Archive for the ‘Pepe The Frog’ Category

Pepe the Frog croaks: Cartoonist kills off character that became a hate symbol – York Daily Record/Sunday News

Michael Kunzelman, Associated Press 4:45 a.m. ET May 9, 2017

Pepe the Frog, a cartoon character turned Internet meme, has been added to the Anti-Defamation League's database of hate symbols. USA TODAY

Andrew Knight holds a sign of Pepe the frog, a conservative icon, during a rally in Berkeley, California on April 27, 2017.(Photo: JOSH EDELSON, AFP/Getty Images)

The cartoonist who created Pepe the Frog has killed off the character in a rebuke to far-right extremists who transformed a benevolent internet meme into a racist, anti-Semitic symbol.

A Pepe cartoon released Saturday in comic book stores shows Matt Furies creation in an open casket. Furie didnt immediately respond to an email seeking comment Monday.

In a Time magazine essay last year, Furie described Pepe as chill frog-dude who debuted in a 2006 comic book called Boys Club and became a popular online subject for user-generated mutations.

But internet trolls hijacked the character and began flooding social media with hateful Pepe memes more than a year before the 2016 presidential election. Pepe became a tongue-in-cheek symbol of the alt-right fringe movement and its loosely connected brand of white nationalism, neo-Nazism and anti-immigration.

Pepe memes promoting Donald Trumps presidential campaign became so ubiquitous that Trump himself tweeted an image blending his likeness with the cartoon frog in October 2015.

The Anti-Defamation League branded Pepe as a hate symbol in September 2016 and promoted Furies efforts to reclaim the character, with a social media campaign using the #SavePepe hashtag.

Thats a huge challenge, said Oren Segal, director of the ADLs Center on Extremism. It just didnt pick up.

Segal said he doubts Pepes cartoon death will erode his iconic status with the alt-right movement.

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Pepe the Frog declared a hate symbol by Anti-Defamation League

Richard Spencer, a white nationalist who popularized the term alt-right, said it could have the opposite effect.

The artist isnt in control of his work once it enters the culture in the way it has, Spencer said.

Kyle Bristow, a Michigan attorney who founded a self-described alt-right nonprofit educational group called the Foundation for the Marketplace of Ideas, said he already has seen a meme depicting Pepe as Jesus rising from the dead.

The Republicans have an elephant. The Democrats have a donkey. The alt-right has a cartoon frog, Bristow said with a laugh.

Furie wasnt amused by how his creation became an icon of hate, calling it a nightmare in his Time essay.

Before he got wrapped up in politics, Pepe was an inside-joke and a symbol for feeling sad or feeling good and many things in between, Furie wrote. I understand that its out of my control, but in the end, Pepe is whatever you say he is, and I, the creator, say that Pepe is love.

Fantagraphics, which published Boys Club, also published the one-page strip in which Furie killed off Pepe. Fantagraphics spokeswoman Jacq Cohen said she would be surprised if Furie never draws Pepe again but she hadnt discussed his plans for the character with him.

This whole Pepe co-opting experience has been pretty rough on Matt as an independent artist, Cohen said.

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Pepe the Frog croaks: Cartoonist kills off character that became a hate symbol - York Daily Record/Sunday News

Pepe The Frog Killed Off By Creator Following Alt-Right Appropriation – Konbini US

It's all over. Pepe the Frog and his chilledsmirk are no longer.

Created by cartoonist Matt Furie more than a decade ago, the drowsyfrog went on tobecome the poster boy of pro-Trump legions due tosome obscure mechanism only the internet can generate. Today, the once peace-loving frog has been symbolically killed off by his own creator.

Over the weekend, Matt Furie shared online a somberdrawingshowing the amphibian alone in a coffin with only his most iconic portrait looming over him.

A symbolicway toexpress his frustration and disgust with his character's parallel life which had become synonymous with racism and xenophobia Pepe's deathis above all a defeat for Furie.

Faced with internet trolls and the rise of white supremacism, the cartoonist had no choice but to let the characterpass on.

Pepe the Frog was born on MySpace in 2005 asone of the main characters ofthe comicBoy's Club.Starting off life as a simple cartoon, Pepe was then shared all over the web as the "feels good, man" meme whichshowed him quietly taking a leak with his pants around his ankles.

The innocent frog was then disfigured at the hands of the extremist groups populating 4chan, who decorated him with Nazi symbols orTrump's (and, more recently, Marine Le Pen's) haircut.

In turn, this led to Pepe being included in the Anti-Defamation League's blacklistof hate symbols, despite Furie's attempts toreclaim the spirit of his artwork from the clutches of the far-right thieves.

In November 2016, a few days before Trump's final victory, Matt Furie launched an initiative to "save Pepe," encouraging users to flood Twitter with images of the original Pepe via the #SavePepe hashtag. Unfortunately, it didnt work, the alt-right being particularly active and coordinated on social networks.

By putting an end tohis creation's tumultuous life, Matt Furie hasacknowledged the overwhelming power of online communities. With a heavy heart, he describes his characterescaping from him as "a nightmare,"and says that Pepe was once just a "peaceful frog-dude".

Farewell Pepe, martyr of the internet: we will neverforget your sacrifice.

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Science, data, culture et galjades. Internet est mon glise.

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Pepe The Frog Killed Off By Creator Following Alt-Right Appropriation - Konbini US

An Obituary For The Painfully Misunderstood Pepe The Frog – Huffington post (press release) (blog)

Pepe the Frog, a fictional amphibian both beloved and abhorred by Americans of varying political persuasions,has died. Drawn into creation in 2005,he passed away tragically at the hands of his creator, artist Matt Furie, on Saturday.

Birthed in Microsoft Paint, and printed at a local Kinkos shortly after, he has been described by those who knew him personally as chill, peaceful and often stoned. Yet by his time of death,the Boys Club zine star was virtually unrecognizable. Hed, unfortunately, become a darling symbol of the alt-right.

Pepe had a happy upbringing. He spent his early 20s in frog years, that is doing what he loved: chugging pop, snarfing pizza and getting high with his roommates Andy, Brett and Landwolf. Furie gave him a simple life full of simple pleasures, like surfing the web for sick videos and eating so much you barf it all back up. For a few years, at least.

Things got complicated, however, in a seemingly fleeting moment that would prove to be fatal. One day, Pepes roommate caught the frog in a compromising position:peeing, with his pants dropped all the way down to his ankles. His entire butt was exposed, for no reason. It was weird. When Landwolf called Pepe out for it, Pepe responded: Feels good man. The altercation, memorialized in zine, would forever alter the course of Pepes life.

In 2008, a cartoon depicting Pepes smarmy feels good man smile popped up on the message board 4chan. There was something contagious about Pepes indulgent joie de vivre that made internet users share the image again and again and again. It soon went viral,gaining particular traction in, of all places, a bodybuilding forum.

That year, Pepe went from mere image to meme a humorous cultural touchstone, that, like a human gene, could mutate and replicate in strange ways.The more popular a meme Pepe became, the more he began to change, adopting alternate personas like Batman Pepe, Nu Pepe and Borat Pepe, which spread wildly across Reddit, Tumblr, Facebook and Instagram. Each iteration featured the frogs classic mug, his unctuous expression warped this way and that to appear sleepy, dazed, sad and angry.

Pepes internet acclaim continued to grow. Katy Perry shareda bleary-eyed and crying Pepe in 2014, along with the caption Australian jet lag got me like. Nicki Minaj followed suit, posting an image of Pepe showing off his juicy behind in a pair of tight, peach-colored booty shorts.

Ive realized that Pepe is beyond my control, artist Furie told New York Magazine in 2016. Hes like a kid, he grew up and now I have to set him free to live his life. Its all good.

JOSH EDELSON via Getty Images

Pepes future was irreparably thrown off course a year before that, when, in 2015, an online community of white nationalists developed a soft spot for Pepes droopy eyelids and self-satisfied smirk. The dark pockets of the internet launched a campaign to adopt Pepe as their own personal symbol, using the cartoons absurd and somewhat adorable aesthetic to make hateful messages appear playful and benign.

In 2015 and 2016, very different versions of Pepe began proliferating online: Pepe readingMein Kampf, Pepesipping from a swastika teacup, an anti-Semitic caricature of Pepe hinting at his involvementin the Sept. 11 attacks. In style, the green critter still resembled a harmless joke, a stoner cartoon meant to elicit a blazed chuckle or two.Yet Pepes zany cuteness now served to make palatable grossly discriminatory views. As Emily Nussbaum put it: The joke protected the non-joke.

The goal of Pepes makeover, as alt-right internet user @JaredTSwift explained to Olivia Nuzziin 2016, was to use the unassuming frog to usher white nationalism into the mainstream. And it worked. People have adopted our rhetoric, sometimes without even realizing it, Swift said. Were setting up for a massive cultural shift. Pretty soon, Pepe the racist and antisemitic frog far out-shined Pepe the stoner frog in visibility and recognition.Few remembered his glory days as a Boys Club bro, instead understanding Pepe to be the creation of spiteful internet trolls.

During the 2016 presidential election, Donald Trump and Pepe forged an unlikely alliance when a Trump-esque Pepe adaptation, complete with yellow floppy hair, appeared to bepolicing the U.S. Mexican border and operating a gas chamber. To most of the internet, Pepe was now synonymous with hate, bigotry and Trump.Some even credit the frog with helping Trump win the election.(According to Furie, Pepe would not be the type to even vote.)

Pepe madness reached a surreal peak in September 2016, when the Anti-Defamation Leaguedeclared Pepe an official hate symbol, much to Furies confusion and disappointment. In my mind, frogs are one of the most peaceful creatures, he told HuffPost. They just chill on lily pads and eat. You never really feel threatened by frogs in nature. I think thats why theyre so popular in fairy-tales. Theyre just ... chill.

Furie did his best to alter Pepes fate, spearheading a social media campaign to#SavePepe.The artist also began to speak out, post-Pepe, against anti-Semitism and online hate at conferences and panels hosted by the ADL. He also collaborated with Save the Frogs!on a line of Pepe-centric goods,with all proceeds benefitting a wildlife organization devoted to protecting endangered frog species.

The artist made a valiant effort to protect Pepe from the garbage forces of the internet. But alas, something about Pepe had changed. And on May 6, 2017, Furie made the executive decision to say goodbye to his little green friend for good. He drew Pepe into death, featuring the frog in an open casket, his buddies toasting him farewell with a bottle of whiskey, which they then proceeded to spill on his face. Furie created the single-page comic for Fantagraphics Worlds Greatest Comics, sordidly markingFree Comic Book Day.

Pepes life was a strange one, perhaps even the first of its kind. While no artwork is immune to possible interpretations that diverge from the artists intention, few images have taken as long, winding and bizarre a journey as little Pepe.

Born a humble character in a cult stoner zine, the benevolent frog was forever altered by internet fame. When Pepe died, he left this world a nationally recognized symbol for white supremacy. Who controls an image? Who can verify its true meaning? A cute, mellow frog became a harbinger of fascism, in part because the whole progression was too weird and kind of funny to take seriously. Kind of like the story of Trump himself.

Now, we believe, Pepe is in a better place. Hopefully hes living the dream: drinking pop with one hand and helping to pee it out with the other.Fare thee well, sweet Pepe. You were too chill for this world. May you rest without fear of being appropriated by trolls for all of eternity.

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An Obituary For The Painfully Misunderstood Pepe The Frog - Huffington post (press release) (blog)

‘Pepe The Frog’ Has Been Killed, But Not Its Symbolism – Vocativ

Memes come and go, but Pepe the Frog will forever be remembered as a symbol of hate even in its afterlife. Matt Furie, the artist who created Pepe over a decade ago to be a pretty chill cartoon frog, published a comic strip this weekend depicting Pepe laid to rest in an open casket. It was his way of symbolizing the death of the meme, even though he cant really kill it, and everything else its associated with.

Pepe the Frog started as a stoned frog in his 20s in Furies 2005 Boys Club MySpace comic, but leading up to the 2016 presidential election, it was adopted by the so-called alt-right as a symbol to spread racist messages. It even became a designated hate symbol by the Anti-Defamation League.

Furie tried several times to take back ownership of his cartoon from white supremacists, but struggled. In a Time essay he published October 2016, Furie said the whole experience of Pepe becomingan icon of hate was a nightmare. The only thing I can do is see this as an opportunity to speak out against hate I understand that its out of my control, but in the end, Pepe is whatever you say he is, the creator, say that Pepe is love, Furie wrote in Time

Furie then launched a campaign to Save Pepe by flooding the internet with nice and peaceful depictions of Pepe, but after failing again, he decided to kill the character as a final way to disassociate from anti-Semitism it took on to represent. Yet, even as the character was laid to rest, that wont stop far-right white supremacists from appropriating the meme to spread messages of oppression and anti-Semitism.

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'Pepe The Frog' Has Been Killed, But Not Its Symbolism - Vocativ

Pepe the Frog is officially dead – The Verge

Pepe the Frogs battles are finally over. Cartoonist Matt Furie has officially killed off his most famous creation, which rose from internet meme to white supremacist mascot during the 2016 US election. As reported by Comic Book Resources, Furie published a one-page installment of his Boys Club series (where Pepe was first introduced in 2005) in celebration of Free Comic Book Day. The strip shows Pepe laid to rest in an open casket while his friends gather round to mourn. One pours out some whisky for the departed frog, splashing it on Pepes face. (You can see the full strip here.)

Furie hasnt spoken about the new cartoon, but its publication seems to bring to an end his quest to rehabilitate Pepe. When the alt-right version of the cartoon became a widespread meme last year, Furie was initially upbeat, saying Pepes political affiliation was just a phase, and that the cartoons lovable, and charming status will be intact as early as next week.

Sometime after the Anti-Defamation League identified the cartoon as an anti-Semitic hate symbol last September, though, Furie decided to weigh in himself. He started a #SavePepe campaign to spread positive Pepe memes and messages, and drew a cartoon for The Nib showing Pepes transformation into a horrific Donald Trump-esque figure as an apocalyptic nightmare. Writing for Time magazine, Furie said: It's completely insane that Pepe has been labeled a symbol of hate [...] but in the end, Pepe is whatever you say he is, and I, the creator, say that Pepe is love.

Unfortunately for Furie, that wasnt enough, and Pepe has continued to function as an alt-right meme, making his most recent appearance as Pepe Le Pen a mascot for the (recently defeated) far-right French presidential candidate, Marine Le Pen. Even Pepes death wont stop him from being a meme, but maybe, at least, Furie himself can get some rest.

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Pepe the Frog is officially dead - The Verge