mr. trudeau: not all of my smoking mr. butts strips went into north carolina papers, when i went and wrote about frank sinatra, the strip went dark in las vegas. [laughter] mr. trudeau: some stories i wrote about, a dallas paper threw it out. ms. crabapple: i think one of the interesting things that we are seeing right now is the death of that sort of context, because once we move a way from print and online, everything can be contextualized. that was the whole thing about "charlie hebdo," i think that it was one little small percentage of cartoons, some pretty horrible cartoons, and it affects a small minority, but everything affects everybody in some way. mr. trudeau: but they said we are doing this for a very particular reason, and i inc. just because it you can -- and i think just because you can say something doesn't in you should. ms. crabapple: i think there is a huge difference between what you should be legally permitted to say, which is everything, in my opinion, and those horrible things that you say, like tablo