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) is an Internet meme and quote of the protagonist from the 1990s Japanese anime TV series The Brave Fighter of Sun Fighbird. The image originates from a scene where the character mistakes a butterfly as a pigeon. The image was originally posted on Tumblr and later the meme spread with other variations.
Rainbows and unicorns are so intrinsically linked (the association is also a Victorian invention) that it's unsurprising that the magic creature started to appear on T-shirts and banners at Gay Pride around the world, with slogans such as 'Gender is Imaginary' or 'Totally Straight' emblazoned under sparkling rainbow unicorns."
Butterflies come in almost all colors of the rainbow including red, orange, yellow, blue, purple, black, and white. As mentioned above, butterflies are a symbol of personal growth and ...
Rainbow Butterfly Unicorn Kitty, officially shortened to RBUK (/ ɑːr b ʌ k /), is an American animated television series created by Rich Magallanes [2] and based on a concept by Melissa Reale. [5] It was co-developed by Magallanes and Mark Palmer. The series was produced by American toy company Funrise and animated by Canadian studio Bardel ...
In 2018, it was popularised on Twitter by a meme created by Io Ascarium of the ABO Comix collective, which sells comics made by other abled LGBTQ+ prisoners. [9] Ascarium describes the phrase as coming "from the communal grab-bag of anti-assimilationist queer slogans.
The series has largely become a self-referential meme; wide popular with Gen Alpha, it has been deemed to cause "brain rot." Use in a sentence: "If you watch too much 'Skibidi Toilet' on YouTube ...
Nyan Cat is a YouTube video uploaded in April 2011, which became an Internet meme. The video merged a Japanese pop song with an animated cartoon cat with a Pop-Tart for a torso flying through space and leaving a rainbow trail behind. The video ranked at number five on the list of most viewed YouTube videos in 2011. [1]
Double Rainbow was a viral video filmed by Paul "Bear" Vasquez (September 5, 1962 [1] – May 9, 2020). [2] The clip, filmed in 2010 in his front yard just outside Yosemite National Park in California, shows his ecstatic reaction to a double rainbow. As of July 2024, Vasquez's video had accumulated more than 51 million views on YouTube. [3]