- Where Are They Now? Here's What 'CopperCab,' The 'Gingers Do Have Souls!' Kid, Has Been Up To Since His Anti-Ginger-Hate Rant
- Why Does Dracula Owe Moon Knight Money? The Meme Turned Canon By 'Marvel Rivals' Explained
- Why Was The Wonder Woman Game Canceled? The Monolith Productions Shut Down Controversy Explained
- Who Is Mary Kate Cornett? The Rumor And Memes About An SEC Student Sleeping With Her Boyfriend's Dad Explained
- 'Woman Yelling At Cat' Meme And 'Real Housewives' Star Taylor Armstrong On The Meme's Tragic Backstory, 'Baby There's No Plane' And More
Things IT People Never Say
November 14th, 2014 10:00 AM"Did you try kicking it?"
Please Bring Our Continent Back Home
November 13th, 2014 10:00 PM SharePatreon
November 13th, 2014 9:30 PMThis crowdfunding site has become one of the many battlegrounds in this year's GamerGate controversy.
Share
Father Sings "Blackbird" to Dying Son
November 13th, 2014 8:30 PMFather Chris Picco sings the 1968 Beatles song "Blackbird" to his 24-week-old dying son, Lennon James Picco, who was delivered by emergency C-section after his mother Ashley unexpectedly passed away in her sleep.
4chan Takes Over TIME's Bannable Word Poll
November 13th, 2014 7:31 PMYesterday, TIME posted its fourth annual "word banishment" poll to single out one buzzword from this year and declare it banned in 2015, which included a slew of internet slangs and meme-y expressions, but then also, dare we speak of it: feminism. Can you guess what happened next?
Share
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Father Sings "Blackbird" to Dying Son
Father Chris Picco sings the 1968 Beatles song "Blackbird" to his 24-week-old dying son, Lennon James Picco, who was delivered by emergency C-section after his mother Ashley unexpectedly passed away in her sleep.
4chan Takes Over TIME's Bannable Word Poll
Yesterday, TIME posted its fourth annual "word banishment" poll to single out one buzzword from this year and declare it banned in 2015, which included a slew of internet slangs and meme-y expressions, but then also, dare we speak of it: feminism. Can you guess what happened next?