- Gorilla Sofa Started As An AI Design, Continued As A Meme, And Now Can Actually Be Purchased
- The 'Chad Xi Jinping' Meme Has Been A Popular Reaction Image Online Since Early 2022
- Four Years Ago, 'Amogus' Changed The Meme Landscape Forever
- The 'Unnie' Scene From 'Squid Game' Season 2 Is A Lot Better With Cats Screaming 'Young-meow!'
- Videos Of People Setting Random Fires In L.A. Have Led To Conspiracy Theories About The Fires Being Caused By Malicious Arsonists
Oppa Putin Style
January 14th, 2013 7:30 PMVladimir Putin pulls off PSY's powder blue suit in this overdue parody of Gangnam Style.
Hollywood's Favorite Newspaper
January 14th, 2013 7:00 PMThis one's been floating around for a few years, but in case you've missed. Notice a pattern here?
Aaron Swartz
January 14th, 2013 6:35 PMLate internet activist Aaron Swartz was known for his involvement in several web-based projects including the Rich Site Summary (RSS) 1.0 and Infogami, as well as in online activism through his group Demand Progress.
Cat Correctly Solves Shell Game
January 14th, 2013 6:02 PMYouTuber moonli927's cat Kido is a natural at solving the classic shell game.
Bottle Meme
January 14th, 2013 5:40 PMAlso known as “You May Bottle Anything” in the Japanese art communities, this exploitable drawing fad involves "bottling" iconic anime and manga characters inside of glass jars.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Oppa Putin Style
Vladimir Putin pulls off PSY's powder blue suit in this overdue parody of Gangnam Style.
Hollywood's Favorite Newspaper
This one's been floating around for a few years, but in case you've missed. Notice a pattern here?
Aaron Swartz
Late internet activist Aaron Swartz was known for his involvement in several web-based projects including the Rich Site Summary (RSS) 1.0 and Infogami, as well as in online activism through his group Demand Progress.
Bottle Meme
Also known as “You May Bottle Anything” in the Japanese art communities, this exploitable drawing fad involves "bottling" iconic anime and manga characters inside of glass jars.