- 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
KYM Gallery: Ruined Childhood
July 2nd, 2012 9:00 PMThere are 60 videos in this gallery that will potentially ruin your childhood. You've been warned.
YoSoy132 Reacts to Election Turnout
July 2nd, 2012 8:30 PMEnrique Peña Nieto's victory in Mexico's presidential election yesterday has led to an uproar on Twitter from the members of #YoSoy132 movement, spreading accusations of election fraud through the hashtag #fraude2012.
Meanwhile on /b/
July 2nd, 2012 6:57 PMMoral of the story: If you find an uncapped hand grenade in the forest, do not touch.
Gaming on Facebook
July 2nd, 2012 6:45 PMYouTuber somegreybloke explains how Facebook gaming works in this animated video
Divide By Zero
July 2nd, 2012 6:17 PMScience, How Does It Work?: The inability to divide by zero was noted as early as 1734. However, the act did not imply epic failures or earth-shattering disasters until 2005.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
KYM Gallery: Ruined Childhood
There are 60 videos in this gallery that will potentially ruin your childhood. You've been warned.
YoSoy132 Reacts to Election Turnout
Enrique Peña Nieto's victory in Mexico's presidential election yesterday has led to an uproar on Twitter from the members of #YoSoy132 movement, spreading accusations of election fraud through the hashtag #fraude2012.
Meanwhile on /b/
Moral of the story: If you find an uncapped hand grenade in the forest, do not touch.
Divide By Zero
Science, How Does It Work?: The inability to divide by zero was noted as early as 1734. However, the act did not imply epic failures or earth-shattering disasters until 2005.