(Note: The actual four-letter word was used in the comic strip.)
A number of other newspapers, including the Dallas Morning News and Columbus Dispatch, also dropped the comic strip.
Miller said it was something he had done a few weeks ago when he was angry about something the president had done and forgot to take it out, but that contradicted a tweet he sent saying some of his "sharp-eyed readers had spotted an Easter egg" in the strip and asking if readers could find it.
Stark said a reader told her about the hidden message this morning. She explained in a column published a few minutes ago the steps she took.
I never would have seen it unless prompted, but there it was, plain as day under a magnifying glass.
This foolishness from Wiley has cost him publication in The Joplin Globe as well as a good many more newspapers, based on some of the internet stories I've read.
The Globe only expresses what they and the cartoonists believe....smut is the Globes character
ReplyDeleteThank you Globe.
ReplyDeleteFreedom of the press and Freedom of Speech. Although it was tasteless, I don't think the cartoonist should lose his space in newspapers. I think seeing the Kardashians in the newspapers every day telling us that their way to live is the right way makes me wretch, but that is the way it is. Don't read it if you don't like it.
ReplyDelete