Sean Aaberg

[citation needed] As a kid, he liked "anything weird, nasty and old", including cheap magazines which he bought thousands of, as he said in an interview.

His friends and he read Mad, drew comics, liked to listen to Cheech and Chong and the Ramones on the Dr. Demento show, and later discovered the Church of the Subgenius.

[5] Aaberg is mostly known for his Weirdo Art following in the foot-steps of Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, Basil Wolverton and Robert Crumb.

She told an interviewer for Tension Magazine that people do not always understand their sense of humor and that they frequently receive hate mail from "activists" who lecture them on appropriate behavior, but "cultural ownership" is against their artistic vision.

[10] The Aabergs ran a blog called The Daily Hitler, incorporating Nazi imagery in commentary on contemporary society.

[14] PORK magazine has been a big catalyst for Weirdo Art and Rock&Roll, with an emphasis on street culture elements like denim, studs, pizza, burgers, switchblades and anti-social behavior.

Beginning in 2017, such images were removed from the magazine as a response to changing "national circumstances", according to an interview with founder Sean Aaberg.

PORK#9 cover by Sean Aaberg (November, 2012)