Other regular features include I Love You I Hate You, a section where readers submit short anonymous messages to anyone person or group; Tom Tomorrow's weekly political comic strip This Modern World; and Emily Flake's comic Lulu Eightball.
PBF was once updated weekly on Sundays to correspond with its "Biblical" title. According to the official website, it appeared in 21 newspapers, five magazines and five school papers. These included the Baltimore City Paper Philadelphia City Paper, New York Press, The Chicago Reader, the Metro Times, The Guardian, The Portland Mercury, City Newspaper (in Rochester, NY), the Ottawa Xpress, Buffalo Beast and Black & White.
New York City | Philadelphia | Mexico City | Kansas City, Missouri | Philadelphia Eagles | Kansas City | Salt Lake City | Philadelphia Phillies | Quebec City | Oklahoma City | City of London | city | Vatican City | New York City Subway | Panama City | Kansas City Chiefs | Philadelphia Orchestra | Kansas City Royals | Sex and the City | Mayor of New York City | Atlantic City, New Jersey | Utrecht (city) | Cork (city) | New York City Ballet | Manchester City F.C. | Jersey City, New Jersey | New York City Opera | Guatemala City | Atlantic City | Quezon City |
Cuts from Jack's first album, "Halfway to NowHere" were profiled on the Iain Anderson's Radio Scotland programme on the BBC on March 30, 2011.The Philadelphia alternative newspaper, The Philadelphia City Paper, profiled Jack in its February 2, 2012 issue.