- Saying Goodbye to My Chinese Spy: The Viral Trend Amid TikTok's Ban Discussions In The U.S.
- 2017 Tweet About 'Gay Muslim Furry Romance' Resurfaces On Twitter Suggesting The Novel As An Option To 'Resist Trump' Administration
- Cool Dinosaur Edits Are One Of The Biggest Memes On Reels Right Now
- Ninja's Gaming Guide Came Out Over Five Years Ago, But The Collective Memory Of It Still Lives In Memes
- 'TikTok Refugees' Are Signing Up For Chinese Instagram At Unprecedented Rates
Supercut: Haul Videos
December 14th, 2011 4:30 PMSlacktory compiled this epic supercut of fifteen of YouTube's best haul videos of everything from clothes and makeup purchases to computers and candles.
Asians in the Library
December 14th, 2011 4:00 PMVirals of 2011: After Alexandra Wallace made the poor decision to upload a horribly racist video about interacting with Asian students in the library, she was met with wave of criticism across the web and dropped out of her university within a week.
NMA News on Louis CK AMA
December 14th, 2011 3:36 PMNMA News produced a video about Louis C.K.'s Reddit AMA thread that has received over 41,000 up votes since it was created on Monday.
Rage Comic: Are You Serious Edition
December 14th, 2011 3:00 PMOh Derpina, I don't even…
Tilt Shift Effect
December 14th, 2011 2:17 PMWhile the techniques of "tilting" and "shifting" the camera lens has been around since the beginning of photography, it recently became a widespread online trend with the advents of mobile camera apps and digital image processing.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Asians in the Library
Virals of 2011: After Alexandra Wallace made the poor decision to upload a horribly racist video about interacting with Asian students in the library, she was met with wave of criticism across the web and dropped out of her university within a week.
Rage Comic: Are You Serious Edition
Oh Derpina, I don't even…
Tilt Shift Effect
While the techniques of "tilting" and "shifting" the camera lens has been around since the beginning of photography, it recently became a widespread online trend with the advents of mobile camera apps and digital image processing.