Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
From remixing classic formats to creating entirely new templates, memes are a playground for creativity, allowing anyone to contribute to the collective humor of the internet. #22 Image credits ...
The “Epic Funny Page” Instagram account is dedicated to hilarious and painfully relatable memes. The post 50 Entertaining Posts And Memes To Help You Fight Boredom (New Pics) first appeared on ...
A magical part about memes being readily accessible, both to make and to just enjoy, is that it can show just how much we actually have in common. Similar emotions, annoyances, victories and defeats.
"All your base are belong to us" is an Internet meme based on a poorly translated phrase from the opening cutscene of the Japanese video game Zero Wing. The phrase first appeared on the European release of the 1991 Sega Mega Drive / Genesis port of the 1989 Japanese arcade game .
Carlinal (talk · contribs) You guys could use a Know Your Meme enthusiast around here. Amazing that these topics are now mainstream enough for this project's existence, which is heaven to me. Shotgunheist (talk · contribs) Terminally online individual; adding history of surreal, abstract, and/or absurdist memes if notable enough for wikipedia.
The meme first appeared on the Polish imageboard Vichan with the name ciepłatwarz.jpg (warmface.jpg). [1] [2] The earliest archived appearance was posted on 16 December 2009 on the meme sharing website Sad and Useless. [3] [4] Intelligencer describes the meme Wojak's expression as "pained but dealing with it". [5]
"This is fine" – A two-panel comic drawn in 2013 by KC Green as part of the Gunshow webcomic, showing an anthropomorphic dog sitting in a room on fire, and saying "This is fine". The comic emerged as a meme in 2016, used in situations, as described by The New York Times, "halfway between a shrug and complete denial of reality". Numerous ...
[1] [2] [3] The meme has been described as "a way for people to passive-aggressively call out social media behaviours that annoy them." [4] The meme also attracted a large number of detractors who criticized the meme's tone and lack of self-awareness. [5] Boston officials used the meme to discourage the use of space savers in parking spots. [6] [7]