What Celebs Look Like Without Fame

Mateus Lima • 2 days ago
Already a memeber? | Don't have an account? |
Mateus Lima • 2 days ago
Owen Carry • 5 days ago
Mateus Lima • 2 months ago
Mateus Lima • 23 days ago
Owen Carry • 4 days ago
n 2008, Douglas Reinhardt created the single-topic Tumblr F**k Yeah! Ryan Gosling, captioning photos of the actor with the flirtatious line "Hey girl." By December 2011, dozens of spinoff blogs were created using the same trope. We spoke with Reinhardt to get his take on the Gosling craze.
We recently spoke with Nate Dern, A.K.A. "Huh?" Guy, who became a Reddit hero for his single line in an AT&T commercial. He told us about his reaction to all the upvotes and becoming a rage face.
We had a chance to chat with Shira Lazar, the LA-based videoblogger behind the daily news blog and video series What's Trending which rose to controversy after a sudden fallout with CBS over a mistweet about Steve Job’s death.
In the 1990s, James Marshall decided to compose what many considered a canonical list of emoticons and one-line ASCII art. He recently spoke with us about why he started the collection and his thoughts on the future of emoticons.
We had a chance to sit down with Cole Stryker, the author of the new book Epic Win for Anonymous, to talk about the process of documenting internet culture, the worst and the best of /b/, the future of Reddit and more!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
n 2008, Douglas Reinhardt created the single-topic Tumblr F**k Yeah! Ryan Gosling, captioning photos of the actor with the flirtatious line "Hey girl." By December 2011, dozens of spinoff blogs were created using the same trope. We spoke with Reinhardt to get his take on the Gosling craze.
We recently spoke with Nate Dern, A.K.A. "Huh?" Guy, who became a Reddit hero for his single line in an AT&T commercial. He told us about his reaction to all the upvotes and becoming a rage face.
We had a chance to chat with Shira Lazar, the LA-based videoblogger behind the daily news blog and video series What's Trending which rose to controversy after a sudden fallout with CBS over a mistweet about Steve Job’s death.
In the 1990s, James Marshall decided to compose what many considered a canonical list of emoticons and one-line ASCII art. He recently spoke with us about why he started the collection and his thoughts on the future of emoticons.
We had a chance to sit down with Cole Stryker, the author of the new book Epic Win for Anonymous, to talk about the process of documenting internet culture, the worst and the best of /b/, the future of Reddit and more!
Legal Information: Know Your Meme ® is a trademark of Literally Media Ltd . By using this site, you are agreeing by the site's terms of use and privacy policy and DMCA policy .
© 2007-2025 Literally Media Ltd.