- Where Does The 'Dexter And Batista On A Computer' Meme Come From? The Viral 'Dexter's Laptop' Memes Explained
- What Does 'You Really Think I Needed All The Guards At The Hexgates' Mean In 'Arcane?' The Viral 'CaitVi' Memes Explained
- What Is 'Doug's Winter Party' And When Does It Happen? The Wholesome Viral Video Explained
- What's With All The Memes About 'Influencer Smurf'? Here's Why People Are Joking About The 'Smurfs 2025' Character Being 'Cancelled' This Past Week
- This Insane Tweet In Defense Of A Cancelled Influencer has Became An Out-of-Pocket Copypasta This Past Year
It's Super Effective!
February 2nd, 2011 3:58 PMA colloquial expression derived from Nintendo's Pokemon games, typically used to indicate power level over 9000.
I Believe You Have My Stapler
February 2nd, 2011 11:41 AMI was told that if I did not confirm this entry, the building would be set on fire.
I Got 99 Problems...
February 1st, 2011 7:08 PMDid you know that Jay-Z’s platinum single “99 Problems” was inspired by the OG rapper Ice-T’s song with the same title?
Just As Planned
February 1st, 2011 4:56 PM"Just As Planned" (Japanese: 計画通り, Keikaku Dohri) is a series of image macros and a popular catchphrase taken from a highly dramatic monologue scene in the popular manga/anime series Death Note.
Meme Prop Overload
February 1st, 2011 3:52 PMWe are starting to get quite the collection of meme toys over here. Got any of your own? Post them here!
Welcome new visitor!
Know Your Meme is a website dedicated to documenting Internet phenomena: viral videos, image macros, catchphrases, web celebs and more.
It's Super Effective!
A colloquial expression derived from Nintendo's Pokemon games, typically used to indicate power level over 9000.
I Believe You Have My Stapler
I was told that if I did not confirm this entry, the building would be set on fire.
I Got 99 Problems...
Did you know that Jay-Z’s platinum single “99 Problems” was inspired by the OG rapper Ice-T’s song with the same title?
Just As Planned
"Just As Planned" (Japanese: 計画通り, Keikaku Dohri) is a series of image macros and a popular catchphrase taken from a highly dramatic monologue scene in the popular manga/anime series Death Note.
Meme Prop Overload
We are starting to get quite the collection of meme toys over here. Got any of your own? Post them here!