Evelyn Beatrice Hall summarised the beliefs of philosopher Voltaire with the much-quoted line "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it", often cited to ...
Pepe Punch is throwing punches in the crypto market, with experts calling it as the next meme coin with 100x potential, ...
Editor’s note: This article includes depictions of a cartoon character that many deem offensive due to its association with white supremacist groups. Some links in this story lead to offensive ...
In 2005, artist Matt Furie published the first edition of Boy’s Club, a comic book starring four friends living in the hedonistic and aimless haze of their post-college, early-20s. There was Landwolf, ...
A doc about Pepe the Frog's journey from chill dude to official hate symbol explores how nobody can own anything on the internet. It took thousands of years for people to pervert the ancient Eurasian ...
Matt Furie, creator of the fun-loving stoner frog Pepe in the comic Boy's Club, has been struggling to come to terms with his character's adoption as a symbol of white supremacy in the so-called ...
Cartoonist Matt Furie wants to wrest control of a meme away from virulent internet cesspools and turn it back into the funny, chill character he created. We wish him luck, because he's going to need ...
What can you do when your favorite frog gets away from you? When Matt Furie drew Pepe the Frog for a short-lived magazine in 2005, he had no way of knowing the character would become a mascot for the ...
Regardless of who you are, you’ve probably seen Pepe’s smug, fat-lipped face smirking at you from your monitor. Perhaps he randomly popped up on your Facebook timeline, headlining a meme, or even made ...
Denizens of the darker corners of the Internet turned an innocent frog comic into a hate symbol of the "deplorable" alt-right. "Pepe the Frog" first appeared in 2005 in the comic "Boy's Life" by ...