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From the archives: A witch cursed Phil Hands’ dick

As Tone Madison’s 10th anniversary approaches, we look back at some highlights from the past decade.

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Someone's left hand holds a cutout piece of paper in the shape of a penis and testicles over a table with a small tray and conical vessel. The name "Phil Hands" is written on the shaft of the paper.
Screen capture of Twitter user ROCYarnSiren’s brief ceremony that cursed cartoonist Phil Hands’ penis.

As Tone Madison‘s 10th anniversary approaches, we look back at some highlights from the past decade.

Tone Madison turns 10 years old this year. To mark a decade of our fiercely independent, reader-supported coverage of culture and politics in Madison, we’re revisiting some highlights from our archives. Got a favorite Tone Madison story you think we should include? Let us know by sending an email to editor@tonemadison.com


“A self-described ‘fierce political moderate’ who loves ‘using both sides of my brain every day,’ Hands will hurl his spongiform harpoons toward any political target, pencils ever prodding at the sore spots of partisans and ideologues of all stripes. People across the full length and girth of the political spectrum chafe at his commentary, but to Hands’ knowledge this is the first time a witch has ever cursed his dick.”

—Scott Gordon

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Editor’s note: I don’t know if Tone Madison has ever published a headline more attention-grabbing than this one, and it’s just in time for a reappraisal here in the spellbinding full-moon glow of October. Our publisher Scott Gordon’s ability to use levity to cut to the core of serious issues is one of his greatest strengths as a writer. So of course he could not resist covering a spring 2020 feud between Wisconsin State Journal cartoonist Phil Hands and Freedom, Inc. activists, who Hands sketched in malicious caricature at the time. (I still recall the hilarious potency of “Shitpost or not, the spell directs genuine negative energy toward Hands’ pelvic region.”)

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Gordon’s approach initially defined this publication’s voice and nook in the arts and culture scene from the outset. And it continues to great effect here, during a time when there were no arts events and our staff and devoted freelancers were regularly expanding out into local and state politics, for good reason, after the unconscionable murder of George Floyd.

We also owe the framing to once regular columnist Sami Schalk, who inspired this article with a Twitter hashtag about Hands. The editorial cartoonist is basically the Wisconsin paper’s self-professed Bill Maher, whose aim is to punch up/down at stances he deems extreme. However, only false equivalences can be made when someone like him is trying to insensitively “both-sides” matters he doesn’t fully grasp. Yeah, it sure is a challenge to gracefully articulate systemic racism in four ungainly, unsubtly-illustrated panels, because Hands simply hasn’t had those life experiences and had to sit with those unjust safety concerns in his head everyday.

As Gordon weaves through this amusing hex saga, he points out the people and faces of Freedom, Inc., and what they were actually advocating for (as well as the history of the defund-the-police discourse), countering Hands’ crude sketches. That kind of clarity felt so necessary at this moment of uprising during lockdowns, and I know it was Gordon’s most sincere intention behind taking this to publication. But sometimes the best way to foster engagement is to just disarm readers initially with a little digressive story about a 30-second curse video on a cartoonist’s phallus. Come to think of it, maybe there’s something here for a new, hypothetical season of Nathan Fielder and Benny Safie’s unhinged series. —Grant Phipps, Film Editor

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A witch cursed Phil Hands’ dick

The Wisconsin State Journal cartoonist’s treatment of Black activists has placed him in penile peril.

Originally published June 8, 2020.

Editorial cartoonist Phil Hands, the Wisconsin State Journal‘s purveyor of meaningfully crooked fingers and Leprechaun Paul Ryans, stuck himself into the debate over abolishing the police with a June 5 cartoon. It suggests Madison non-profit Freedom Inc.’s demands for justice and radical change are rooted in legitimate concerns, but go too far because, as a Black woman in the cartoon suggests, defunding police and releasing people from jail would leave Black people defenseless against white supremacists. 

Police departments grew out of various efforts to enforce a racist social order and have a well-documented problem with employing white supremacists. No community is monolithic and issues of public safety are absolutely complex, and yes, sure, white supremacists have gotten arrested. But members of marginalized communities in the United States often experience more persecution than protection from cops. There is also something profoundly fraught about a white cartoonist drawing a dialogue between two Black people in this way. Hands has acknowledged the “justified outrage” about systemic racism and about George Floyd’s murder at the hands of Minneapolis police. But the tendency to want to lampoon “both sides” of every issue gets him into trouble.

This latest Hands cartoon was the last straw for Dr. Sami Schalk, a UW-Madison professor of Gender and Women’s studies and an uncompromising commentator on all things dealing with race, gender, disabilities, and sexuality. Schalk wrote a Twitter thread about long-running problems with Hands’ cartoons and started a #FirePhilHands hashtag that has picked up some steam. Schalk also tweeted a response directly to Hands: “Also, how fucking dare you use the BLM hashtag & George Floyd’s name in this. I truly hope a witch curses your dick.”

Subsequently, a witch cursed his dick.

On June 5, Twitter user and self-proclaimed witch @ROCYarnSiren responded with a 30-second video of a brief ceremony. A cutout paper dick and balls with the name “Phil Hands” on it is set ablaze, tip first, left to burn in a small vessel, and sprinkled with an ominous pinch of black salt. The spell also employs smoky quartz and a seed from a water chestnut.

“As a woman of color with a pale complexion that has given me a hell of a lot of privilege in life, at a time where we have been rioting for a week straight for justice, it felt important to oblige this black woman’s request,” the upstate New York-based @ROCYarnSiren says. “I mean, in all honesty, it was basically a shitpost. Sami is someone I found before COVID and riots and I found her interesting and informative. And she’s been out there breaking her back for the betterment of the world, so when I saw her post I thought, ‘I can slap a video together and make her laugh for a minute.'” 

Shitpost or not, the spell directs genuine negative energy toward Hands’ pelvic region.

“I set a vague intention of anything bad happening to this guy’s dick—really I’m open to anything ranging from a painful zit to it falling off from gangrene,” @ROCYarnSiren says. “I’m gonna let the universe decide what’s appropriate. I cut a simple dick shape out of paper, wrote this dude’s name on it, and set it on fire before sprinkling it with black salt which is good for curses. We got lucky that it happened to be a full moon, which is a bonus for any spell.”

A self-described “fierce political moderate” who loves “using both sides of my brain every day,” Hands will hurl his spongiform harpoons toward any old point on the political spectrum, pencils ever prodding at the sore spots of partisans and ideologues of all stripes. People across the full length and girth of the political spectrum chafe at his commentary, but to Hands’ knowledge this is the first time a witch has ever cursed his dick.

“I didn’t see the whole video initially,” Hands says. “I quickly glanced at the video on Twitter and saw someone performing some sort of ritual and I thought it was a unique way of showing displeasure with my work, so I tweeted about it. Later, a friend watched it more carefully and noticed the phallus with my name written on it. I’m not sure how I’m supposed to feel about that. It’s a pretty personal attack, but I don’t feel threatened by it, and people are welcomed to criticize my cartoons and my point of view. I’ve done lots of other cartoons about the protests and racial justice, which can be seen Madison.com.”

The crux of this member-magicking ordeal is that when Hands draws cartoons involving Freedom Inc., he portrays the organization’s leaders as irrational, emotional Black people polluting the political debate with uncivil interruptions. In her Twitter thread, Schalk wrote that Hands depicts the group “in an inaccurate, racist, fatphobic, transphobic manner. His image of FI is almost always a fat Black genderqueer figure likely targeting one of FI’s 2 co-directors who is a large, dark-skinned Black queer non-binary person.” Schalk also took issue with Hands’ treatment of the controversy over cops at Pride events, pointing out that one of his cartoons on the subject misrepresented the racial dynamic of that debate.

There are a few reasons why Hands’ cartoons about racial issues rub people the wrong way, and it’s not simply that he doesn’t agree with the demands Freedom Inc. has articulated. Wherever you stand on Freedom Inc.’s specific goals, it’s easy to get tired of local commentators clutching their pearls over the organization’s tactics, given that we’re talking about literal life-and-death issues that elected officials have failed abjectly to address. While Hands does indeed almost always represent the organization as a Black person, Freedom Inc. is explicitly a Black and Southeast Asian organization that serves members of those communities with a range of support and educational programming in addition to leading advocacy work, including an ongoing campaign to remove Madison Police Department officers from local public schools. It has gained even more prominence over the past couple weeks as a leading organization in Madison’s protests against police brutality, hence that latest cartoon. 

While the idea of defunding and/or abolishing police and prisons has only penetrated the mainstream discourse in the past couple of weeks, radical thinkers and activists have been articulating their visions of a cop-free world for years. Freedom Inc. definitely advocates for its agenda through disruption, whether at school-board meetings or on the Beltline, but it would be a mistake to treat this as irrational or emotional behavior. It’s strategic and, despite the odds, has actually moved the needle. For instance, on Sunday night, the teachers’ union Madison Teachers Inc. announced that it would support eventually removing police from public schools, a major reversal. Even without that development, imagine seeing what Freedom Inc. and its partners have managed to pull off in these past 10 days and not coming away with a profound respect for their organizational savvy, political intelligence, and unwavering commitment to their goals. 

Freedom Inc. and its allies have not yet convinced many of Madison’s elected officials to support full-on police abolition. But on Sunday night a veto-proof majority of Minneapolis City Council members announced that they would support dismantling the police department that murdered George Floyd. Who knows what will eventually happen, but the gathering of political will alone is an extraordinary breakthrough in a major United States city. It shows that sometimes radical demands can catch on, and over the past week it’s become increasingly clear that even people who don’t want to abolish police altogether are suddenly far more willing to question the impunity and lavish resources police enjoy.

Similarly, a goodly witch on the shores of Lake Ontario has taken concrete steps to defund and/or dismantle Phil Hands’ dick, and only time will tell whether this bold hope can be realized. Given that the State Journal still employs Chris Rickert, Hands’ knob might be a more realistic target than his job. 

“I’ll also say that Hands hasn’t responded to any of the #FirePhilHands tweets to my knowledge EXCEPT the dick curse,” Schalk told me on Twitter Sunday night, “so we know where his priorities lie.”

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Author

Scott Gordon co-founded Tone Madison in 2014 has covered culture and politics in Madison since 2006 for publications including The A.V. Club, Dane101, and Isthmus, and has also covered policy, environmental issues, and public health for WisContext.

Profile pic by Rachal Duggan.