The Indianapolis Star will no longer run the comic strip 'Non Sequitur' in its daily and Sunday newspapers after discovering its author used the cartoon as a platform for a profane, vulgar message ...
Starting early next month, the Star will drop the daily comic “Non Sequitur” and run “Rubes” in its place. Wiley Miller, the creator of “Non Sequitur,” inserted vulgar language aimed at President ...
The results of our Non Sequitur survey are in. I’m sharing results here, and asking another question about our Diversions section. To recap: We dropped Non Sequitur after a breach of trust by the ...
At first glance, Sunday's "Non Sequitur" comic strip just showed bears dressed up like Leonardo da Vinci. The syndicated strip opens with Bear-Vinci holding a picture of a Virtruvian Bear. It ends ...
Wiley Miller, the cartoonist behind the popular “Non Sequitur,” told an audience for the first time Monday that he almost lost his livelihood and marriage after he scrawled a vulgar note to President ...
The Herald-Leader no longer will publish the “Non Sequitur” comic strip by Wiley Miller. On Sunday, Feb. 10, Miller included in his strip a profane phrase aimed at President Donald Trump. The phrase, ...
The Tribune will no longer publish the comic strip “Non Sequitur” because the cartoonist slipped in a vulgar insult at President Trump on Feb. 10. The decision was not political; it was about meeting ...
The Republican will drop the comic strip, “Non Sequitur,” from its pages following the actions of artist Wiley Miller, who included a vulgar, political commentary in a strip that was published on ...