- 'Accidentally Became Important At Work' Becomes Viral Catchphrase Meme On Twitter
- Reviewbrah's First Video Was Shared On This Day, Marking 14 Long Years Of 'TheReportOfTheWeek'
- This Awkward Photo Of Christopher Walken Looks Like He's Waiting To Hear Back From You
- An Intriguing Sentence Spoken By 'Minecraft' YouTuber 'Kwebbelkop's AI Is Going Viral
- Cringe 'Honestly I Think They Not Like Us' Copypasta Was Seemingly Posted Ironically But History Is Omitting That
This is What Water Looks Like in CGI
July 30th, 2013 8:29 PMCheck out this incredibly photorealistic animation of fluid liquid water rendered in CGI by animator IntotheVOiD.
They Just Want to Watch the World Burn
July 30th, 2013 7:30 PM ShareThey Took Our Jobs
July 30th, 2013 7:00 PMThis anti-immigration complaint is best yelled in a thick southern accent.
Breaking Bad Meets Weird Al
July 30th, 2013 6:30 PMYouTuber ibrews mashed up used tons of Breaking Bad footage to illustrate the lyrics to Weird Al Yankovic's 1999 song Albuquerque.
Printing Out the Internet
July 30th, 2013 6:00 PMIn May 2013, MOMA Poet Laureate Kenneth Goldsmith launched an ambitious crowdsourced art project asking contributors to print out the entire web. After two months of collection, more than 10 tons of printed internet is now being shown at an art gallery in Mexico City.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
This is What Water Looks Like in CGI
Check out this incredibly photorealistic animation of fluid liquid water rendered in CGI by animator IntotheVOiD.
They Took Our Jobs
This anti-immigration complaint is best yelled in a thick southern accent.
Breaking Bad Meets Weird Al
YouTuber ibrews mashed up used tons of Breaking Bad footage to illustrate the lyrics to Weird Al Yankovic's 1999 song Albuquerque.
Printing Out the Internet
In May 2013, MOMA Poet Laureate Kenneth Goldsmith launched an ambitious crowdsourced art project asking contributors to print out the entire web. After two months of collection, more than 10 tons of printed internet is now being shown at an art gallery in Mexico City.