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List of Satirists And Satiresreport

  • Aesop (c. 620–560 BCE, Ancient Greece) – Aesop's Fables (Early satirical authors)

  • Diogenes (c. 412–323 BCE, Ancient Greece) (Early satirical authors)

  • Aristophanes (c. 448–380 BCE, Ancient Greece) – The Frogs, The Birds, and The Clouds (Early satirical authors)

  • Gaius Lucilius (c. 180–103 BCE, Roman Republic) (Early satirical authors)

  • Horace (65–8 BCE, Roman Republic) – Satires (Early satirical authors)

  • Ovid (43 BCE – 17 CE, Roman Republic/Roman Empire) – The Art of Love (Early satirical authors)

  • Seneca the Younger (c. 4 BCE – 65 CE, Hispania/Rome) – Apocolocyntosis (Early satirical authors)

  • Persius (34–62 CE, Roman Empire) (Early satirical authors)

  • Petronius (c. 27–66 CE, Roman Empire) – Satyricon (Early satirical authors)

  • Juvenal (1st to early 2nd centuries CE, Roman Empire) – Satires (Early satirical authors)

  • Lucian (c. 120–180 CE, Roman Empire) (Early satirical authors)

  • Apuleius (c. 123–180 CE, Roman Empire) – The Golden Ass (Early satirical authors)

  • Various authors (9th century CE and later) – One Thousand and One Nights, أَلْفُ لَيْلَةٍ وَلَيْلَةٌ‎ (Early satirical authors)

  • Godfrey of Winchester (died 1107, England) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Ubayd Zakani (عبید زاکانی, died 1370, Persia) – Akhlaq al-Ashraf (Ethics of the Aristocracy) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–1375, Italy) – The Decameron (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • James Bramston (1694–1743, England) – satirical poet (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343–1400, England) – The Canterbury Tales (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Gil Vicente (c. 1465–1536, Portugal) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Erasmus (1466–1536, Burgundian Netherlands/Switzerland) – The Praise of Folly (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • François Rabelais (c. 1493–1553, France) – Gargantua and Pantagruel (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Various authors (16th century CE and later, Italy) – Talking statues of Rome (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Miguel de Cervantes (1547–1616, Spain) – Don Quixote (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Luis de Góngora (1561–1627, Spain) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • William Shakespeare (1564–1616, England) – Sonnet 130 (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Francisco de Quevedo (1580–1645, Spain) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Juan de Tassis, 2nd Count of Villamediana (1582–1622, Spain) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Martin Marprelate (true identity unknown, fl. 1588–1589, England) – Marprelate tracts (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Samuel Butler (1612–1680, England) – Hudibras (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Molière (1622–1673, France) – Le Malade imaginaire (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1623–1673, England) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester (1647–1680, England) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Jonathan Swift (1667–1745, Ireland/England) – Gulliver's Travels, A Modest Proposal, A Tale of a Tub (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • John Gay (1685–1732, England) – The Beggar's Opera (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Alexander Pope (1688–1744, England) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Voltaire (1694–1778, France) – Candide (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • James Bramston (1694–1744, England) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • William Hogarth (1697–1764, England) – Beer Street and Gin Lane (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Henry Fielding (1707–1754, England) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Laurence Sterne (1713–1768, Ireland/England) – The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • James Beresford (1764–1840, England) – The Miseries of Human Life (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Ivan Krylov (1769–1844, Russia) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Jane Austen (1775–1817, England) – Love and Freindship (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Thomas Love Peacock (1785–1866, England) – Nightmare Abbey, Crochet Castle (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Eaton Stannard Barrett (1786–1820, Ireland) – The Heroine (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Charles Etienne Boniface (1787–1853, France/South Africa) – De Nieuwe Ridderorde of De Temperantisten (in Dutch, The New Knighthood or the Temperance Societies) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Giuseppe Gioachino Belli – (1791–1863, Italy) (Medieval, early modern and 18th-century satirists)

  • Evan Bevan (1803–1866, Wales) – satirical poetry in Welsh (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Nikolai Gogol (1809–1852, Russia) – The Government Inspector, Dead Souls (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849, US) – The Man That Was Used Up, A Predicament, Never Bet the Devil Your Head (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • William Makepeace Thackeray (1811–1863, England) – Vanity Fair (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Charles Dickens (1812–1870, England) – Hard Times, A Tale of Two Cities (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • James Russell Lowell (1819–1891, US) – A Fable for Critics (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • George Derby, also known as John P. Squibob and John Phoenix (1823–1861, US) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin (1826–1889, Russia) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Lewis Carroll (1832–1898, England) – Alice in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Samuel Butler (1835–1902, England) – Erewhon (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Mark Twain (1835–1910, US) – Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • W. S. Gilbert (1836–1911, England) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Narushima Ryūhoku (成島柳北, 1837–1884, Japan) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Thomas Nast (1840–1902, US) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Ambrose Bierce (1842 – c. 1914, US) – The Devil's Dictionary (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Anatole France (1844–1924, France) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • José Maria de Eça de Queirós (1845–1900, Portugal) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Oscar Wilde (1854–1900, Ireland/England) – The Importance of Being Earnest (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950, England) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Jerome K. Jerome (1859–1927, England) – Three Men in a Boat, Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Anton Chekhov (1860–1904, Russia) – The Lady with the Dog (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • O. Henry (1862–1910, US) short story writer known for surprise endings, namesake of the O. Henry Award (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Jalil Mammadguluzadeh (1866–1931, Azerbaijan) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Lakshminath Bezbaroa (1868–1938, India, writing in Assamese) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Saki, also known as H. H. Munro (1870–1916, England) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Trilussa (1873–1950, Italy) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Alfred Jarry (1873–1907, France) – Ubu Roi (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Radoje Domanović (1873–1908, Serbia) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Iraj Mirza (ایرج میرزا‎, 1874–1926, Iran) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Karl Kraus (1874–1936, Austria) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Will Rogers (1879–1935, US) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • James Branch Cabell (1879–1958, US) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Ali-Akbar Dehkhoda (علی‌اکبر دهخدا‎, 1879–1959, Iran) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • H. L. Mencken (1880–1956, US) – cultural critic and author (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Arkady Averchenko (1881–1925, Russia) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • P. G. Wodehouse (1881–1975, England/US) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957, England) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Jaroslav Hašek (1883–1923, Austria-Hungary/Czechoslovakia) – The Good Soldier Švejk (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Oscar Cesare (1885–1948, Sweden/US) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977, England) – Modern Times, The Great Dictator, Monsieur Verdoux (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Kurt Tucholsky (1890–1935, Germany) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Mikhail Bulgakov (1891–1940, Russia/Soviet Union) – Heart of a Dog, The Master and Margarita (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Dorothy Parker (1893–1967, US) satirical writer of humorous short stories, poetry and book reviews (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893–1930, Russia/Soviet Union) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Aldous Huxley (1894–1963) – Point Counter Point, Brave New World (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • James Thurber (1894-1961, US) – "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Mikhail Zoshchenko (1894–1958, Soviet Union) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Josep Pla (1897–1981, Spain [Catalonia]) (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Ilf and Petrov: Ilya Ilf (1897–1937, Soviet Union) and Yevgeni Petrov (1903–1942, Soviet Union) – The Twelve Chairs, The Little Golden Calf (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Yury Olesha (1899–1960, Soviet Union) – Three Fat Men, Envy (Modern satirists (born 1800–1900))

  • Stella Gibbons (1902–1989, England) – author of comic novel Cold Comfort Farm (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Evelyn Waugh (1903–1966, England) – Brideshead Revisited, Decline and Fall, Scoop (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • George Orwell (1903–1950, England) – Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty-Four (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Malcolm Muggeridge (1903–1990, England) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Dr. Seuss (1904–1991, US) – The Lorax (1971), The Butter Battle Book (1984) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Kurt Kusenberg (1904–1983, Germany) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Daniil Kharms (1905–1942, Russia/USSR) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • H. F. Ellis (1907–2000, England) – The Papers of A. J. Wentworth, B.A., 1949 (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Jean Effel (1908–1982, France) – cartoonist, author of the cartoon cycle The Creation of the World (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Al Capp (1909–1979, US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Arkady Raikin (1911–1987, Russia/USSR) – stand-up comedian (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Aubrey Menen (1912–1989, Britain, India) – satirist, novelist and philosopher (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Walt Kelly (1913–1973, US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Anthony Burgess (1917–1993, England) – A Clockwork Orange (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Warrington Colescott (1921–2018, US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Kurt Vonnegut (1922–2007, US) – Slaughterhouse-Five, Breakfast of Champions, Cat's Cradle (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Lenny Bruce (1925–1966, US) – stand-up comedian (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Joseph Heller (1923–1999, US) – Catch-22 (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Terry Southern (1924–1995, US) – The Magic Christian, Dr. Strangelove (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Günter Grass (1927–2015, Germany) – The Tin Drum, Cat and Mouse (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Stanley Kubrick (1928–1999, US) – Dr. Strangelove (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Harvey Kurtzman (1924–1993, US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Tom Lehrer (born 1928, US) – That Was the Year That Was (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Jules Feiffer (1929, US) – satirical cartoonist who wrote the original play and screenplay for Little Murders (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Ray Bradbury (US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • William S. Burroughs (US) – Naked Lunch (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Dario Fo (Italy) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Flannery O'Connor (US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • C. Northcote Parkinson (England) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Anna Russell (England/Canada) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Gore Vidal (US) – Myra Breckinridge (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Mel Brooks (US) – The Producers, Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Erma Bombeck (1927, US) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Allan Sherman (1924–1973, US) – musician, parodist, television producer, voice actor (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Stan Freberg (1926, US) – musician, parodist, voice actor (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Brian O'Nolan (1911–1966, Ireland) – At Swim-Two-Birds (as Flann O'Brien) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Ephraim Kishon (1924, Israel) (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Jerry Lewis (1926-2017) (US) – comedian, screenwriter, director (Modern satirists (born 1900–1930))

  • Mordecai Richler (1931–2001, Canada) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Tom Wolfe (born 1931, US) – The Bonfire of the Vanities (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Vladimir Voinovich (born 1932, Soviet Union/Russia) – The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin, Moscow 2042 (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Robert Anton Wilson (1932–2007, US) – The Illuminatus! Trilogy (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Barry Humphries (born 1934, Australia) – My Gorgeous Life, The Life and Death of Sandy Stone, stage shows (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jonathan Miller (1934–2019, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Alan Bennett (born 1934, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Mykhailo Zhvanetskyi (born 1934, Soviet Union/Russia) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Dudley Moore (1935–2002, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • David Lodge (born 1935, US) – author of "Campus Trilogy" (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Woody Allen (born 1935, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Thomas Pynchon (born 1937, US) – V., The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Richard Ingrams (born 1937, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • John Kennedy O'Toole (born 1937, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • George Carlin (1937–2008, US) – stand-up comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Peter Cook (1937–1995, England) – of the Satire boom, Beyond the Fringe (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Eleanor Bron (born 1938, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • David Frost (1939–2013, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Grigori Gorin (1940–2000, Soviet Union/Russia) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Frank Zappa (1940–1993, US) – We're Only in It for the Money, Cruising with Ruben and the Jets (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Sergei Dovlatov (1941–1990, Soviet Union/Russia) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Kioumars Saberi Foumani (کیومرث صابری فومنی‎, 1941–2004, Iran) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Neil Innes (1944–2019, England) – former Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band founder and member of The Rutles. Writer of satirical songs and books (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Gennady Khazanov (born 1945, Soviet Union/Russia) – stand-up comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Luba Goy (born 1945, Canada) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Roger Abbott (born 1946, Canada) – sketch comedian. (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Lewis Grizzard (born 1946, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Sue Townsend (1946–2014, England) – Adrian Mole (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Don Ferguson (born 1946, Canada) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jonathan Meades (born 1947, England) – writer, broadcaster and satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Terry Pratchett (1948–2015) – humorist and fantasy novelist (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Lewis Black (born 1948, US) – stand-up comic, The Daily Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Terry Pratchett (1948–2015, England) – The Discworld book series (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Mikhail Zadornov (born 1948, Soviet Union/Russia) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Garry Trudeau (born 1948, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jaafar Abbas (living, Sudan) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Christopher Guest (born 1948, US) – This Is Spinal Tap, Waiting for Guffman (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Georg Schramm (born 1949, Germany) – Scheibenwischer, Neues aus der Anstalt, kabarett artist (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Gary Larson (born 1950, US) – cartoonist (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Fran Lebowitz (born 1950, US) – The Fran Lebowitz Reader, Public Speaking (film) – NYC public intellectual (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Bailey White(born 1950, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Steve Bell (born 1951, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Bill Bryson (born 1951, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Al Franken (born 1951, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Douglas Adams (1952–2001, England) – The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Mary Walsh (born 1952, Canada) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Phil Hendrie (born 1952, US) – radio host of The Phil Hendrie Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Robert Zubrin (born 1952, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Christopher Buckley (born 1952) – Thank You for Smoking, The White House Mess (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Carl Hiaasen (born 1953) – Tourist Season, Double Whammy, Basket Case, Skinny Dip (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Stoney Burke (born 1953, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Louis de Bernières (born 1954, UK) – Latin America Trilogy: The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts, Señor Vivo and the Coca Lord, The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Matt Groening (born 1954, US) – The Simpsons, Futurama (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • George C. Wolfe (born 1954, US) – The Colored Museum (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Howard Stern (born 1954, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jaspal Bhatti (1955–2012, India) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Cathy Jones (born 1955, Canada) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Bill Maher (born 1956, US) – Real Time with Bill Maher (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Percival Everett (born 1956, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Ziad Rahbani (زياد الرحباني, born 1956, Lebanon) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • David Sedaris (born 1956, US) – Naked, Me Talk Pretty One Day (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Craig Brown (born 1957, UK) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Scott Adams (born 1957, US) – Dilbert (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Stephen Fry (born 1957, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Christopher Moore (born 1957, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Victor Shenderovich (born 1958, Russia) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Ebrahim Nabavi (سید ابراهیم نبوی, born 1958, Iran), winner of Prince Claus Award (2005) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Bill Watterson (born 1958, US) – cartoonist, Calvin and Hobbes (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jello Biafra (born 1958, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • George Saunders (born 1958, US) – author of CivilWarLand In Bad Decline, Tenth of December and Lincoln in the Bardo. (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Wayne Federman (born 1959, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • "Weird Al" Yankovic (born 1959, US) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Hugh Laurie (born 1959, England) (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jeffrey Morgan (living, Canada) – CREEM, Metro Times (Contemporary satirists (born 1930–1960))

  • Jacob M. Appel (US, born 1973) – playwright (Causa Mortis, Arborophilia) (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Michael "Atters" Attree (born 1965, UK) (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Max Barry (born 1973, Australia) – author (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Paul Beatty (born 1962, US) – (The White Boy Shuffle, The Sellout) (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Nigel Blackwell (living, UK) – Half Man Half Biscuit (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Jan Böhmermann (born 1981, Germany) (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Charlie Brooker (born 1971, UK) – Nathan Barley (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Bo Burnham (born 1990, US) – comedian and musician (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Dave Chappelle (born 1973, US) – stand-up comedian, Chappelle's Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • David Cross (born 1964, US) – Mr. Show, Arrested Development (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Sacha Baron Cohen (born 1971) – Borat, Da Ali G Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Stephen Colbert (born 1964, US) – The Colbert Report, The Daily Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Sarah Cooper (born 1977, US) – blogger, vlogger, author, comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Douglas Coupland (born 1961, Canada) – Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Johnny Corn (born 1969, US) – stand-up comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Scott Dikkers (born 1965, US) – comedy writer and speaker (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Bret Easton Ellis (born 1964, US) – screenwriter and director (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Ricky Gervais (born 1961, UK) – comedian, creator of The Office (British TV series) (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Sabina Guzzanti (born 1963, Italy) – satirist and writer (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Bill Hicks (1961–1994, US) – stand-up comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Mishu Hilmy (living, US) – Good Morning Gitmo (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Ian Hislop (born 1960, UK) – Private Eye (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Jessica Holmes (born 1973, Canada) – comedian and actress (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Armando Iannucci (born 1963, UK) – Brass Eye, The Day Today (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Mike Judge (born 1962, US) – creator of Beavis and Butt-Head and King of the Hill (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Kennedy (born 1972, US) – radio personality and author (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Hari Kondabolu (born 1982, US) – stand-up comic and film-maker (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Erik Larsen (born 1962, US) – "Savage Dragon" comic book (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Craig Lauzon (living, Canada) – comedian and caricaturist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Stewart Lee (born 1968, UK) – stand-up comedian and director (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Victor Lewis-Smith (living, UK) – TV Offal (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Ash Lieb (born 1982, Australia) – artist, author and comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Chris Lilley (born 1974, Australia) – Summer Heights High, We Can Be Heroes: Finding The Australian of the Year (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Daniele Luttazzi (born 1961, Italy) – satirist and songwriter (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Maddox (born 1978, US) – website The Best Page in the Universe (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Seth MacFarlane (born 1973, US) – Family Guy (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Aaron McGruder (US) – The Boondocks (comic strip), The Boondocks (TV series) (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Rick Mercer (born 1969, Canada) – Rick Mercer Report (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Tim Minchin (born 1975, Australia) – comedian and musician (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Mark Morford (living, US) – Notes and Errata, San Francisco Chronicle, SF Gate (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Chris Morris (born 1965, UK) – Brass Eye, The Day Today (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Gregory Motton (born 1961, UK) – playwright and author (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • The Moustache Brothers (Myanmar) – screwball comedy and dance (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Bob Odenkirk (born 1962, US) – Mr. Show, Saturday Night Live, The Larry Sanders Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • John Oliver (born 1977, England) – Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Chuck Palahniuk (born 1962, US) – Fight Club and Choke (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Alan Park (born 1962, Canada) – comedian and satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Trey Parker (born 1969, US) – South Park, Team America: World Police, The Book of Mormon (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Alexandra Petri (born 1988, US) - author and columnist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Mark A. Rayner (living, Canada) – satirist and fiction writer (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Pablo Reyes Jr (born 1989, US) – website The Daily Currant and Huzlers (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Celia Rivenbark (living, US) – columnist and author (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Eric Schwartz (living, US) – folk singer and satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Andrew Shaffer (living, US) – author (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Amy Sedaris (born 1961, US) – actress and comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Sarah Silverman (born 1970, US) – stand-up comedian, The Sarah Silverman Program (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Martin Sonneborn (born 1965, Germany) – political jokester and satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Jon Stewart (born 1962, US) – The Daily Show (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Matt Stone (born 1971, US) – South Park, The Book of Mormon (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Vermin Supreme (born 1961, US) – performance artist, comedian and political satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Greg Thomey (born 1961, Canada) – comedian and playwright (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • David Thorne (living, Australia) – humorist and satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Andrew Unger, (living, Canada) – Mennonite satirist (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Jhonen Vasquez (born 1974, US) – Johnny the Homicidal Maniac, Squee (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Mark Whitney (born 1959, US) – satirist and comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Bassem Youssef ( باسم رأفت محمد يوسف‎,born 1974, EG) – Egyptian comedian (Contemporary satirists (born 1960–present))

  • Astérix (French comic strip, satirizing both the Roman Empire era as well as 20th century life)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Benchley (US comic strip created by Mort Drucker and Jerry Dumas, satirizing Ronald Reagan and American culture)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Bone (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Boondocks (US comic strip, satirizing African-American culture)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Le Canard enchaîné (weekly French satirical newspaper)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Charlie Hebdo (weekly French satirical paper)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Chaser (Australian newspaper and TV shows)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Cho Ramaswamy (Thuglak – Tamil magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Dilbert (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge comics by Carl Barks

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Doonesbury (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Faux Faulkner contest (annually published in Hemispheres magazine until 2005)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fritz the Cat by Robert Crumb

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Humor Times (monthly US magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Idées noires (Belgian comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Li'l Abner (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Life in Hell (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Mad (satirical comic book and magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Medium (weekly newspaper printed by students of Rutgers University)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Mr. Natural by Robert Crumb

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Nero (Belgian comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The New Yorker (Shouts and Murmurs)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Onion (US magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Peanuts (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Pogo (US comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Private Eye (UK magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Inconsequential (UK magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Second Supper (US magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Tart (Fortnightly UK newspaper)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Adventures of Tintin (Belgian comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Titanic (German magazine)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Tom Puss (Dutch comic strip)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Watchmen (American comic book series)

    (Print) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Simpsons and Futurama (Matt Groening)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Howard Stern (radio personality "The Howard Stern Show")

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (US Talk Show)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Colbert Report (US Talk Show)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Day Today (UK TV news parody by Chris Morris)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Brass Eye (UK current affairs TV-show parody by Chris Morris)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • On the Hour (UK news radio parody by Chris Morris)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • TV Offal (UK TV critique show by Victor Lewis-Smith)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • This Hour Has 22 Minutes (Canadian TV show)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • South Park (Trey Parker and Matt Stone)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Chaser (Australian newspaper and TV shows)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Facelift (New Zealand Political show)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Spitting Image (UK TV show famous for its puppets of celebrities)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Yes Minister (also "Yes, Prime Minister" – UK TV show satirising government)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Kukly (Dolls, 1994–2002) – Russian satirical puppet show

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fitil (Fuse) – Soviet television satirical/comedy short film series

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Nip/Tuck (Ryan Murphy)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Have I Got News For You – Long running UK TV panel show

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Nathan Barley – 2005 UK TV satire by Chris Morris and Charlie Brooker.

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Chaser's War on Everything – Australian satire with an emphasis on attacking 'everyone'.

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Seinfeld (Jerry Seinfeld)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Royal Canadian Air Farce (1993–2007) (Don Ferguson, Roger Abbott, Luba Goy)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Air Farce Live (2007–present) (Don Ferguson, Roger Abbott, Luba Goy)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Monty Python's Flying Circus

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Phil Hendrie (radio personality "The Phil Hendrie Show")

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Mock the Week – UK TV comedy panel show

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Larry Sanders Show – (Garry Shandling)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • 30 Rock – (Tina Fey)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Glenn Martin, DDS – A Nick@Nite show

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Episodes – David Crane

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Better Off Ted – (Victor Fresco)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Onion News Network

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Boondocks – (Aaron McGruder)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • heute-show (German TV series)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Amazing World of Gumball – Ben Bocquelet

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Family Guy – (Seth McFarlane)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • On Cinema at the Cinema – (Tim Heidecker, Gregg Turkington)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air – (Andy Borowitz and Susan Borowitz)

    (Television and radio) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • "White America" is a satirical song by Eminem It is about his impact in rap and the impact of rap in the white communities.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • "Mercedes Benz" is a McClure-Joplin song sung by Janis Joplin

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Culturcide's album Tacky Souvenirs of Pre-Revolutionary America overdubbed new, satirical lyrics onto such pop hits as "We Are the World".

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Vaporwave, a satirical music genre with anarcho-capitalist and cyberpunk overtones dedicated to (anti-)consumerism.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Mark Russell is an American political satirist known for his many appearances on PBS

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Peter Gabriel's song The Barry Williams Show satirizes talk shows which showcase domestic topics of a taboo or shocking nature (and the viewing public's fascination with such content).

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Chumbawamba have consistently used satire to make political points throughout their musical career.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Pink Floyd's albums Animals and The Dark Side of the Moon are conceptual and satirical albums.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Lonely Island is a satirical music group known for their work on Saturday Night Live.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Trey Parker, Robert Lopez and Matt Stone's Tony-sweeping Broadway show The Book of Mormon (musical) satirizes the applicability of first-world religion to third-world problems.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Dead Milkmen is a satirical punk rock/cowpunk band from the early 1980s.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Ben Folds, a rock pianist, and his group, Ben Folds Five, have multiple songs including satirical elements. Some of them being, "Underground", "Sports and Wine", and "Rock Star".

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Dead Kennedys, an American punk band, often used satire in their songs, most notably Kill the Poor.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention's We're Only in It for the Money.

    (Music) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Blazing Saddles, a 1974 comedy movie directed by Mel Brooks, satirizing racism.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Casino Royale, a 1967 surrealistic satire on the James Bond series and the entire spy genre.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Get Out

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • This Is Spinal Tap, a satire on heavy metal culture and "rockumentaries."

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Very Same Munchhausen, a 1979 satire of the late Soviet society.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Clueless

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • American Beauty, a 1999 satire of life in the suburbs.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Thank You for Smoking

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Team America: World Police is a 2004 film satirizing Hollywood action flicks as well as post-9/11 American foreign policy.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Wag the Dog

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Rules of Attraction

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Best in Show

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • I Heart Huckabees

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Starship Troopers

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Scary Movie

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Donald Trump's The Art of the Deal: The Movie

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Dr. Strangelove

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Planet of the Apes A 1968 film portraying a future version of Earth controlled by gorillas, orangutans, and chimpanzees in which humans are mute beasts; the ruling gorillas and orangutans reject evolutionary theory and the ability of the humans to think because they don't speak.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, a film satirizing censorship.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Network

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Otaku no Video, a 1993 anime satirizing the otaku subculture.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Adaptation.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Brazil

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • S.O.B., a satire on Hollywood.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Election

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Not Another Teen Movie, a satire of the teen film genre.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Citizen Ruth

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Hospital

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Weapons of Mass Distraction

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Little Children

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Bulworth

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Man Bites Dog

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Simpsons Movie

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Smile, a satire of beauty pageants and small town life.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Bob Roberts

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • War, Inc.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Britannia Hospital

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fight Club, a dark satire on consumerism, cults, and extremism.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • American Psycho

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Tropic Thunder

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Simon, satirical commentary on the effects of mass media in pop culture.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • American History X satirizes race/racism in a contemporary setting.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • They Live

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Land of the Dead, a satire of post-9/11 America state and of the Bush administration.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Wicker Man, a satire on cults and religion.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Great Dictator, a satire on Adolf Hitler.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Monty Python's Life of Brian, a satire on miscommunication, religion and Christianity.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Player, a satire of Hollywood, directed by Robert Altman.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • In the Loop, a satire of the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Elvis Gratton, a French Canadian/Québécois series depicting a satirical federalist.

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fubar

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Man Who Knew Too Little

    (Film) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fallout

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fallout 2

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fallout 3

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fallout: New Vegas

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Fallout 4

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Dead Rising (デッドライジング, Deddo Raijingu), a satire on US consumer culture.

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Dead Rising 2: Off the Record (デッドライジング2 オフ・ザ・レコード, Deddo Raijingu 2: Ofu za rekōdo), a satire on US consumer culture.

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Grand Theft Auto

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Crash: Mind over Mutant

    (Video games) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Adequacy.org

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Babylon Bee (Christian satire)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • BBspot

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Best Page In The Universe

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Coconut Kelz (South African satirical video blogger)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Daily Mash (U.K. satirical news website)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Daily Bonnet (Mennonite satire website)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Faking News (Indian news satire website)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Hard Times

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Huzlers

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Landover Baptist Church (US website satirizing Fundamentalist Christians)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Latma

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • McSweeney's Internet Tendency

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • National Report

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Jeremy Nell (South African cartoonist)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • NewsBiscuit

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Onion

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Pat Condell

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Reductress

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • ScrappleFace

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The Second Supper

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • The UnReal Times (Indian news satire website)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Uncyclopedia (satirical parody of Wikipedia)

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

  • Vote for the Worst

    (Internet) (Notable satires in contemporary popular culture)

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About This Tool

A critic is an expert who engages in commentary and criticism. There are different categories in the social industry such as literary critics, political critics, fashion critics, military critics, sports critics, aesthetic critics and so on. They see things with a sharp eye, and comment from a unique angle, with their own unique views. The random tool compiled a list of 448 social satire critics from around the world, some of whom left their work behind.

In addition to being discerning critics, they are also outspoken critics. There are different styles in their work, whether it’s revealing, ironic, humorous, or black comedy. In the list compiled by the generator, you can see that they are from the era, from the country, very classic works

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of satirists and satires.

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