- 'Woman Yelling At Cat' Meme And 'Real Housewives' Star Taylor Armstrong On The Meme's Tragic Backstory, 'Baby There's No Plane' And More
- What's The 'Not My Name, Quarterback' Meme? The 'Nice Catch, Cheer' Scene In The 'Sidelined' Movie Explained
- What's The 'Running All Over The Place' And 'Shi Is Bubonic' Meme? Chandler's Cringe 'Coworker' Rap Song Explained
- What's Up With Jokes About February 26th Being 'National Backdoor Day'? Memes About February 26th Being 'Slime Ya HB' Day Explained
- What Is The 'Beabadoobee' And 'NBA YoungBoy' Drama? The 'Artists Who Can't Sing' Meme That Made Beabadoobee Crashout Explained
Surprised Patrick
March 29th, 2013 3:33 PMThe character Patrick Star's bewildered expression from the 2004 animated film The SpongeBob Squarepants Movie has inspired a photoshop meme in which the cartoon starfish is edited into a variety of different base images.
Lost Sheep Song
March 29th, 2013 2:30 PMPerformer Adrian Muncie repeatedly bleats like a sheep in this bizarre rendition of the "Lost Sheep" song.
Hadoken-ing
March 29th, 2013 2:00 PMThis quirky Asian photo fad mimicking the "Qi blast" as often seen in Japanese fighting arcade games and mangas has been around for years, but recently, it has found a new audience on the English-speaking web, thanks to Twitter and Portland blogger Kentballs.
Baby Walks the Dog
March 29th, 2013 1:00 PMYouTuber cr8zypancakes' daughter enjoys her version of walking the dog, which is just dropping the leash and letting the dog run free.
Social Justice Blogging Cheat Sheet
March 29th, 2013 12:30 PMClick through for the full-length social justice blogging logic flowchart.
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Surprised Patrick
The character Patrick Star's bewildered expression from the 2004 animated film The SpongeBob Squarepants Movie has inspired a photoshop meme in which the cartoon starfish is edited into a variety of different base images.
Hadoken-ing
This quirky Asian photo fad mimicking the "Qi blast" as often seen in Japanese fighting arcade games and mangas has been around for years, but recently, it has found a new audience on the English-speaking web, thanks to Twitter and Portland blogger Kentballs.
Social Justice Blogging Cheat Sheet
Click through for the full-length social justice blogging logic flowchart.