- Eight Years Ago, Obama Gave Himself A Medal Because Why Not
- The Reddit Creepypasta Known As 'The Lamp Story' Appeared On The Site 13 Years Ago Today
- Trump Introduced 'Fake News' Into Popular Vernacular On This Date In 2017
- It's Been Five Years Since Jeff Bezos' 'I Love You Alive Girl' Messages Were Leaked By The Press
- iShowSpeed Losing His Braincells On Stream Is The Perfect Reaction Meme To Send The Stupidest Person On Your TL
The "!1" Phenomenon
January 11th, 2011 6:32 PMIf your exclamation points are not followed by a series of "1"s, then you just aren't excited enough.
Mouth Eyes
January 11th, 2011 4:45 PMThe images in this entry are a very strange combination of funny and creepy. BRB – going to read my old copies of Sandman.
To The Follower Who Left (לעוקב שעזב)
January 11th, 2011 3:48 PMLatest from the Middle East Meme Dept:
לעוקב שעזב, or "To the Follower Who Left," is a trending phenomenon among Hebrew-speaking Twitter users that involves IDing the latest unfollower of your Twitter account and calling them out for for the lulz.
Cereal Guy
January 11th, 2011 1:19 AMCereal Guy is a stick figure character commonly used on imageboards and discussion forums as a multi-purpose reaction face.
Boxxy
January 10th, 2011 10:58 PMBreaking news: Queen of /b/ hath returned.
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
The "!1" Phenomenon
If your exclamation points are not followed by a series of "1"s, then you just aren't excited enough.
Mouth Eyes
The images in this entry are a very strange combination of funny and creepy. BRB – going to read my old copies of Sandman.
To The Follower Who Left (לעוקב שעזב)
Latest from the Middle East Meme Dept:
לעוקב שעזב, or "To the Follower Who Left," is a trending phenomenon among Hebrew-speaking Twitter users that involves IDing the latest unfollower of your Twitter account and calling them out for for the lulz.
Cereal Guy
Cereal Guy is a stick figure character commonly used on imageboards and discussion forums as a multi-purpose reaction face.