- Are You 'Holding Space' And 'Feeling Power' With The Lyrics Of 'Defying Gravity?'
- 17 Years Ago Today, The Classic 'Handsome Squidward' Scene Was Aired On TV
- The Gen Z Brainrot Slang Term 'Glazing' Was First Using Online On This Date In 2021
- Pump.fun Is The Site Responsible For The New 'Meme Coin' Craze Because It Requires No Money And A Few Seconds
- 'Wicked: Part 1' Just Released In Theaters, But The Memes It Spawned May Steal The Show
Race Guy
November 18th, 2010 3:00 PMEarlier this week, the clothing retail chain Hot Topic decided to sell some t-shirts with Rage Guy design. The Internet noticed and waged a sabotage mission, falsely pairing Rage Guy comics with highly offensive racist jokes.
United States of Whatever
November 18th, 2010 1:10 PMRemember Sifl and Olly? The show aired on MTV from 1997-1999, and during it's last season premiered the popular punk comedy song "United States of Whatever" that would later become heavily parodied across the web.
This Man (Ever Dream This Man)
November 18th, 2010 12:53 PMEver dream of this man? Apparently people from all over the world have been seeing him in their dreams, often as a benevolent character. Is this real, or just a viral marketing campaign?
U Jelly?
November 18th, 2010 11:52 AM"U Jelly?" is a slightly quicker way of saying "you jealous?" on discussion forums and comments.
Tenso Research Shows Brazil Does Copyright Better Than You
November 17th, 2010 1:42 AMWe all know that memes form through the sharing of ideas. Here in the United States, many people have mixed feelings about the nature of copyright law. But in Brazil, sharing culture and building upon each other's work is a feature of national pride.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
United States of Whatever
Remember Sifl and Olly? The show aired on MTV from 1997-1999, and during it's last season premiered the popular punk comedy song "United States of Whatever" that would later become heavily parodied across the web.
This Man (Ever Dream This Man)
Ever dream of this man? Apparently people from all over the world have been seeing him in their dreams, often as a benevolent character. Is this real, or just a viral marketing campaign?
Tenso Research Shows Brazil Does Copyright Better Than You
We all know that memes form through the sharing of ideas. Here in the United States, many people have mixed feelings about the nature of copyright law. But in Brazil, sharing culture and building upon each other's work is a feature of national pride.