Greetings! You must login or signup first!

Meme Encyclopedia
Media
Editorials
More

Popular right now

Fukouna Shoujo 03

Fukouna Shoujo 03

7 years ago

Italian Brainrot / AI Italian Animals image and meme examples.

Italian Brainrot Animals

Mateus Lima

Mateus Lima • about a month ago

Tralalero Tralala meme example.

Tralalero Tralala

Sakshi Rakshale

Sakshi Rakshale • 2 months ago

JD Vance and Pope Francis meme and tweet example.

J.D. Vance Killed Pope Francis

Mateus Lima

Mateus Lima • about 10 hours ago

Tung Tung Tung Sahur meme image examples.

Tung Tung Tung Sahur

Sakshi Rakshale

Sakshi Rakshale • 29 days ago

Know Your Meme is the property of Literally Media ©2024 Literally Media. All Rights Reserved.
1c80af7b-1f3f-41eb-9fec-d48f324e2696

Confirmed   23,815

Part of a series on Twerking. [View Related Entries]

About

Nose Twerking is a video fad featuring people drawing a female behind on their nose and making it move with their finger as if it was twerking. It soon became a viral sensation in the first half of 2016, leading to many people following suit on various social sites such as Vine and YouTube.

Origin

On May 12th, 2016, Filipina Facebook user Meg Mallari Perez uploaded a short video of herself with her nose drawn to look like a woman's behind and making it appear as if it was twerking to Rihanna's 2016 hit song Work using her finger[4] (YouTube upload from her account shown below).

The video quickly spread in popularity, accumulating to over 710,000 views in the first five months of its upload.

Precursor

On June 10th, 2014, Twitter user ‏@DannyKrazeWbu posted a close-up photograph of Christopher Poole, a.k.a Moot with the comment "This guys nose looks like a girl twerking"[1] (shown below, left). Several months later, in September 2014, the full photograph with the same reference to his nose looking like a woman twerking was uploaded to Imgur, leading to the creation of a GIF animation[2] (shown below, right).

Spread

On May 13th, Perez' video was shared to the official Philippines Rihanna page on Facebook. There, it gained more than 32 million views in its first five months.[3] The video sparked enough imitators that in a week, the trend was picked up by The Daily Mail,[8] Buzzfeed,[5] Mashable,[6] Huffington Post,[7] and more.

Various Examples

[This video has been removed]


[This video has been removed]

[This video has been removed]

[This video has been removed]

Search Interest

External References



Share Pin

Related Entries 1 total

O3uvaw5v8hswuvpjl1mt
TRUE Kitchen Anti-Twerking Ra...

Recent Images 2 total


Recent Videos 0 total

There are no recent videos.




Load 18 Comments
Nose Twerking

Nose Twerking

Part of a series on Twerking. [View Related Entries]

PROTIP: Press 'i' to view the image gallery, 'v' to view the video gallery, or 'r' to view a random entry.

About

Nose Twerking is a video fad featuring people drawing a female behind on their nose and making it move with their finger as if it was twerking. It soon became a viral sensation in the first half of 2016, leading to many people following suit on various social sites such as Vine and YouTube.

Origin

On May 12th, 2016, Filipina Facebook user Meg Mallari Perez uploaded a short video of herself with her nose drawn to look like a woman's behind and making it appear as if it was twerking to Rihanna's 2016 hit song Work using her finger[4] (YouTube upload from her account shown below).



The video quickly spread in popularity, accumulating to over 710,000 views in the first five months of its upload.

Precursor

On June 10th, 2014, Twitter user ‏@DannyKrazeWbu posted a close-up photograph of Christopher Poole, a.k.a Moot with the comment "This guys nose looks like a girl twerking"[1] (shown below, left). Several months later, in September 2014, the full photograph with the same reference to his nose looking like a woman twerking was uploaded to Imgur, leading to the creation of a GIF animation[2] (shown below, right).



Spread

On May 13th, Perez' video was shared to the official Philippines Rihanna page on Facebook. There, it gained more than 32 million views in its first five months.[3] The video sparked enough imitators that in a week, the trend was picked up by The Daily Mail,[8] Buzzfeed,[5] Mashable,[6] Huffington Post,[7] and more.

Various Examples


[This video has been removed]


[This video has been removed]

[This video has been removed]

[This video has been removed]


Search Interest

External References

Recent Videos

There are no videos currently available.

Recent Images 2 total


Top Comments


+ Add a Comment

Comments (18)


Display Comments

Add a Comment


Meme Encyclopedia
Media
Editorials
More