Palin, the impersonation of the vice presidential candidate was also noteworthy because of Fey's humorous use of some of exactly the same words Palin used in media interviews and campaign speeches as a way to perform political satire.
Saturday Night Live also uses political satire throughout its
Weekend Update sketch.
Weekend Update is a fake news segment on the show that satirizes politics and current events. It has been a part of
SNL since the first episode of the show on October 11, 1975.
The Daily Show and
The Colbert Report use stylistic formats that are similar to
Weekend Update. On
The Daily Show, host
Jon Stewart used footage from news programs to satirize politics and the news media.
Stephen Colbert performed in character on
The Colbert Report as a right-wing news pundit. Both hosts' television programs were broadcast on
Comedy Central.
The Daily Show continues to run with Stewart as the Monday host, and featured
Trevor Noah as the host from 2015–2022; Colbert became the host of
The Late Show, succeeding
David Letterman. With their shows, Stewart and Colbert helped increase public and academic discussion of the significance of political satire.
Real Time with Bill Maher, Full Frontal with Samantha Bee and
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver are also examples of satirical news shows. During the
2020 presidential campaign,
perennial candidate Vermin Supreme was recruited by members of the
Libertarian Party to run a serious presidential campaign (
Vermin Supreme 2020 presidential campaign) which utilizes his satirical character to promote
libertarianism. ==The Middle East==