- New York Magazine's 'Cruel Kids' Table' Cover Is Catching Flack From Republicans Who Can't Decide If It's A Hit Piece Or Not
- Reese Youngn's 'No More Parties' Remix Is Back In Memes Following The Spread Of 'Dih,' 'TS' And 'PMO'
- 2013 'Modern Family' Scene Has TikTokers Saying 'I Hate Vietnam' In New Lip Dub Trend
- 'Warhammer 40K' Fans Are Hyped For The Much Awaited Sequel To The 2018 Fan Film 'Astartes'
- Villains Take Their Names In Viral 'I Think I Like That Name' Meme On Twitter
Korn's Youngest Fans
March 6th, 2013 5:00 PMThough Korn's heyday was in the late 1990s, these two kids can't get enough of their nu metal jams.
Hackers Rustle Time Warner's Jimmies
March 6th, 2013 4:32 PMIn protesting Time Warner Cable's support of the recently launched Copyright Alert System (CAS), a hacking collective known as NullCrew replaced the company's customer support page with an image of the iconic ape.
MIT Captures Invisible Motion in Video
March 6th, 2013 3:38 PMA team of M.I.T scientist has developed an image-enhancing software program that can reveal subtle fluctuations in colors and motions once thought to be invisible to the naked eye. Head over to the New York Times for more on this story.
Just Legolize It
March 6th, 2013 3:04 PM ShareDanbooru
March 6th, 2013 2:37 PMThis image archive based around tagging systems launched in 2005, offering their source code online for free resulting in many subject-specific spinoff sites known as "boorus."
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Hackers Rustle Time Warner's Jimmies
In protesting Time Warner Cable's support of the recently launched Copyright Alert System (CAS), a hacking collective known as NullCrew replaced the company's customer support page with an image of the iconic ape.
MIT Captures Invisible Motion in Video
A team of M.I.T scientist has developed an image-enhancing software program that can reveal subtle fluctuations in colors and motions once thought to be invisible to the naked eye. Head over to the New York Times for more on this story.