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・ Tom Scholz
・ Tom Schuberth
・ Tom Schueller
・ Tom Schuette
・ Tom Schuler
・ Tom Schulman
・ Tom Schultz
・ Tom Schuman
・ Tom Schweich
・ Tom Schütz
・ Tom Scioli
・ Tom Scollay
・ Tom Scott
・ Tom Scott (businessman)
・ Tom Scott (Canadian football)
Tom Scott (cartoonist)
・ Tom Scott (coach)
・ Tom Scott (composer)
・ Tom Scott (footballer)
・ Tom Scott (linebacker)
・ Tom Scott (musician)
・ Tom Scott (offensive lineman)
・ Tom Scott (painter)
・ Tom Scott (poet)
・ Tom Scott (sound engineer)
・ Tom Scott (TV presenter)
・ Tom Scott and The L.A. Express
・ Tom Scrimenti
・ Tom Scrivens
・ Tom Scudamore


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Tom Scott (cartoonist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Tom Scott (cartoonist)

Thomas Joseph Scott (born 1947) is a New Zealand cartoonist, and is regarded by some as one of the best New Zealand cartoonists since the 1970s.
==Biography==
Scott was born in London in 1947 and emigrated to New Zealand with his family as an 18-month-old. He was raised at Rongotea in rural Manawatu, and studied at Massey University, graduating with a Bachelor of Science in psychology in 1972.〔
Scott has been a regular cartoonist, initially for the ''New Zealand Listener'' magazine, between 1984 and 1987 for the ''Auckland Star'', and then for the ''Evening Post'' newspaper and its successor the ''Dominion Post'', for most of his career.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Tom Scott )〕 Scott said of Muldoon: "I believe that much of the sourness, depression and division that currently besets our country can be laid at the feet of one man - Robert David Muldoon... he has made intolerance and prejudice, if not fashionable then at least permissible." (Rights of passage : beyond the New Zealand identity crisis : Laidlaw, Chris, Auckland, N.Z. : Hodder Moa Beckett, 1999. p. 102)

As a satirist, newspaper columnist and cartoonist, Scott often provokes New Zealand politicians and at one stage was banned from the press contingent for a considerable period of time by the Prime Minister of the day, the Right Honourable Sir Rob Muldoon, which naturally resulted in continuing astringent expressions in the press by Scott.
Scott has won numerous awards, including the Qantas Awards for New Zealand Cartoonist of the Year (five times), Columnist of the Year, and Political Columnist of the Year (three times). He also won scriptwriting awards for ''Fallout'' and for ''View from the Top''. Scott co-wrote the screenplay for the animated feature ''Footrot Flats: The Dog's Tale'' with Murray Ball. In 2001 Scott wrote the semi-autobiographical stage play ''The Daylight Atheist'' which has since been performed by numerous theatres in New Zealand and Australia.
In the 2006 New Year Honours, Scott was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services as a writer, journalist and illustrator.〔(New Year Hours List 2006 ). Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 28 October 2013.〕
In 2011, Scott produced the 1981 Springbok Tour TV drama, ''Rage'' shown as the final of four parts of the ''Sunday Theatre'' season on TV One on 4 September 2011.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Rage (2011) )〕 The series was a ratings winner.
His son, Samuel Flynn Scott, is the frontman of rock band The Phoenix Foundation.

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