The Brown Noser

The Brown Noser
Type Satirical newspaper
Owner(s) Brown University
Founded 2006
Headquarters Providence, Rhode Island
Website http://www.thenoser.com

The Brown Noser (also known as Khaled Mustapha or Ahmed Odeh) is an undergraduate satirical newspaper at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

History

Founded in 2006, The Brown Noser is the university's second oldest humor publication (behind The Brown Jug, founded in 1920).[1] When the Brown Noser's founders first applied to the Board of the Undergraduate Council of Students to request a financial endowment for publishing, they were denied funding. The founders then stormed the Undergraduate Council of Students meetings covered in body paint until they received funding sufficient to print the Noser five times a semester.[2] The first article was "Brown Noser to Replace Daily Herald as Campus's Premier Comedy Newspaper", a joke on the Brown University's oldest publication, The Brown Daily Herald.[3]

In Fall 2009, the Noser adopted and revived The Brown Jug, the student satirical magazine founded in 1920.[4] The Jug features humorous content which mocks popular culture, fashion trends, politics, humorous illustrations, and events around the Brown University's campus. The Noser is part of a collective of Brown comedy groups, along with Improvidence, Starla and Sons, and The Brown Jug, known as the "Brown Barrel."[5]

Issues

The Brown Noser publishes five times per year and unloads hundreds of copies within hours of its release by stationing members at frequented campus intersections.[2]

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. Becheck, Michael (13 March 2007), Brown Noser Gets a Whiff of Success, retrieved 8 February 2015
  2. 1 2 "The Unofficial Brown Barrel Handbook". Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  3. Stackhouse, Ross (1 December 2006), Brown Noser to Replace Daily Herald as Campus's premier Comedy Newspaper, retrieved 8 February 2015
  4. Schreckinger, Ben (15 October 2008), Humorists at Noser, Jug Are Joining Forces, Brown Daily Herald, retrieved 14 February 2015
  5. Smyth, Andrew (18 March 2009). "More Than Four Humors: Campus Comedy Culture Thrives". Retrieved 15 February 2015.
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