- Where Are They Now? Here's What 'CopperCab,' The 'Gingers Do Have Souls!' Kid, Has Been Up To Since His Anti-Ginger-Hate Rant
- Why Does Dracula Owe Moon Knight Money? The Meme Turned Canon By 'Marvel Rivals' Explained
- Why Was The Wonder Woman Game Canceled? The Monolith Productions Shut Down Controversy Explained
- Who Is Mary Kate Cornett? The Rumor And Memes About An SEC Student Sleeping With Her Boyfriend's Dad Explained
- 'Woman Yelling At Cat' Meme And 'Real Housewives' Star Taylor Armstrong On The Meme's Tragic Backstory, 'Baby There's No Plane' And More
Meme Overload: The 2010 Edition
December 14th, 2011 10:50 AMA meme overloaded mural by Bob Geile!
Siri Meets Notorious BIG
December 13th, 2011 8:00 PMFor London's 2011 Music Hack Day, German coder Robert Böhnke programmed Siri to rap over the beat to Biggie's "Hypnotize." He won a pair of Beats headphones for this masterpiece.
Heavy Burtation
December 13th, 2011 7:30 PMVirals of 2011: In her recap of the 2011 Grammy Awards ceremony, CBS Los Angeles reporter Serene Branson fumbled over her lines for 20 seconds on air. Her nonsense quote was repeated later that year in a 30 Rock episode.
The Joy of Pokemon
December 13th, 2011 7:00 PMThis video was based on a long-lost Tube Dubber thread on 4chan's /vp/ (Pokemon) board. It features all 493 Pokemon and an epic jam.
Tebowing is Now an English Word?
December 13th, 2011 6:27 PMThe term "tebowing" has been declared an English word by The Global Language Monitor, a media analytics agency specializing in tracking the most trending English neologisms from each year.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Heavy Burtation
Virals of 2011: In her recap of the 2011 Grammy Awards ceremony, CBS Los Angeles reporter Serene Branson fumbled over her lines for 20 seconds on air. Her nonsense quote was repeated later that year in a 30 Rock episode.
Tebowing is Now an English Word?
The term "tebowing" has been declared an English word by The Global Language Monitor, a media analytics agency specializing in tracking the most trending English neologisms from each year.