Matt Furie draws Pepe the Frog in 'Feels Good Man.' Credit: Kurt Keppeler and Christian bruno / Sundance Institute Pepe the Frog may not be able to explain everything about these trying times. But ...
In 2005, illustrator Matt Furie released an online comic book called "Boy's Club" that featured four animated characters. One was a frog named Pepe, whom Furie has described as "a chill frog who ...
Matt Furie, a San Francisco-based cartoonist of reluctant notoriety, is a frog lover. He’s always drawn frogs: goofy frogs, peaceful frogs, frogs on bike rides, frogs having tea. “It’s just been kind ...
Without context, The Adventures of Pepe and Pede looks like a fairly standard children’s book. Its cover features a smiling frog with its left arm around a friendly looking centipede, and its pages ...
“I didn’t even know what a meme was,” confesses cartoonist Matt Furie in the documentary “Feels Good Man,” demonstrating just how ill-equipped he was to resist the dark forces that engulfed him and ...
Pepe the Frog was created in 2005 as an innocent-enough cartoon frog. But through no fault of his own, Matt Furie’s creation eventually mutated into a symbol for the alt-right around the time Donald ...
He may have become a far-right internet meme in the West, but Pepe the Frog's image is being rehabilitated in Hong Kong where democracy protesters have embraced him as an irreverent symbol of their ...
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