- TikToker Cookie King Talks Luke Belmar, '99% Accuracy' Trend And Other Brainrot Memes That He Somehow Started
- What Is The 'Down Boy, Arf' Meme And Where Did It Come From? The Viral 'Archie Comics' Panel Explained
- What's With The Memes About J.D. Vance Asking Zelenskyy 'Have You Said Thank You Once?' The Jokes After The Trump-Zelenskyy Meeting Explained
- What's With Jokes That Go 'No, It's Fine, I Just Didn't Think It Would Be Chinese'? Memes Inspired By A TikTok About 'Chinese Heaven' Explained
- What's With The Weird 'J.D. Vance Photoshop Edits' Online? The 'Babyface' Trend That's Distorted The Vice President's Face Explained
Bitches Be Like...
October 8th, 2013 12:20 PMWhile the image macro series first began as a way to poke fun at women's logic, it has since evolved into a gender-neutral expression associated with all sorts of stereotypes and clichés, in a similar vein to S**t Girls Say.
The Root Cause of the Shutdown
October 8th, 2013 10:44 AMThis animation by FilmCow exposes the disturbing motivations behind the recent United States government shutdown.
The Destroyer of Worlds
October 7th, 2013 11:30 PM ShareYarn Bombing
October 7th, 2013 11:01 PMYarn graffiti took off in 2005 with the foundation of Knitta Please, a Houston-based art collective devoted to cloaking outdoor objects with knitted and crocheted patches.
Telekinetic Rage Coffee Shop Prank
October 7th, 2013 10:00 PMThis viral marketing stunt for the upcoming remake of the 1976 horror film Carrie features a clever prank in which an angry woman uses her telekinetic powers in a New York City coffee shop.
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Bitches Be Like...
While the image macro series first began as a way to poke fun at women's logic, it has since evolved into a gender-neutral expression associated with all sorts of stereotypes and clichés, in a similar vein to S**t Girls Say.
Yarn Bombing
Yarn graffiti took off in 2005 with the foundation of Knitta Please, a Houston-based art collective devoted to cloaking outdoor objects with knitted and crocheted patches.