- 'The Dildo Of Consequences' Has Been One Of Internet's Favorite Sayings Since 2022, But It Was First Used Years Earlier
- 'The Ancestral Homeland of Timothée' Becomes Viral Phrasal Template To Reference Paris
- Bonesmasher 'James Sapphire' Has Gone Ghost On Social Media As He Slowly Becomes Creepypasta Fodder
- Oh... To Hit The Road Or Stay In Beacontown... Decisions, Decisions...
- K-Pop Fans Have Turned A TikToker Into A Meme After She Questioned Why Aespa's Maknae 'Ningning' Ate First
Jesusland vs. United States of Canada
January 10th, 2012 12:32 PMJesusland (Red States) and the United States of Canada (Blue States) brace themselves for another year of bipartisan showdown.
Nicolas Cage Turns 48
January 7th, 2012 7:17 PMHappy birthday to one of the Internet's favorite celebrities!
Wikipedia Donation Banner Captions
January 3rd, 2012 4:00 PMWikipedia's 2011 end-of-year fundraising campaign racks in $20 million and a slew of hilarious, awkward image-word screenshots.
Tenso
December 31st, 2011 3:00 AMTenso is all about enjoying every detail.
We are the 99 Percent
December 27th, 2011 9:06 PMSingle Topic Blogs of 2011: Initially launched in an effort to raise public awareness of Occupy Wall Street, this Tumblr and its unified message of "the 99%" went onto become one of the most often heard protest slogans of 2011.
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Jesusland vs. United States of Canada
Jesusland (Red States) and the United States of Canada (Blue States) brace themselves for another year of bipartisan showdown.
Nicolas Cage Turns 48
Happy birthday to one of the Internet's favorite celebrities!
Wikipedia Donation Banner Captions
Wikipedia's 2011 end-of-year fundraising campaign racks in $20 million and a slew of hilarious, awkward image-word screenshots.
We are the 99 Percent
Single Topic Blogs of 2011: Initially launched in an effort to raise public awareness of Occupy Wall Street, this Tumblr and its unified message of "the 99%" went onto become one of the most often heard protest slogans of 2011.