Abigail Shapiro

Philipp Kachalin • 5 years ago
Already a memeber? | Don't have an account? |
Philipp Kachalin • 5 years ago
Phillip Hamilton • about 17 hours ago
Mateus Lima • about a month ago
Owen Carry • about a year ago
Sakshi Rakshale • 4 days ago
Baseball fans on Twitter celebrate the MLB season kick-off with a photoshop tribute to the New York Mets pitcher Bartolo Colón's awkward batting stance.
This year's break-out anime TV show about a schoolgirl in search of vengeance for her father's death has garnered a cult status online for its over-the-top action sequences, borderline absurd plot and of course, a plenty of fan services.
To celebrate April Fool's Day Google Maps has released an update that allows users to catch the 150 Pokemon scattered across the world on Google Maps.
A string of earthquakes in Los Angeles and the surrounding area have hit California this March, and Twitter users are eager to share photos of the lack of devastation.
Twitter users are rallying around the Twitter hashtag #CancelColbert after @ColbertReport tweeted a quote from the show they perceived as racially insensitive towards Asian Americans. Others on Twitter and in the media counter that Colbert was simply using satire.
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Baseball fans on Twitter celebrate the MLB season kick-off with a photoshop tribute to the New York Mets pitcher Bartolo Colón's awkward batting stance.
This year's break-out anime TV show about a schoolgirl in search of vengeance for her father's death has garnered a cult status online for its over-the-top action sequences, borderline absurd plot and of course, a plenty of fan services.
To celebrate April Fool's Day Google Maps has released an update that allows users to catch the 150 Pokemon scattered across the world on Google Maps.
A string of earthquakes in Los Angeles and the surrounding area have hit California this March, and Twitter users are eager to share photos of the lack of devastation.
Twitter users are rallying around the Twitter hashtag #CancelColbert after @ColbertReport tweeted a quote from the show they perceived as racially insensitive towards Asian Americans. Others on Twitter and in the media counter that Colbert was simply using satire.
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.