- What's Going On With Enron Supposedly Coming Back And Launching A Meme Coin? The 'Enron Egg' Prank, Rebrand Hoax And Crypto Scam Explained
- Warhammer 40K’s Greatest Memes Explained: Thieves, Liars and the Most Punchable Man in the Galaxy
- Where Did The 'Furry Parents Fighting' Image Come From? Memes Inspired By A Crying Furry Wolf Explained
- What's The 'What's A Father' XXXTentacion Meme? The 'Corny' Interview Clip Of The Late Rapper Explained
- In Memes, The Recruiter's Friendly Smile Hides Many Emotions (But Mainly Suffering)
Three Years of Selfies Become One Awesome Lip Dub
January 6th, 2014 12:45 PMA teen took a selfie for 1101 days and turned them into a lip dub video for Queen's "Don't Stop Me Now."
A Punny Adventure With The Rock
January 6th, 2014 12:35 PM ShareAre You Frustrated?
January 5th, 2014 4:47 PMThese bizarre elongated neck images have been confirmed!
Jimmy Hendrix on a Gayageum
January 5th, 2014 2:15 PMThis girl rocks the 1968 rock song "Voodoo Chile" by Jimmy Hendrix on the gayageum Korean musical instrument.
Edward Snowden
January 5th, 2014 1:40 PMThe New York Times and the Guardian's recent op-eds have given a second wind to a public debate that has been ongoing since day one: should the U.S. government pardon Edward Snowden, the most sought-after whistleblower of the century?
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Three Years of Selfies Become One Awesome Lip Dub
A teen took a selfie for 1101 days and turned them into a lip dub video for Queen's "Don't Stop Me Now."
Are You Frustrated?
These bizarre elongated neck images have been confirmed!
Jimmy Hendrix on a Gayageum
This girl rocks the 1968 rock song "Voodoo Chile" by Jimmy Hendrix on the gayageum Korean musical instrument.
Edward Snowden
The New York Times and the Guardian's recent op-eds have given a second wind to a public debate that has been ongoing since day one: should the U.S. government pardon Edward Snowden, the most sought-after whistleblower of the century?