
Although Jacques said he believes the site to be fair use, he said he would be willing to post a disclaimer on the site indicating that it is parody if Walmart requested it.

In March Jacques posted a cease and desist letter he received from Walmart who claimed the website diluted their intellectual property. Jacques created the website as a piece of postmodernist "nonsense-art". The website's sole page is an image of a horse in front of a Walmart store. In September 2014, Jacques launched a new comic, Alice Grove, which updated once per week until the story finished in July 2017.Įarly in 2015 Jacques purchased the domain name walmart.horse (using the more recently available ICANN-era generic top-level domains). He puts anything from favored panels to simple sketches for others to see what he does in his spare time. To further broaden his drawing limits, Jacques created Jephdraw to place unnamed drawings of his onto the Internet. Compared to Questionable Content, it is a simple strip, eschewing detailed art and linear storyline in favour of reusable pre-drawn panels and one-shot jokes. Jacques launched indietits as an anonymous side project on April 1, 2005, to use ideas that did not fit into Questionable Content 's setting. Jacques was a member of Dayfree Press, an online webcomic syndicate which included other artists such as Christian Fundin and Pontus Madsen of Little Gamers, Sam Logan of Sam and Fuzzy, and Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics. On September 4, 2004, Jacques lost his day job, and decided to try publishing QC every weekday and make a living selling QC-related T-shirts.

It was initially published two days a week, and then moved up to three updates a week when Jacques published strip #16.

Questionable Content (QC) is a comedic slice-of-life webcomic that Jacques started on August 1, 2003.
