Who we are: The Princeton Tiger is the nation's second oldest college humor magazine, 126 years young (though we don't look a day over 90). Tiger has housed many famous alumni, from F. Scott Fitzgerald to a former Editor-in-Chief and Executive Editor of Maxim Magazine. We're funny, we're marginally literate, and we're free, distributed to every undergraduate room, common area, dining hall, eating club, and elite social circle on campus, even the equestrian team (when they get off their high horses). We know that we're a successful magazine, because issues of the Tiger frequently make it into the bathroom stalls (and not into the piping), a status symbol (the prestige, not the stalls) that is the truest sign that people enjoy our publication.

What we do: We produce and distribute our unique brand of literature (should you actually call it "literature") 6 times annually, sometimes coinciding important landmarks in the academic year like freshman week, bicker season, or Reunions. In addition, Tiger Magazine is an active member of the Princeton pranking community. That is to say, we have abducted Orange Key tourists for their bunches of bananas while dressed as a diminutive, sexually-repressed gorilla. We have also reenacted various pivotal moments of civil war history in Professor McPherson's class while adding our own form of "gorilla" warfare.

All in all, Tiger Magazine provides effective means of procrastination, bathroom reading material, and a source of uncontrolled laughter. We live by our adopted motto: "The wise man knows himself to be a fool." If you're not satisfied after reading the Tiger, well, then maybe you're the wise man. It's not our problem. So enjoy the labors of some fruit.