- Nine Years Ago, We Dared To Ask How A Dog Might Wear Pants For The First Time
- This Iconic Reaction Image Turns 13 Today
- Fugglers Are A Major Fixture In This 'Oopy Goopy, General Munchkin, Lil Jimbob... and Larry' Trend
- Sophie Rain's New Content House 'Bop House' Already Marred In Controversy As It Nears A Million Followers
- Viral Meme Asks The Important Question, 'Why Is It Lowkey Thursday Today?'
Kyubey Stares into Your Soul
April 22nd, 2011 5:10 PMMeet Kyubey, a sketchy magical creature with the face of an angel from Japan's #1 anime series right now: Puella Magi Madoka Magica.
Weirdest Boner
April 22nd, 2011 3:44 PMResearching this entry brought up some very interesting results in Google image search.
R.T.F.M
April 22nd, 2011 1:15 PMManuals, they're not for decoration. Read them.
Chocolate Rain
April 22nd, 2011 12:29 PM4 years ago today, Tay Zonday moved away from the mic to upload one of the strangest songs about racism ever produced. At over 65 million views, it ranks as one of YouTube's top 100 most viewed videos of all time.
Takedown of Downfall Parodies
April 21st, 2011 6:41 PMBack in April 2010, YouTube began blocking access to thousands of Downfall parody videos after Constantin Film decided to pull the plug on the meme.
While the censorship efforts have subsided since, hundreds of clips still remain missing to this day. Help us preserve this YouTube classic by uploading your favorites in our video gallery.
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Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Kyubey Stares into Your Soul
Meet Kyubey, a sketchy magical creature with the face of an angel from Japan's #1 anime series right now: Puella Magi Madoka Magica.
Weirdest Boner
Researching this entry brought up some very interesting results in Google image search.
Chocolate Rain
4 years ago today, Tay Zonday moved away from the mic to upload one of the strangest songs about racism ever produced. At over 65 million views, it ranks as one of YouTube's top 100 most viewed videos of all time.
Takedown of Downfall Parodies
Back in April 2010, YouTube began blocking access to thousands of Downfall parody videos after Constantin Film decided to pull the plug on the meme.
While the censorship efforts have subsided since, hundreds of clips still remain missing to this day. Help us preserve this YouTube classic by uploading your favorites in our video gallery.