About the Author
Group-F is produced by Wesely E. Smith, who goes by the nickname/initials WES.

As with most children who read comic books, WES had ambitions of being the creator of the next great superhero, or at least on staff of DC or Marvel. This dream persisted until the ripe old age of 12 when reality hit like a baseball bat accross the eyes.

WES suddenly realized that he had little to no artistic talent.

Suddenly there was a reason why he could barely scratch out a stick figure. Why his only acceptable comic had a cast of invisible heros that wore but one piece of clothing each. Why people gave that look when they were told what he wanted to be.

So the dream died.

Over the next several years, WES become facinated with computers. This facination resulted in a degree in Computer Information Systems, and a career. Over the course of this career WES dug into many differenct aspects of computers in the work place. Just about everything from database administration to real time programming to photo edititing for trade shows.

The germination for Group-F happened in the year 2000. An office mate introduced WES to Max Cannon's amazingly bizzare Red Meat. This was the missing piece of the puzzle.

At once, WES knew what the world was missing. The one thing that would make the world a much better place. A comic that combined Dilbert, Mad Magazine, and Red Meat. Surely this would be a disturbingly funny comic.

This idea had yet to be named, and WES still had no artistic abillity. He couldn't draw a paper bag that was recognizeable, much less an entourage of characters.

However, WES still doodled and on rare occasion tried to force an image out of a pencil. Finally in 2007 it happened. Co-workers were able to recognize crudely drawn images on whiteboards. This fueled the fire. Before long, the same co-workers were actually enjoying WES's scribbles.

Over a few weeks, WES developed a slew of characters, fleshed out the Group-F concept, bought a domain name and some web space. WES had all the computer hardware and knowldge for the mechanics of a web comic, but never had need for a scanner. Thanks to James WES received a $10 scanner from Goodwill.

Latter that week Group-F hit the net.

Just a few weeks latter, WES's computers fried out. This event has been named the Great Crash of 2007.