Throwing Car Batteries Into the Ocean

Adam Downer • 6 years ago
Already a memeber? | Don't have an account? |
Adam Downer • 6 years ago
Mateus Lima • about a month ago
Matt Schimkowitz • 6 years ago
Owen Carry • 6 days ago
Sakshi Rakshale • about a month ago
The deep Web represents a large part of the Internet that is not indexed by conventional search engines, which includes websites containing black markets for drugs, assassins and other illegal activities.
Balloon artist Bruce Carr created this sculpture of Metal Gear's Solid Snake for a friend's birthday. However, its poor resemblance to the actual character made it the subject of photoshopped images on 4chan.
After a group of four young women from Queen's University in Ontario started a Facebook community for students at the school to send anonymous compliments to each other in September, the trend spread to dozens of other colleges and universities across the globe.
This series of animations are drawn to go along with lectures on a variety of topics, including education, economics, science and history.
At age of nine, Caine Monroy opened up a cardboard arcade in his father's auto parts shop. His very first customer Nirvan Mullick, a Los Angeles filmmaker, became so inspired by the boy's creativity that he organized a flash mob event and made a documentary about it, helping to raise more than $150,000 for Caine's college fund in the process.
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Balloon artist Bruce Carr created this sculpture of Metal Gear's Solid Snake for a friend's birthday. However, its poor resemblance to the actual character made it the subject of photoshopped images on 4chan.
After a group of four young women from Queen's University in Ontario started a Facebook community for students at the school to send anonymous compliments to each other in September, the trend spread to dozens of other colleges and universities across the globe.
This series of animations are drawn to go along with lectures on a variety of topics, including education, economics, science and history.
At age of nine, Caine Monroy opened up a cardboard arcade in his father's auto parts shop. His very first customer Nirvan Mullick, a Los Angeles filmmaker, became so inspired by the boy's creativity that he organized a flash mob event and made a documentary about it, helping to raise more than $150,000 for Caine's college fund in the process.
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.