Catturd Running Over His Dog

Owen Carry • about a year ago
Already a memeber? | Don't have an account? |
Owen Carry • about a year ago
Phillip Hamilton • a day ago
Mateus Lima • about a month ago
Philipp Kachalin • 5 years ago
Sakshi Rakshale • 4 days ago
The social media campaign to diversify children's literature has authors, librarians, parents and kids sharing why they want to see everyone represented in their books.
After The Hollywood Reporter released a photo John Green, popular vlogger and author of The Fault in Our Stars, fans on Twitter started to tweet photos recreating his awkward pose.
Viner Bryan Silva has inspired a slew of parodies mocking his bizarre selfie rap videos ending with the gunfire onomatopoeia "gratata."
This badass 86-year-old grandma from Williamstown, Kentucky loves to rock the tie-dye, throw up the peace sign and pop pills to "keep life interesting" like it's 1969 everyday.
The long-standing urban legend that the American video game publisher buried its overstock at a New Mexico landfill site back in 1983 has been finally confirmed, after numerous copies of Atari titles, including the ill-fated adaptation of the 1982 blockbuster E.T. the Extra-Terristrial, were recovered from the site as part of an ongoing excavation project.
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
The social media campaign to diversify children's literature has authors, librarians, parents and kids sharing why they want to see everyone represented in their books.
After The Hollywood Reporter released a photo John Green, popular vlogger and author of The Fault in Our Stars, fans on Twitter started to tweet photos recreating his awkward pose.
Viner Bryan Silva has inspired a slew of parodies mocking his bizarre selfie rap videos ending with the gunfire onomatopoeia "gratata."
This badass 86-year-old grandma from Williamstown, Kentucky loves to rock the tie-dye, throw up the peace sign and pop pills to "keep life interesting" like it's 1969 everyday.
The long-standing urban legend that the American video game publisher buried its overstock at a New Mexico landfill site back in 1983 has been finally confirmed, after numerous copies of Atari titles, including the ill-fated adaptation of the 1982 blockbuster E.T. the Extra-Terristrial, were recovered from the site as part of an ongoing excavation project.
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.