- The Weekly Meme Roundup: Eye Of Rah, Gulf Of America, Property In Egypt And More
- The People Behind The 'Eye Of Rah' Meme: Jeremiah Springfield, Rashad Bowens And Twitter's Scribbles Discuss The Brainrot Meme's Evolution
- These Heatmaps That People Have Been Posting Out-Of-Context Lately Compare How Liberals And Conservative Distribute Their Moral Regard
- This Blursed Jollibee Mascot Is The New Mikudayo Fanart Inspiration
- 'Flight Driving A Shoe' Is Either The Hardest Image On The Internet Or The Stupidest
Tiger Mom
January 27th, 2011 3:21 PMTiger Mom is an Advice Dog-style image macro series featuring a standoffish looking Asian woman and various captions poking fun at the popular stereotype of Asian American mothers as uber-strict and overzealous parents.
Lick Icons
January 26th, 2011 5:41 PMFOURTH WALL BROKEN. Check inside to learn more about this avatar-making fad that swept across DeviantART in 2010.
Q&A with Matt Furie
January 25th, 2011 7:17 PMLast year, we sat down with artist Matt Furie during one of his gallery openings in New York to talk about his comics and FEELING GOOD, MAN.
KYM Gift Shop Sale
January 25th, 2011 7:16 PM1. Go to KYM store
2. Grab sum shurts and buttens
3. ????
4. PROFIT!
What I Watched, Expected and Got
January 25th, 2011 4:46 PM"What I Watched, What I Expected, What I Got" is an image macro series that consists of three visual metaphors on any given subject topic, with most iterations typically commentating on popular anime and video games.
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
Lick Icons
FOURTH WALL BROKEN. Check inside to learn more about this avatar-making fad that swept across DeviantART in 2010.
Q&A with Matt Furie
Last year, we sat down with artist Matt Furie during one of his gallery openings in New York to talk about his comics and FEELING GOOD, MAN.
What I Watched, Expected and Got
"What I Watched, What I Expected, What I Got" is an image macro series that consists of three visual metaphors on any given subject topic, with most iterations typically commentating on popular anime and video games.