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The Trump-Putin New Yorker cover is clear about who's really in charge
The Trump-Putin New Yorker cover is clear about who's really in charge
http://i.amz.mshcdn.com/71NX_nrUr9LE...fdd779da75.jpghttp://a.amz.mshcdn.com/assets/feed-...8be198fb13.jpghttp://a.amz.mshcdn.com/assets/feed-...6a4ca77139.jpg The New Yorker isn't afraid to call out Donald Trump or his Russian bro, Vladimir Putin, that's for damn sure. For its latest artistic masterpiece, Barry Blitt transformed the magazine's iconic first cover from 1925 — featuring New Yorker mascot Eustace Tilley inquisitively gazing at a butterfly — into political commentary on the eerily complex Trump-Putin relationship. SEE ALSO: Moth named after Donald Trump for uncanny resemblance Under "The New Yorker" spelled out in the Cyrillic alphabet, a nattily-dressed Putin can be seen inspecting a tie-wearing butterfly with a Trump head through his mo**cle. (Luckily, ** top hat.) Read more... More about Art, Conversations, New Yorker, Magazine Cover, and Russiahttp://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Mashable/~4/WU8DtQwgrDI |
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