Pepe the Frog

Pepe
Boy's Club character
First appearance 2005 in Boy's Club[1]
Created by Matt Furie
Information
Species Frog
Gender Male

Pepe the Frog /pɛp/ is a popular Internet meme. The green anthropomorphic frog with a frog-like face and a humanoid body is originally from a comic series by Matt Furie called Boy's Club.[2] It became an Internet meme when its popularity steadily grew across Myspace, Gaia Online and 4chan in 2008. By 2015, it had become one of the most popular memes used on 4chan.

Beginning in 2015, the character's image has been appropriated as a symbol of the controversial alt-right movement. The Anti-Defamation League added Pepe the Frog to their database of hate symbols in 2016, adding that not all Pepe memes are racist.[3] Since then, Pepe's creator has publicly expressed his dismay at Pepe being used as a hate symbol.[4]

The meme's original use has evolved over time and has many variants, including Sad Frog, Smug Frog, Feels Frog, and "You will never..." Frog.[5]

History

Pepe the Frog was created by American artist Matt Furie in 2005. Its usage as a meme came from his comic, Boy's Club #1. The progenitor of Boy's Club was a zine that Furie made on Microsoft Paint called Playtime, which included Pepe as a character.[6] He posted his comic in a series of blog posts on Myspace in 2005.[5][7]

In the comic, Pepe is seen urinating with his pants pulled down to his ankles and the catchphrase "feels good man" was his rationale.[8][9] Furie took those posts down when the printed edition was published in 2006.[5]

"My Pepe philosophy is simple: 'Feels good man.' It is based on the meaning of the word Pepe: 'To go Pepe.' I find complete joy in physically, emotionally, and spiritually serving Pepe and his friends through comics. Each comic is sacred, and the compassion of my readers transcends any differences, the pain, and fear of 'feeling good.'"

–Matt Furie, 2015 interview with The Daily Dot[2]

Pepe was used in blog posts on Myspace and became an in-joke on Internet forums, such as Gaia Online. In 2008, the page containing Pepe and the catchphrase was scanned and uploaded to 4chan's /b/ board, which has been described as the meme's "permanent home".[5] The meme took off among 4chan users, who adapted Pepe's face and the catchphrase to fit different scenarios and emotions, such as melancholy, anger, and surprise.[2] Color was also added; originally a black and white line drawing, Pepe became green with brown lips, sometimes in a blue shirt.[7][8] "Feels Guy", or "Wojak", originally an unrelated character typically used to express melancholy, was eventually often paired with Pepe in user-made comics or images.[9]

In 2014, images of Pepe were shared on social media by celebrities such as Katy Perry and Nicki Minaj.[5][8][10] As Pepe became more widespread, 4chan users began referring to particularly creative and unique variants of the meme as "rare Pepes." These images, sometimes as physical paintings,[11][12] were put up for sale and auction on eBay and posted in listings on Craigslist.[2][5] 4chan users referred to those who used the meme outside of the website as "normies" (or "normalfags") in response to the meme's increase in usage.[5] In 2015, Pepe was #6 on Daily News and Analysis' list of the most important memes and was the most retweeted meme on Twitter.[13][14]

Association with the alt-right


A man holds up a sign saying "DEPLORABLES AND ALT-RIGHT UNITE" with a cartoon frog in the corner.
An alt-right activist holds up a sign featuring Pepe at the March 4 Trump in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

During the 2016 United States presidential election, the meme was connected to Donald Trump's campaign. In October 2015, Donald Trump retweeted a Pepe representation of himself, associated with a video called "You Can't Stump the Trump (Volume 4)".[3][15] Later in the election, Roger Stone and Donald Trump Jr. posted a parody movie poster of The Expendables on Twitter and Instagram titled "The Deplorables", a play of Hillary Clinton's controversial phrase, basket of deplorables, which included Pepe's face among those of members of the Trump family and other figures popular among the alt-right.[16]

Also during the election, associations of the character with white nationalism and the alt-right were described by various news organizations.[17][18][19] In May 2016, Olivia Nuzzi of The Daily Beast wrote how there was "an actual campaign to reclaim Pepe from normies" and that "turning Pepe into a white nationalist icon" was an explicit goal of some on the alt-right.[20] In September 2016, an article published on Hillary Clinton's campaign website described Pepe as "a symbol associated with white supremacy" and denounced Donald Trump's campaign for its supposed promotion of the meme.[21][22] The same month, the two sources for Nuzzi's Daily Beast article revealed to The Daily Caller that they had coordinated beforehand to mislead Nuzzi (particularly about the existence of a campaign) under the expectation that she would uncritically repeat what she was told, with one saying, "Basically, I interspersed various nuggets of truth and exaggerated a lot of things, and sometimes outright lied — in the interest of making a journalist believe that online Trump supporters are largely a group of meme-jihadis who use a cartoon frog to push Nazi propaganda. Because this was funny to me."[23] The Anti-Defamation League, an American organization opposed to antisemitism, included Pepe in its hate symbol database but noted that most instances of Pepe were not used in a hate-related context.[24][25] In January 2017, in a response to "pundits" calling on Theresa May to disrupt Trump's relationship with Russia, The Russian Embassy in the United Kingdom tweeted an image of Pepe.[26][27] White supremacist Richard B. Spencer, during a street interview after Trump's inauguration, was preparing to explain the meaning of a Pepe pin on his jacket when he was punched in the face, with the resulting video itself becoming the source of many memes.[28][29]

In an interview with Esquire, Furie commented on Pepe's usage as a hate symbol, stating: "It sucks, but I can't control it more than anyone can control frogs on the Internet".[30] Fantagraphics Books, Furie's publisher, issued a statement condemning the "illegal and repulsive appropriations of the character".[31] On October 17, Furie published a satirical take of Pepe's appropriation by the alt-right movement on The Nib.[32][33] This was his first comic for the character since he ended Boy's Club in 2012.[1] In May 2017 it was announced that Furie had killed Pepe off in response to the character's continued use as a hate symbol.[34] However, in an interview with Carol Off on her interview show As It Happens Furie stated that despite news of the Pepe's death, fans haven’t seen the last of him stating: "The end is a chance for a new beginning," and that "I got some plans for Pepe that I can’t really discuss, but he’s going to rise from the ashes like a phoenix … in a puff of marijuana smoke."[35][36] Shortly later, Furie announced his intention to "resurrect" Pepe, launching a crowdfunding campaign to raise funds for a new comic book featuring Pepe.[37]

On June 2017, a proposed app and Flappy Bird clone called "Pepe Scream" was rejected from the Apple App Store due to its depiction of Pepe the Frog. The developer of the app, under the name "MrSnrhms", posted a screenshot of his rejection letter on /r/The Donald. The app in question is available on Google Play.[38][39]

Kek

"Esoteric Kekism",[40] or the Cult of Kek,[41] is a term for the parody religion of worshipping Pepe the Frog, which sprung from the similarity of the slang term for laughter, "kek", and the name of the ancient Egyptian frog god of darkness, Kek.[42] This deity, in turn, was associated with Pepe the Frog on internet forums.[42][43] The internet meme has its origin on the internet message forum 4chan and other chans, and the board /pol/ in particular.[42][44] Kek references are closely associated with the alt-right[45][46][47][48] and Donald Trump.[49][50][51][52]

The phrase "kek" originated as a variation of the phrase "lol"[53][54] and seems to originate from the video game World of Warcraft.[55] The phrase then became associated with the Egyptian deity of the same name.[42] "Esoteric Kekism" references the "Esoteric Hitlerism" of writer Savitri Devi.[40][56]

During the 2016 United States presidential election, Kek became associated with alt-right politics.[57][58][59][60][61][62] Kek is associated with the occurrence of repeating digits, known as "dubs", on 4chan, as if he had the ability to influence reality through internet memes.[63]

Online message boards, such as 4chan, first noted a similarity between Kek and the character Pepe the Frog.[64][43][65][66] The phrase is widely used[42] and 4chan users see Kek as the "'god' of memes".[67]

Kekistan

Kekistan is a fictional country created by 4chan members that has become a political meme and online movement.[68] According to Ian Miles Cheong writing in Heat Street, the name is a portmanteau of "kek" and the suffix "-stan", which is Persian for "place of" (and the end of several names of actual Central Asian countries and regions), and Kekistanis identify themselves as 'shitposters' persecuted by excessive political correctness.[69] He writes that "although there are undoubtedly some trolls that use the term, the online movement is fundamentally a politically incorrect reaction to the suppression of free speech".[69] Self-identified Kekistanis have created a cultural mythology around the fictitious country, including a fictional history that includes the invasion and overthrow of the ancient kingdom by the nations of "Normistan" and "Cuckistan".[70]

Cheong credits YouTuber Sargon of Akkad as being instrumental in popularizing the meme.[69] When Benjamin noticed that shitposters technically could classify as an ethnic group for the British Census, he contacted them and requested that Kekistani be added to the census.[71] After his video on the subject, the meme spread rapidly with the hashtag #FreeKekistan. He was eventually unsuccessful in getting the tongue-in-cheek ethnicity added to the British Census, and credited his failure as partly due to the listing at Know Your Meme.[72] He suggested that if only 10,000 or so people write in 'Kekistani' as their ethnicity in the 2021 Census, it could become an official ethnicity of Britain, similar to the Jedi census phenomenon.[72]

As a satirical ethnicity it was soon taken up politically in the United States as an emblem for alt-right protesters against political correctness in late 2016 and 2017, with 'Kekistanis' decrying the 'oppression' of their people and trolling protesters by waving the 'national flag of Kekistan' (modeled after the Nazi War Flag, with the red replaced by green, the Iron Cross replaced by the logo for 4chan, and the swastika replaced by a rubric for KEK).[70][73][74][68] As such it was prominently displayed at the 2017 Berkeley protest for free speech in mid-April.[75][76]

Cheong writes that the meme also includes the term "Shadilay", used as a greeting, referring to the 1986 album by P.E.P.E featuring a green frog on the album artwork.[69] The song is also used as a national anthem for the fictional country.

Other uses

See also

References

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Further reading

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