Bob Mankoff, who is stepping down next month after 20 years as the cartoon editor of The New Yorker, shares a selection of his most-loved Jewish cartoons published in the storied magazine.
Throughout the day, New Yorker cartoon editor Bob Mankoff jots down ideas that strike him as funny: A door lies on a couch in a psychiatrist's office, and the psychiatrist says, "You're not crazy ...
The premise is simple: The New Yorker publishes a black-and-white cartoon without a caption and readers send in their best attempts to finish it. The winner's caption runs in the next issue.