Wikipedia:Wikipedia in comics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wikipedia in the media |
Wikipedia as a topic: |
In the press |
In academic studies |
In blogs |
In books |
In cartoons |
In press releases |
In webcomics |
In comics |
On TV and radio |
Heaps of praise |
Wikipedia as a source: |
In academic studies |
In books |
In conference |
In court cases |
In the press |
In webcomics |
On TV and radio |
Elsewhere |
This is a page listing Wikipedia as a topic, not a reference, in comics.
Contents |
[edit] 2005
[edit] 2007
[edit] March
- Wisdom #4 of 6. Pete Wisdom and his team looked up Jack the Ripper on Wikipedia and IMDb.
[edit] April
- Real Life Adventures: Tuesday April 3rd, 2007. Mother says to child: "Dad is the human Wikipedia. He has all the answers, but most of them are wrong."
- Get Fuzzy: Friday April 20th, 2007. Bucky Katt claimed that his music albums were on the Wikipedia website. Satchel Pooch stated that Bucky was crazy and referred to Bucky's comments being on Wikipedia was "Wackypedia" on Bucky's claims.
- Non Sequitur Sunday April 29th, 2007: Danae writes in her Wikipedia article that she is a Nobel Prize winner.
[edit] May
[edit] July
- Sally Forth: 2007-07-01, Sunday. During a fireworks viewing, Hilary quoted such 'obscure facts' about American History as Thomas Jefferson writing a movie-like sequel to the Declaration of Independence after its success and John Hancock bare-knuckle boxing other signers of the Constitution to be the first to sign the document. Sally then asks her daughter if she found those facts via Wikipedia.
- The Order #1, 2007-07-18: Henry Hellrung mentions his Wikipedia page.
[edit] August
- On A Claire Day: 27 August-29 August, Monday-Wednesday. Claire, a young adult, embarrasses herself in an interview for a job at a public library by stating incorrect information sourced from Wikipedia.[1]
[edit] 2008
[edit] June
- Charles Peattie; Russell Taylor. "Alex" (comic strip), The Daily Telegraph, 2008-06-04. Retrieved on 2008-06-04. (English) "I'm revising Bacon's entry on Wikipedia to make it square with the rubbish I wrote in the exam"
- The Sir Francis Bacon article in Wikipedia is changed by Alex's son.