- Nobody Is As Ready For Pillowy Mounds Of Mashed Potatoes As Uncle Phil
- 'Thanksgiving Grandma' Plans To Reunite With Mistaken Friend For The 9th Year Since 2016
- Blessed By The Gift Of Prophecy, This Headline By 'The Onion' Has Been An Inspiration For Schadenfreude Memes
- People Are Joking About How Korean Mahwa 'The Ki Sisters' Is Like 'Baki For Women'
- The Slang Term 'Degen' Has Become A Staple Of Meme And Crypto Culture Over The Past Few Years
The Victims of the Manchester Suicide Attack
May 25th, 2017 4:00 PM ShareHow to Get Friendzoned Like a Boss
May 25th, 2017 3:30 PMYouTuber Ben Wonder uses a rejection phone call as inspiration for some sick beats.
GOP Candidate Body Slams Journalist
May 25th, 2017 3:00 PMGreg Gianforte, a Republican candidate for Montana's only seat in the House of Representatives, "body slammed" Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs last night on the eve of today's special election.
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If Real People Were In Burger King Ads
May 25th, 2017 2:30 PMFinally, some real people are in Burger King commericals, and they're kind of wishing they were at Chick-Fil-A.
Burrito Cart Closes Following Online Backlash
May 25th, 2017 2:00 PMAfter a social justice backlash led to the closing of the Portland-based food cart Kooks Burritos, whose white female owners were accused of "cultural appropriation," a Google Doc urging residents to avoid other ethnic restaurants owned by white people began circulating online.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
How to Get Friendzoned Like a Boss
YouTuber Ben Wonder uses a rejection phone call as inspiration for some sick beats.
GOP Candidate Body Slams Journalist
Greg Gianforte, a Republican candidate for Montana's only seat in the House of Representatives, "body slammed" Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs last night on the eve of today's special election.
If Real People Were In Burger King Ads
Finally, some real people are in Burger King commericals, and they're kind of wishing they were at Chick-Fil-A.
Burrito Cart Closes Following Online Backlash
After a social justice backlash led to the closing of the Portland-based food cart Kooks Burritos, whose white female owners were accused of "cultural appropriation," a Google Doc urging residents to avoid other ethnic restaurants owned by white people began circulating online.