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President Donald Trump posted a picture on Truth Social that contains Pepe the Frog, sometimes used as a hate symbol, and uses a QAnon tagline.
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 ...
When Matt Furie created his cartoon Pepe the Frog, he never imagined the laid-back amphibian might one day be considered a hate symbol. But that's what the Anti-Defamation League says the comic ...
On Saturday, Pepe creator Matt Furie published a one-page comic that kills off the slacker frog.
So when she denounced Pepe the frog as a symbol of hatred, the internet practically drowned in laughter. But this was the general public's first proper introduction to Pepe, and first impressions ...
Pepe the Frog is one of the most prolific images on the Internet. A new documentary follows the frog's creator, cartoonist Matt Furie, as he fights to regain control over his character.
Pepe started his life as a laid-back cartoon frog but memes transformed him into an alt-right villain. The evolution of this cultural phenomenon is emblematic of the relationship between online ...
4chan’s Pepe the Frog meme was wildly popular among ‘normies’—until white nationalists decorated him with swastikas and gave him a Trump button.
Pepe the Frog's creator demanded that the author halt all distribution of the “Islamophobic” book and donate its profits.
How Pepe the frog and Dilbert explain the culture wars of the 2016 election, in one comic The alt-right’s controversial memes reflect the unsavory side of remix culture.
Pepe the Frog creator teams up with Anti-Defamation League to use beloved meme as a force for good.