- The Weekly Meme Roundup: Cave Divers, Anglerfish, Outies, Hostile Government Takeovers And Deltarune Tomorrow
- What's Is The 'I Mean, I Like X, I Like Y' Meme On Twitter? Doechii's 'Denial Is A River' Memes Explained
- What's With All The Memes About 'Injecting Crushed Butterfly'? The Bizarre News Story About A Brazilian Teen Explained
- What's The Ship Being Spammed In Twitter Replies? The 'HMS Undaunted' And The Confusing Trend Explained
- Who Is The 'Russian Swimming Cap Lady' On TikTok? The Memes About The 'Arena' Swim Cap Model Explained
Beethoven's Für Elise Played Backwards
October 1st, 2013 11:55 AMClassical guitarist Jakob XP Brunnbauer arranged Beethoven's classic "Für Elise" backwards, then used video editing software to reverse the footage, recreating the familiar tune. Mind = Blown.
Happy 10th Birthday, 4chan!
October 1st, 2013 11:55 AMThe iconic anonymous imageboard site turns 10 today.
The Spider Who Couldn't Hide
October 1st, 2013 9:41 AMIt turns out that this adorable little spider didn't love cocaine, it was just trying to hide itself!
How The Dinos Became Extinct
September 30th, 2013 11:55 PM Share2013 U.S. Government Shutdown
September 30th, 2013 10:55 PMA U.S. Government shutdown is imminent for the first time since 1995. WIll the House and the Senate come to an agreement before it's too late?
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Beethoven's Für Elise Played Backwards
Classical guitarist Jakob XP Brunnbauer arranged Beethoven's classic "Für Elise" backwards, then used video editing software to reverse the footage, recreating the familiar tune. Mind = Blown.
Happy 10th Birthday, 4chan!
The iconic anonymous imageboard site turns 10 today.
The Spider Who Couldn't Hide
It turns out that this adorable little spider didn't love cocaine, it was just trying to hide itself!
2013 U.S. Government Shutdown
A U.S. Government shutdown is imminent for the first time since 1995. WIll the House and the Senate come to an agreement before it's too late?