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KYM Review: Events of 2014

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This article is part of Know Your Meme’s 2014 State of the Internet series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events, subcultures, sites, apps and people that made their mark online this year.



T

he word “eventful” would be an understatement to describe the highs, the lows and everything in between that made 2014 yet another tumultuous year on the Internet. In North America, we began with online discussions about the drastic effects of climate change, starting with a whirlwind of snowstorms and record-breaking declines in temperature across the continent that became known as the Polar Vortex and followed by a series of unusual earthquakes across California in March. The year also kicked off with an explosive surge of viral moments in the world of professional sports, beginning with the Super Bowl XLVIII in the United States, followed by the 2014 Winer Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia (which rang in the new year with its fair share of viral videos, hashtags and memes) and culminating with the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. Meanwhile, the globalization of viral media reached an unprecedented level as the usage of social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter continue to grow beyond the boundaries of languages and cultures across the world; when dozens of Nigerian schoolgirls and three Israeli students went missing in their respective countries, only weeks apart, the families of the missing students in both countries bonded through the sharing of the hashtags #BringBackOurGirls and #BringBackOurBoys.

GamerGate

GamerGate refers to the online backlash against perceived breaches of journalistic integrity on video game news sites that occurred as a result of the Quinnspiracy, an online controversy surrounding indie game developer Zoe Quinn’s alleged affairs with a number of male writers working in the video game news industry.


Mike Brown’s Death

  • Summary: The fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager from Ferguson, Missouri, by a St. Louis Police Department officer in August 2014, which took place less than a month after the controversial “chokehold” death of Eric Garner by an New York Police Department officer, instantly sparked a nationwide protest both online and offline against police brutality and racial profiling, similar to the large-scale protests that erupted in the wake of the death of Trayvon Martin in 2012.


The Fappening

  • Summary: A portmanteau of the words “happening” and “fap”, the Fappening was a massive nude photograph leak featuring various high profile celebrities that were posted on 4chan in late August 2014. Many speculated that the images were stolen via Apple’s iCloud service, which hosts photographs taken with iPhone mobile devices online.


Twitch Plays Pokemon

  • Summary: “Twitch Plays Pokemon” is an ongoing live-stream event hosted by the video-streaming platform Twitch in which any member of the site can participate in a massively multiplayer online co-op version of Nintendo’s 1996 role-playing video game Pokémon Red by inputting various commands in chat.


2014 FIFA World Cup

  • Summary: 2014 Brazil World Cup is the 20th international men’s football tournament organized by Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) that took place in Brazil from June 12th to July 13th, 2014.


Cyberattacks

Conflicts

Protests

Sporting Events

Scandals

Pranks

Stunts

Technology

Disasters

Holidays

Crimes

Justice

Conventions


KYM Review: Subcultures of 2014

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s 2014 State of the Internet series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events, subcultures, sites, apps and people that made their mark online this past year.



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lenty of television shows, video games and films gained significance online this year, with many growing substantial fan bases across various community sites.

In film, Star Wars nerds rejoiced with the release of the trailer for the upcoming Disney film Star Wars: The Force Awakens, which inspired a slew of parody videos and a photoshop meme mocking the newly revealed crossguard lightsaber. Last year’s animated musical Frozen remained culturally relevant with a relentless onslaught of parodies and covers of the film’s hit song “Let it Go” by Kristen Anderson-Lopez.

On the video game front, the new releases in the Super Smash Bros. franchise provided a slew of new Internet memes related to game’s growing roster of playable characters. Donkey Kong continues to remain an Internet culture staple with this year’s resurgence in Lankyposting on 4chan. Meanwhile, Pokémon became the focus of the biggest livestreaming event in history as an estimated 1.16 million people joined together to play a co-op version of the 1996 Gameboy game Pokémon Red on Twitch.

In serials, podcasts made a huge comeback this year, most notably with the juggernaut Serial by the producers of This American Life, which manages to suck in nearly anyone who listens to it like a black hole. In television, Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson wowed audiences with their performances in the crime drama series True Detective,


Five Nights at Freddy’s

  • Type: Survival Horror Game
  • Profile: Players assume the role of an underpaid nighttime security guard at a pizza restaurant inhabited by homicidal animatronic animals in this point-and-click single player video game..
  • Highlights: After a successful release on Valve‘s Steam distribution service in August, the sequel Five Nights at Freddy’s II was released on the platform in November.
  • Figures: On Steam, the original Five Nights at Freddy’s is averaging at 257 concurrent players and the sequel is averaging at 379 players. (SteamCharts)

Goats

  • Type: Animal
  • Profile: These domesticated mammals managed to bleat out the rest as the year’s most discussed animal online.
  • Highlights: Goats were the protagonists of several video games, including Let it Goat, Goat Simulator and Goat MMO Simulator. Australian comedian James Dezamaulds gained online fame with his pet Gary the Goat and, sadly, this year marked the passing of the beloved baby snow goat Frostie from the Australian Edgar Mission Farm Sanctuary.
  • Figures: February this year marked the highest Google Trends spike in searches for the keyword “goat,” correlating with the release of Goat Simulator.

Bitcoin

  • Type: Cryptocurrency
  • Profile: A virtual currency treated like cash that is regulated by a peer-to-peer network.
  • Highlights: This year bitcoin got off to a rough start with the controversial shutdown of bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox, in which 744,000 bitcoins went missing. Additionally, a slew of new altcoins hit the market, many of which referenced various inside jokes and Internet memes, including Coinye, Dogecoin, RonPaulCoin and NyanCoin.
  • Figures: As of December 16th, 2014, bitcoins are valued at $335.63 with a market cap of $4,569,363,230.

Feminism

  • Type: Socio-political Movement
  • Profile: Feminism centers around improving the living standards and cultural opinion of women through a variety of means.
  • Highlights: Feminism was a hot-button topic this year in the online gender war, with battles being waged against the manosphere, men’s rights activists, GamerGate and self-proclaimed “equity” feminist Christina Hoff Sommers. Time magazine initially included “feminism” in its annual word banishment poll but removed it after a substantial backlash.
  • Figures: 2014 saw a significant upswing in Google searches for the keyword “feminist”.

Key and Peele

  • Type: Television Series
  • Profile: The sketch comedy show stars comedians Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele.
  • Highlights: Numerous Key and Peele skits have been widely circulated on sites like Reddit, many of which have gained millions of views. Additionally, the show developed notable fan communities on DeviantArt and Tumblr.
  • Figures: The Comedy Central “Key and Peele” YouTube playlist has accumulated upwards of 47 million views.

Films

Serials

Games

Technologies

Vote Now: Your Favorite Meme of 2014

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Dear Know Your Meme Readers,

It is that time again to vote for the single most awesome meme of the year. But departing from our usual tradition of presenting a list of pre-selected choices, for this year’s poll, you can simply log in and cast a vote on the entry of your choice (that was submitted this year). The voting begins now and will stay open until noon (EST) on December 23rd, 2014.UPDATE: This poll is now closed, thanks everyone for participating!

The Meme of 2014: Vivian James

Vivian James (114 / 803 votes) is a fictional character conceived through a collaboration between 4chan‘s /v/ (video games) board and the indie game developer group The Fine Young Capitalists (TFYC). The character can be viewed as an anthropomorphized avatar of the /v/ board community created in response to Zoe Quinn’s purported attack on TFYC while they were trying to fund a Game Jam to assist women’s projects in gaming development.



And The Runner Ups…

#2. Luigi’s Death Stare

Luigi’s Death Stare (73 / 803 votes) refers the odd facial expressions worn by the character of Luigi during gameplay in the eighth installment of Nintendo’s Mario Kart franchise. Upon the release of the game in late May 2014, the character’s creepy gaze quickly became the butt of many jokes and parodies among the fans of Mario Kart.



#3. Yee

Yee (71 / 803 votes) is an onomatopoeia taken from a video featuring an animated dinosaur singing a small jingle, only to be interrupted at the end by another dinosaur shouting “Yee.” Photoshopped images of the dinosaur began circulating in August 2014 after the video surfaced on Reddit.



#4. F**k Her Right In the Pussy

Fuck Her Right in the Pussy (42 / 803 votes) is an obscene quote that gained much notoriety online after it was widely thought to have been said by a videobombing prankster during the live broadcast of a local news report in Cincinnati, Ohio. Though it eventually debunked as a viral hoax campaign orchestrated by filmmaker John Cain in May 2014, the stunt inspired a number of imitations in real-life during live news broadcast.



#5. “I’m Really Feeling It!”

I’m Really Feeling It (38 / 803 votes) is a memorable quote uttered by the character Shulk in the 2012 role-playing game Xenoblade Chronicles, which became a notable catchphrase following the character’s inclusion in Nintendo’s melee fighting game Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and 3DS.



KYM Review: Memes of 2014

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s 2014 State of the Internet series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events, subcultures, sites and people that made their mark online this past year.



Ice Bucket Challenge

  • Peak Period: July – September

  • Summary: This social media game challenges the participant to record oneself dumping iced water over his/her head on video and sharing it online with nominations for three friends to do the same. If unable to complete this task within 24 hours of the invitation, the participant is expected to donate money for good causes, most notably for research and treatment of Lou Gehrig’s disease.

  • Highlights: The origins of the meme have been attributed to multiple sources. The concept of social media nominating was in part inspired by Neknominate, a viral binge-drinking game from Europe, and preceded by Cold Water Challenge, a similar fundraising game which began in Grundy County, Tennessee earlier in March for a local toddler diagnosed with severe juvenile diabetes.

  • Impact: The game instantly became the summertime Facebook meme of the year across the United States, and unlike many other challenges that came before this one, it managed to raise an estimated $220 million dollars in donations for the medical research of Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). By end of the year, the Ice Bucket Challenge videos had garnered over one billion times collectively on YouTube, surpassing the milestone set by last year’s viral dance video hit Harlem Shake.

Starter Packs

  • Peak Period: October – Present

  • Summary: These “starter kits,” sometimes known as “starter packs,” are faux-fashion catalogues meant to serve as a newbie’s guide to adopting the look or attitude of a particular celebrity, company, lifestyle or subculture, similar to other memes derived from reductionist humor, such as …In a Nutshell and Abridged Series.

  • Highlights: The earliest known instance of “starter pack” was used in a LOLCat image dating back to December 2011, but it didn’t see the light of the day on Twitter at large until weeks after a similar fashion catalogue parody “Steal Her Look” had emerged on Tumblr in time for Halloween.

But That’s None of My Business

  • Peak Period: May – September

  • Summary: A sarcastic expression used as a postscript to an insult or disrespectful remark said towards a specific individual or group. The phrase was introduced through Twitter and Instagram an image macro series featuring Kermit the Frog from The Muppets and hilarious punchlines taking jabs at a variety of social blunders or idiosyncrasies in everyday social situations.
  • Highlights: The jokes resonated especially well on Twitter and Instagram; as of December 2014, there are more than 15,610 photos tagged under #kermitmemes on Instagram.
  • Impact: At its peak in June 2014, Google search interest for the phrase “but that’s none of my business” momentarily surpassed that of other similar expressions like “I’m just saying” and “fwiw” (for what it’s worth).

10 Hours of Walking in NYC


  • Peak Period: October – November

  • Summary: A viral video showing a woman walking through the streets of New York City for ten hours while being followed, catcalled and harassed at by strangers.

  • Highlights: The timing of the video couldn’t have been any better, or worse (depending on how you look at), and the audience reception was rather divided. In less than two months, the video garnered more than 38 million views on YouTube.
  • Impact: The video went on to spawn several dozens of parodies and satires that are based on the same concept and shot in other cities. Head over to our video gallery for the complete listings.


Luigi’s Death Stare

  • Peak Period: May – July

  • Summary: Not to be confused with Weegee, Luigi’s “death stare” refers to the odd facial expressions worn by the character during gameplay in the eighth installment of Nintendo’s Mario Kart franchise. Upon the release of the game in late May 2014, the character’s creepy gaze quickly became the butt of many jokes and parodies among the fans.

  • Highlights:

  • Impact: The success of the meme once again reaffirmed Nintendo fans’ universal love for subtle sinisterness, as proven true before with the introduction of “The Villager” and “Wii Fit Trainer” into the Super Smash Bros roster.

Online Slang

Catchphrases

Activism

Sports

Film & TV Entertainment

Video Games

Animals

Advertisements

Hoaxes

Politics

Music

Selfie Challenges

Fashion & Beauty

Online Dating

KYM Review: Sites and Apps of 2014

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s 2014 State of the Internet series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events, subcultures, sites, apps and people that made their mark online this past year.



T

his year saw an influx of brand new sites, mobile applications and online platforms all competing for what little attention we have left. In online marketplaces, Airbnb inspired a photoshop meme after revealing their new logo, Fiverr users hired Rog and Tyrone to produce testimonials and Alibaba became the biggest tech IPO in United States history. News sites like Gawker, Upworthy and BuzzFeed took clickbait to a new level by mastering the art of manipulative headlines, inspiring The Onion to create the satirical Internet news site Clickhole. In crowdfunding, the platform Patreon, founded by Jack Conte of Pomplamoose, hit it big with creatives looking to fund their projects and became one of the many battlegrounds between GamerGate supporters and their critics. On the controversial side, Uber managed to piss off online journalists when an executive suggested the company dig up dirt on writers like Sarah Lacy of Pandodaily. Most recently, the taxi service app made headlines for increasing prices during a hostage siege in Sydney, Australia.


Twitch

  • Type: Livestreaming Website
  • Profile: Twitch has become the top platform for all video game-related livestreams, including Let’s Play videos and e-sports events.
  • Notable Events: “Twitch Plays Pokemon” became one of the biggest livestream events in the history of the web, with an estimated 1.16 million total participants. In September, the site was acquired by Amazon for $970 million.
  • Stats: Holds 1.8% of peak United States traffic with an Alexa rank of 106.

Tinder

  • Type: Dating Application
  • Profile: The most talked about matchmaking app of the year lets users to swipe through profiles of people within close proximity but only allows messaging with those they have matched with.
  • Notable Events: Numerous Tumblr blogs were launched to mock various Tinder profiles and conversations. The app was widely discussed during the Sochi Olympic games after snowboarder Jamie Anderson revealed that many athletes were using the service in the Olympic Village.
  • Stats: Over 1.2 billion profiles with more than 15 million matches each day

Vine

  • Type: Video Sharing Application
  • Profile: A favorite among slapstick enthusiasts, Vine has created a whole new generation of celebrity vloggers, including Nash Grier, Cameron Dallas and Andy Tate.
  • Notable Events: Bryan Silva showed off some cringeworthy rap skills in his “Gratata” rap videos, Peaches Monroe’s eyebrows were “on fleek”, Frank Ocean’s “Thinkin’ Bout You” got butchered and Tish Simmonds wouldn’t get out of her mum’s car.
  • Stats: 40 million registered users, 57% female (infographic)

8chan

  • Type: Imageboard Website
  • Profile: Frederick Brennan’s imageboard is like a hybrid of 4chan and Reddit, allowing users to create and moderate their own custom discussion boards.
  • Notable Events: Following Christopher Poole’s controversial decision to ban all GamerGate discussion on 4chan, many users flocked to 8chan to escape the new restrictions.
  • Stats: One million pageviews per day, 35,000 unique visitors per day and 400,000 posts per week. (The Daily Dot)

Clickhole

  • Type: Satirical Viral News Site
  • Profile: The Onion launched Clickhole in June this year as a parody of Internet news sites like Upworthy and BuzzFeed, known for using “clickbait” web content to generate advertising revenue.
  • Notable Events:
  • Stats: 129,998 Facebook likes

Mobile Apps

Websites

News Sites

KYM Review: People of 2014

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This article is part of Know Your Meme’s 2014 State of the Internet series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events, subcultures, sites and people that made their mark online this past year.



N

umerous individuals managed to shake up the Internet this year in a variety of ways, including plenty of hilarious stunts, bizarre appearances and a slew of heated controversies. In Hollywood, Aubrey Plaza was cast as the voice of the Internet’s favorite ill-tempered feline Grumpy Cat, while Shia LaBeouf weirded everyone out with his bizarre publicity stunts and performance art. Lena Dunham found herself constantly making headlines during the publicity tour for her book Not That Kind of Girl, which contained graphic and controversial descriptions of her sexual history.

In music, Richard James released his first album as Aphex Twin in 13 years with Syro, Beyoncé inspired a new meme based on her pronunciation of the word “surfboard” in the single “Drunk in Love” and a googly-eyed childhood photo of Miley Cyrus launched an exploitable photoshop meme.

Vloggers were out in full force, with Rog and Tyrone providing hilarious testimonials from 4chan, Kid President launching his television series on the Hub Network and Total Biscuit leading the way for GamerGate off the heels of the Quinnspiracy.

On a more somber note, several inspiring figures were lost this year as well, including Instagram’s Grandma Betty and actors Richard Attenborough, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Robin Williams.

Kim Kardashian

  • Profile: This star of the reality television series Keeping Up with the Kardashians is often cited as an example of a “celebutante.”
  • Notable Events: In April, Kardashian was featured in a controversial Vogue Magazine cover with husband Kanye West, followed by a rather racy Paper Magazine cover in November where she exposed her bare butt. Additionally, the reality television star released the successful freemium mobile game Kim Kardashian: Hollywood.
  • Social Media Stats: Facebook: 24 Million Likes | Twitter: 26 Million Followers
  • Benchmarks: Google Trends | (Kim Kardashian > Beyonce > Kanye West)

Taylor Swift

  • Profile: Starting out as a country star in Nashville, Tennessee, this singer-songwriter has since moved to New York City and drifted toward the pop genre in recent times.
  • Notable Events: Swift made a splash with her controversial “Shake it Off” music video, which came under fire for “cultural appropriation.” Additionally, the star embraced her hilarious “No, it’s Becky” Tumblr meme by wearing a shirt with the phrase printed on the front.
  • Social Media Stats: Facebook: 72 Million Likes | Twitter: 48 Million Followers
  • Benchmarks: Google Trends | (Miley Cyrus > Taylor Swift > Katy Perry > Lorde)

LeBron James

  • Profile: This professional basketball player has won numerous awards and secured several lucrative endorsement deals.
  • Notable Events: In June, LeBron inspired an image macro series after announcing he would be opting out of the final year of his contract with the Miami Heat. The following month, Twitter users launched the hashtag #BeforeLeBronDecides before he revealed he would be returning to the Cleveland Cavaliers.
  • Social Media Stats: Facebook: 22 Million Likes | Twitter: 16 Million Followers
  • Benchmarks: Google Trends | (Jensen Ackles > Jared Padalecki > Misha Collins)

Anita Sarkeesian

  • Profile: This polarizing feminist vlogger has remained a central figure in the online gender war since launching a Kickstarter project in 2012, which she received over $150,000 in donations for after publicizing that she was the victim of an online harassment campaign.
  • Notable Events: Sarkeesian was back in the limelight this year after jumping into the front lines of the GamerGate battle, which she claims led to her being forced to flee her home after receiving death threats. She was met with opposition from the likes of “Factual Feminist” Christina Hoff Sommers, who has since become affectionately known as “Based Mom” by GamerGate supporters.
  • Social Media Stats: Facebook: 82,000 Likes (unofficial) | Twitter: 219,000 Followers
  • Benchmarks: Google Trends | (Drake> Kanye West > Gucci Mane> Tyler the Creator)

Islamic State

  • Profile: This Jihadist militant group horrified the world this year by spreading morbid photographs and videos on social media.
  • Notable Events: The terrorist group brutally murdered journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff by beheading and shared video of the cruel acts online. In reaction to their heinous crimes, people all around the world began burning the IS flag in photos and videos shared on Twitter and YouTube.
  • Social Media Stats: Twitter (unofficial): 17,700 Followers
  • Benchmarks: Google Trends | (Drake> Kanye West > Gucci Mane> Tyler the Creator)

Actors & TV Personalities

Musicians

Bloggers & Vloggers

Public Officials

Visual Artists

Athletes

The Departed

KYM Database Search Operators

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Searching the Database

A simple quick search for a keyword without any operators will find and yield entries, images/videos and forum threads with matching titles, body text and tags. In many cases, the search bar will provide instant suggestions for matching results as you type in the keywords, but for more complex search queries based on specific themes and attributes, you can use any of these operators listed below. For the most up to date list of custom-tagged categories, visit KYM Blog – “Know Your Meme Tag Index.” If you’re better accustomed to Google’s search operators, you can also use the custom search parameter by typing in site:knowyourmeme.com (or subdomains) followed by keyword(s) in Google search.

Search Operators

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In addition to viewing search results by post types, you can sort the results by: newest, oldest, most favorited, highest score, lowest score and total views.


Hovering the mouse cursor over the Entries tab prompts sorting options by entry category *(confirmed , hovering over the Images tab prompts sorting options by image types and hovering over the Forums tab prompts sorting options by sub-forums.

Q&A with Ben Garrison

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or nearly five years, Ben Garrison, a 58-year-old commercial artist living in Lakeside, Montana, has been on the receiving end of a relentless online smearing campaign waged by a persistent group of trolls on 4chan and other affiliated image board communities. Since first discovering the campaign in 2010, Garrison has consulted numerous lawyers in pursuit of legal actions and even has written a book about his bouts with the trolls, but the campaign still seems to be ongoing in the light of the recent on-air prank that was orchestrated by 4chan pranksters during Fox News coverage of the Baltimore riots. We spoke with Garrison to find out more about his ordeals with online trolls and what he has learned from the experience.

Interview

Q: How long have you been illustrating political cartoons? What inspired you to start?

A: I drew political cartoons part time at a couple of newspapers early in my career. That cartooning effort lasted only a few years. After about a 20-year hiatus, I decided to draw them again, independently, after the big banks were bailed out in 2008. I wanted to expose the corruption I saw in the country as well as what I consider to be the ‘heart of darkness,’ the Federal Reserve. The Internet made it possible for my cartoons to be seen by people from all over the world. Before the trolling struck, my cartoons were reposted on many websites and blogs.

Q: When did you first realize your work was being defaced online? How did you initially react to the phenomenon?

A: I began getting trolled in 2009--within months of drawing my first anti-Federal Reserve cartoons. At first they began leaving disgusting messages on my blog. I had to shut down the comments and I was accused of being against their free speech. In actuality, I had no time to monitor their hate and personal slurs. I didn’t find out that 4chan was a main source of the trolling until early 2010. My wife was the one who found out about it. I had never heard of 4chan until then. I added a disclaimer to my site. I have to admit, I was naive about dealing with trolls and couldn’t understand why someone would deface my work and then maliciously spread it all over the internet. What they were doing was obvious and outrageous libel and defamation as well as copyright infringement. Frankly, I had no idea how to handle it.



Q: Are you still looking to pursue legal action against those who have defaced your comics?

A: Yes, I am. I’d like to sue Christopher Poole, the owner of 4chan. He has willingly allowed and encouraged the trolling against me to occur almost daily for five years and all of the nonsense shows up on Google searches. I continue to amass evidence. Another main perpetrator lives in Florida and he has made it his life’s mission to destroy my reputation. He alters each and every cartoon I draw into hate. He has attacked me, my wife and my son as well as my business. It’s very difficult to prove such a case. A total of five lawyers have now stated that there’s very little they can do. This emboldens the trolls to push the envelope still further since there is no way to make them legally accountable for their actions. I was hoping some book sales would help me pursue a case since such legal help is extremely expensive.

Q: Speaking from your own experience, do you have any advice for someone in a similar conundrum?

A: If people can’t obtain justice to help end some of the egregious attacks on their business, their character and their own intellectual property, two things will end up happening:


1. Everyone will be forced into anonymity due to the trolling culture.


Anyone who uses their identity to express political opinions can get hammered by anons with no responsibility or accountability. Their hate speech will trump free speech. My experiences with trolls inform me repeatedly that I ‘deserve it’ because I was stupid enough to use my real name. Public figures and/or famous can easily ignore the trolls, but people like me who are not public figures become targets because the trolls delight in ruining such people. It’s easy because the general public accepts whatever they read about unknown people on the Internet. That is the main source of ‘lulz’ among trolls. The political aspect of my cartoons were largely irrelevant. It was the trolling opportunity that attracted them. This ‘fear of the trolls’ helps end genuine discourse and debate. Their kind of unaccountable hate speech shuts down real, reasoned ‘free’ speech and forces everyone to become anons.


2. Excessive and prolonged abuse by trolls can be seen as excuse by government entities to step in and ‘control’ dialogue on the Internet.


I don’t want this--I believe in free speech, even anonymous free speech. Anonymous people are able to attack and destroy the work and reputations of people they don’t even know and they can do it without fear of legal rebuke, or even a punch in the nose. Things that they wouldn’t dream of saying to their victims’ faces. The trolls do it for sport and laughter…and their victims have little recourse. The targets either forced into frightened and frustrated quiescence, or they can speak out and risk making it worse. That is, they will get blamed for the entire ordeal just because they reacted by trying to repair their reputation. If they object, they will almost certainly be accused of ‘feeding the trolls,’ which attracts more trolling. Or they could become a vigilante and end up risking jail time because the legal system makes it way too difficult and expensive to obtain justice.


Q: What is your view on the culture of 8chan and its founder Frederick Brennan? What drove you decide to engage 8chan’s /pol/ board?

A: In my book, I lambasted both 4chan and 8chan--especially the former. After my book was published I decided to take a different attitude. I now treat the troll attacks with humor instead of anger. I posted an image on 8chan. It showed Frederick Brennan in a burning, hellish wheelchair as he maintained a quirky smile on his face (shown below, left). “Hot wheels” has gone through hell due to his affliction. I didn’t intend for the cartoon to be an insult, unlike the one I drew about m00t (shown below, right). To me, I was merely illustrating reality. He’s a kid with a sound mind, but he got shafted by fate when it came to his physical body. He liked my drawing and we agreed to put it on a coffee mug and sell it. We sold a great many mugs and we will split the profit. More importantly, his reaction made me realize that he could take the heat, unlike 4chan’s ‘m00t’ whom I consider to be a money-grubbing, trolling scoundrel. Christopher Poole actually sent me an email accusing me of being a ‘racist,’ so I know he was in on the trolling almost from the beginning. He could have stemmed the incessant trolling against me at any time, but instead he encouraged it even though he did shut down GamerGate and the nude celebrity photos. It was not OK for anons to start threads that attacked Zoe Quinn, but m00t made sure that it remained A-OK for them to constantly post about me being ‘Zyklon Ben." By allowing me to be perpetually smeared as a white supremacist and Nazi, Poole has endangered me, my family and has compromised my reputation. As for 8chan, to my pleasant surprise, I had many comments from people there who claimed they were my fans. Not everyone who posts on 4 and 8 chan are Nazi trolls. Some are smart, intelligent and decent people. That’s what I’ve learned. I just wish there were more of them like that.



Q: Tell us a bit about your creative process in the making of a Ben Garrison cartoon. Do you have a certain approach or do you like to just run with an idea?

A: I do a lot of reading and I listen to YouTube and podcast broadcasts. A lot of times I hear good metaphors being used and I will jot down the ideas in a cheap spiral-bound notebook. I get a lot of ideas out of nowhere when I go on daily walks. I call that vertical thinking--the ideas arrive like thunderbolts. Those ideas often make the best cartoons. The ones cobbled together via horizontal thinking are more difficult. One thing I never do: I never ask myself ’what’s funny in this situation?" I’m not a comedian and I don’t think cartoons need to be funny in order to be successful. To me the cartoons are serious business.
The cartoons begin as a chicken-scratching until I get a composition sorted out. Then I will develop them on a tracing pad and transfer the sketch onto a large piece of bristol board. I use a pocket brush pen to ink it in, and then I erase the pencil marks. I scan it in and add color using Adobe Photoshop. Sometimes I will draw the cartoons as separate pieces and assemble them in Photoshop. I sometimes get good ideas from people who send me email. If I use their idea I will credit them (usually their first name and last name’s initial) on my cartoons.

Q: As a political cartoonist, what are your thoughts on the Charlie Hebdo attack and the recent shootings in Texas?

A: I did draw a cartoon in support of Hebdo. (It too was defaced by trolls). We can’t let fear stop us from using our free speech. It’s a use it or lose it scenario. I’m not religious and don’t like organized religion in general, but I have no interest in drawing cartoons about religion and race. I concentrate on the deeds of men and the clique of corrupt mobsters who currently constitute government. Those at the top of the pyramid must keep us all in fear and now that there’s no longer the Soviet Union as the boogey man, the elite have trotted out fear of Muslims and ‘terrorists’ to keep us preoccupied. They’ve helped arrange things so a lot of Muslims now reside in the US and in western Europe in order to keep people distracted with hate and cultural conflict. That way the citizens don’t go after their puppet masters. The real terrorist who are those at the top of the pyramid. They are the scum of the Earth. That includes people such as the Rothchilds and the Queen of England.



Q: What was your reaction to the Fox News guest call-in prank involving your name during the Baltimore riots coverage?

A: It was completely ridiculous. To me, it was the ‘jump the shark’ moment in the trolls’ Zyklon Ben meme. I wasn’t mad and I won’t sue Fox. If anything, it shows how the mainstream media are now largely unprofessional, incompetent and irrelevant. They could have spent a few seconds to research my name and discover the trolling, but instead they stupidly parroted the trolls’ tweets. Nobody will remember the incident aside from a few celebrating trolls. They must lead very small lives indeed if that’s how they extract happiness from life.



Q: What are some of your go-to sites? Are you active in any online communities? Webcomics or webcomic artists you admire?

A: I like the Drudge Report, Zero Hedge, Judge Napolitano’s site, InfoWars…places such as that. I listen to a lot of YouTube videos. Jim Willie is good, as is Bix Weir…and people such as Karl Denninger. He’s sharp. I frequent a lot of Libertarian sites and pages on Facebook.

Q: What is your favorite internet meme?

A: The Pepe the Frog meme is interesting because there are endless variations. I had no idea people actually collected him and bought original ones on ebay, etc. It’s like the old Pokéman cards that my son used to collect when he was a kid. I myself became a meme because many young people are frustrated by the hopelessness and bitterness at the unjust world around them. I’m the bearer of bad news and I want to help them. Instead many enjoy using me as the focus of their hatred and fantasies of violent revenge. As the elite-owned Walter Conkrite used to say, “That’s the way it is.”

Ben Garrison is an American freelance commercial artist based in Lakeside, Montana with many years of professional experience as a staff graphic designer for various newspapers, including the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. He specializes in illustrating infographic design for corporate clients all over the world. In addition, he has written about his work and experiences with Internet fame in the book Rogue Cartoonist. This interview was conducted over email on May 14th, 2015.


KYM Review: Sports Memes of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.


Not gonna lie: 2015 in sport featured a lot of nasty stuff. There were loads of nasty scandals involving sex, like Hulk Hogan’s ongoing sex-tape lawsuit against Gawker; money, like the FIFA bribery cases; and of course, deflated balls. But sports continued to bleed into the meme culture in fun new ways, with the spectacle of events like the Super Bowl allowing for strange new characters like Left Shark to enter the lexicon. The everlasting resource of high-octane personalities that are drawn to the sports world to compete are also known for generating snazzy catchphrases, funny expressions, and all the other types of emotions necessary for the dankest of memes. The cultural bleed caused us to raise our coverage of sports-related memes, especially as macros of basketball players and their children began to spread through Black Twitter and its Reddit aggregator /r/blackpeopletwitter, and the interlocked world of sports, popular music, awards shows, and memes continued to spread.

Super Bowl XLIX Halftime Shark

AboutThere were two sharks at Katie Perry’s Super Bowl halftime show, but only the left one got all the attention for it’s off-beat dancing and nonchalant expression. What came next was a social media onslaught. First, Snoop Dogg tweeted a joke claiming that in fact, he was the shark. Then, the macros began.

OriginDuring the performance of Katy Perry’s song “Teenage Dream,” during Super Bowl XLIX on February 1st, 2015, one of the backup dancers dressed as a shark and dancing to the left side of the singer was seen screwing up a routine while on stage. Shortly after the conclusion of the halftime show, the awkwardly dancing “left shark” quickly emerged as a trending topic on Twitter and elsewhere.
Examples


Related MemesNationwide Dead Kid, Super Bowl XLIX, Nicki Minaj and Taylor Swift Feud

Villanova Crying Piccolo Player

AboutNo one knows what a Piccolo is, so the Villanova Crying Piccolo Player was also known as the Villanova Crying Flute Player and/or March Sadness. The photoshop fad was based on a video clip of a college marching band mate playing the flute in tears that was displayed on Jumbotron during a NCAA men’s basketball tournament match between Villanova University and North Carolina State University in late March 2015.
OriginAfter Villanova University’s loss to North Carolina State in the annual March Madness NCAA basketball tournament, Roxanne (last name unknown) began to cry. She then looked up at the Jumbotron and saw herself featured on the screen crying. “I’m a senior in the band, so I knew that was my very last game. It’s just so easy to get emotional especially being a senior, that just changed the game for me, knowing it was my last game,” Roxanne said to the Angelo Cataldi of CBS Philadelphia.
Examples



Related MemesPierre the Pelican, Crying Michael Jordan, Male Tears

#DeflateGate

AboutWere the balls under-inflated? The debate and investigation into cheating allegations against the New England Patriots, raged for most of the year, and ended up with a guilty verdict and a 4-game suspension for star quarterback Tom Brady, which was then overturned. But nature of the drawn-out scandal, including the fact that it was about balls, left no stone of immature humor unturned. A sub-meme also bloomed during the hearings themselves, when a strange courtroom sketch depicted the notoriously handsome Brady as a strange, crow-like figure.
OriginOn January 18th, 2015, the New England Patriots secured their place at the annual NFL championship game, along with the defending champions Seattle Seahawks. On the following day, the Indiana news site WTHR[1] reported that a source inside the NFL revealed the Patriots were being investigated for intentionally deflating footballs during the game to gain a competitive advantage over the Colts. The first parody commercial was uploaded two days later; in the meantime, the photoshops, macros, and Twitter jokes started rolling in.
Examples


Related MemesTom Brady’s Courtroom Sketch, Odell Beckham Jr’s Hair, The Whip

Ronda Rousey vs. Bethe Correia

AboutRonda Rousey leapt from relative obscurity to world fame this year with her ruthless, quick style and long undefeated streak in Women’s Mixed Martial Arts fighting. That streak ended in November, but by far the most popular fight of Rousey’s on social media this year was the blink-and-you-missed-it match against Brazilian Bethe Correia, who she beat with armbar submission in just 23 seconds.
OriginOn August 1st, 2015, Rousey defeated Brazilian MMA fighter Bethe Correia by knockout 34 seconds into the first round at UFC 190 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. That day, the UFC on Fox YouTube channel uploaded a highlight of the fight, which gained over 4.8 million views and 1,000 comments in 48 hours. The fight was so fast that a popular stop-motion animation of the fight was created and uploaded in less than 24 hours.
Example


Related MemesCM Punk, Twitch Plays Pokemon, Joe Rogan

Riley Curry Steals the Spotlight

AboutThe young daughter of Golden State Warriors point guard Stephen Curry lapped up as much attention as she could as her dad was winning the NBA Championship. Steph allowed Riley to hang out during the Post-Game Interviews during which she repeatedly grabbed the microphone and took control of the narrative. She appeared bored, she spoke into the microphone, and once, she sang a few bars of Drake. The results? Image macro gold.
OriginOn May 19th, 2015, Steph brought Riley to the stage for his post-game press conference, holding her on his lap. Riley interrupted the conference several times by waving, speaking into the microphone, and running away under the table. This distracted the press, creating a different mood in the press room than normally occurs at these conferences. NBA uploaded the video to their official accounts and spotlighted Riley’s appearance with their social media accounts. The video eventually received 3 million views, and the NBA knew they had a miniature star on their hands.
Examples


Related MemesPost-Game Interviews, Basketball, “If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late Cover Parodies”

Sportsball

AboutThis is Know Your Meme, not Know Your Sports Trivia Bruh, so we understand that our demographic skews. . .well, nerdy. It’s ok, we’ve got them covered with Sportsball, a meme for those who refuse to engage in the wide, wide world of sports that have balls. Basketball, football, baseball, the OTHERfootball– they are all just sportsballs to us, full of sportsing sportsguys who love to sports with sportsballs.
OriginOn March 3rd, 2007, Urban Dictionary user Balcerzak submitted an entry for “Sportsball,” defining the term as:

bq. A generic term for any form of sport involving a ball, and especially those with “ball” in their name. Often derogatory.

Since then, the term has been used in video parodies, web comics, and Reddit comment boards worldwide.
Examples


Related MemesSmol, Animu and Mango, Adulting

Confused Nick Young

About

Nick Young is a fashion plate, sneakerhead, and established player for the Los Angeles Lakers, but that’s not how Twitter primarily knows him – they know him as the guy making a funny face in a grainy video, surrounded by fun 1990s nostalgia question marks. This photo (actually a still from a short documentary about Young and his family) has become a premier reaction image for WTF on Black Twitter.

OriginThe image originally comes from the YouTube series Thru The Lens which depicts a day in the life of Nick Young.



Examples


Related MemesBruh, “New York” on a Bed, The Zola Story

Caitlyn Jenner’s Gender Transition

AboutOne of the most controversial events to occur last year was Olympic runner (and Kardashian clan step-dad) Bruce Jenner’s transition into Caitlyn. Officially released with a blockbuster cover of the fashion magazine Vogue, Jenner’s transition coming-out inspired congratulations and controversy worldwide. Many were purportedly irked when Jenner won an ESPY award over the summer, but the whole medal-repeal controversy turned out to be 4chan trolling, and the premiere of Jenner’s reality TV show was a smash anyways. However, some public figures were wary, both of the transition and of the motivation behind it.
OriginJenner had expressed transgender feelings since at least the 1980s, but she did not come out to the American public until April of 2015 in a 20/20 special interview called Bruce. In that special, Caitlyn told the public she would be coming out as a woman soon. On June 1st, 2015, Jenner and Vanity Fair released an photograph of the magazine cover on a newly created Twitter, @Caitlyn_Jenner; this Twitter post received over 200,000 retweets and 220,000 favorites.



The image was taken by famous celebrity photographer Annie Liebovitz and was accompanied by several other photographs and an in-depth article, titled “Introducing Caitlyn Jenner” about Jenner’s experience transitioning.[5] Upon its release, the cover photograph attracted much attention due to Jenner’s new look and her achievement of being the first transgender woman on the cover of Vanity Fair.


Examples


Related MemesKylie Jenner Challenge, Transgender Transition Timelines, Kim Kardashian’s Paper Magazine Cover

“Lebron James” Kid

AboutWhen one Viner recorded his little brother saying “Lebron James” in a silly, nasal voice, he didn’t imagine that he was starting one of the year’s most popular trends on the video app.
OriginThe video clip was recorded by Viner DARius and uploaded to Vine on June 27th, 2014, featuring his little brother saying the name of the NBA athlete in front of their house. As of December 2015, the video has garnered almost 47 million loops, and countless remixes.




Examples


Related MemesShower Time Diesel Jeans, LeJuan James, Why the Fuck You Lyin

Unexpected John Cena / And His Name Is John Cena

AboutThe theme song of the world’s most popular WWE wrestler, especially in its most upsettingly loud, distorted format, began being placed where ever you least expected it; at the ends of Spongebob Squarepants GIFs, appended on to strange Vine clips, integrated into rap battles. Why did this particular theme song turn into the Internet’s favorite “loud video warning?” We may never know the true answer, but we do know that it’s truly hilarious.
OriginThe soundtrack comes from John Cena’s actual WWE introduction, first used in 2005, while the visuals in most versions come from the 2012 edition of his introduction video; the two were then combined with a bombastic introduction from a radio host. Between April and July, 2015, over 11,000 Vines and 18,000 YouTubes were made, appending the clip onto almost random videos or integrating it into strange situations. An entire subreddit of Unexpected John Cena clips sprung up, creating a community of over 42,000 John Cena jumpscare fans.
Examples


Related MemesCena Wins Lol, Vince McMahon, Hulk Hogan

KYM Review: Animal Memes of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



C

ute animals belong on the short list of subjects that will likely remain popular online until the end of humanity as we know it. While cats still remain a dominate force in this are, other animals have made enormous strides in competing for our attention online.

Advice animals are becoming less culturally relevant with each passing year, but the Seal of Approval series saw a significant boost in popularity on Reddit. Additionally, the photoshop meme Overly Excited Dog made its debut on /r/aww, where Redditors share the most disgustingly adorable photographs they can find.

In France, an animal rights group were caught on camera stealing a puppy from a homeless man, causing an enormous backlash on the French web. Additionally, French activists from the Bird Protection League drew the ire of a shovel-wielding man in his underwear, launching the infamous Slipgate photoshop meme.

Former Alaskan governor Sarah Palin made headlines after posting a photograph of her son using the family dog as a step stool, drawing criticism for animal rights activists who disapproved of her parenting skills.

In no particular order, here are the top 10 animal-related memes that hit the web this past year.

Shabani the Gorilla


Smol


Limberbutt McCubbins


Beast the Dog


Earl the Grumpy Puppy

  • Species: Dog (Canis lupus familiaris)
  • Debut: June 2015
  • Breakout: /r/aww | Reddit
  • Profile: A Puggle (pug-beagle hybrid) dog known for its irritated-looking facial expressions.
  • Primary Habitat: Reddit
  • Highlights: On Fetching | Samuel Jackson Face Swap

Tonkey Bear


Sleep Tight Pupper


Cats vs. Cucumbers


WeaselPecker


Pizza Rat


KYM Review: Music Memes of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



M

usic is an industry and a passion; in 2015’s new crop of music memes, both aspects were on display. Top-selling singles came in both hyper-produced video format, like ‘Taylor Swift’s":/memes/people/taylor-swift “Bad Blood” music video, which starred a veritable cadre of noteworthy celebs and broke a YouTube viewing record, but was quickly forgotten except by her fandom. Another storytelling video, Rihanna’s“Bitch Better Have My Money”, was almost equally popular, but neither inspired much in the way of viral manipulation.

Behind these massive commercial successses were many noteworthy feuds, like that between Swift and Nicki Minaj; that one seemed manufactured expressly for the Video Music Awards performance it inspired, but the catchphrase Minaj ignited during the award ceremony, “What’s Good Miley?” seemed more spontaneous and let to a commenting trend on Cyrus’ Instagram. In any case, it seemed like Minaj might be a little salty in 2015 after her music streaming service, Tidal, failed to take off in any meaningful way. And Snoop Dogg spent a million hours on Instagram, trying to take the perfect selfie so he could get the viral fame he thought he deserved (why would he need it?).

The online world seemed to react to this co-option of memes by MTV and the music industry in general by pointing their interests backwards. Making fun of, of all things, nu metal took off in a big way, with the 90s kids and their admirers pulling tons of humorous lyrics from every possible source and reframing them for the lols. And it might have been the fault of Arrested Development, but the opening bars of Simon and Garfunkle’s hit “The Sounds of Silence” started appearing on reaction videos everywhere. And looking even further back, a screaming marmot sang opera, and everyone was thrilled.

Here’s our look at the musical memes that made us laugh and listen in 2015.

Adele’s “Hello”

Within 24 hours of its release, “Hello,” Adele’s hit single from her long-awaited album 25, had broken the YouTube viewing record set earlier in the year by Taylor Swift. The album, when released in November, would later outsell every other record this year. Adele’s popularity is partially explained by her bombastic singing voice, used simply but to great effect in the catchy, melancholy single. But the blue-eyed soul songstress is not just a voice – her character of giving no f***s about the wide world of social media, celebrity reporting, and other distractions, is certainly unique in this styled-and-curated Instagram pop landscape.



Parodies by media figures (Ellen Degeneres, James Corden, Billy Eichner) and individuals were immediately forthcoming, many of which spotlit the use of a non-smartphone in the immediately iconic video. However, Jimmy Fallon, organizing one of his “Pop stars collaborating with the Roots and playing toy instruments” mini-concerts, scored the biggest viral hit, with an enthusiastic video it was hard not to love.



Jenny Death When

It had become a common comment refrain on /mu/, the music discussion board of 4chan: “Jenny Death When?!” The phrase was a shorthand for a question Death Grips fans had been asking for almost a year before – bam! – Jenny Death was suddenly released as a leak on the same board on March 19th. Death Grips are not known for being a forthcoming group, but they are generous, often giving away their music for free and refusing other offers of commercialism.


In the meantime, the format of the phrase “Jenny Death When” started mutating and appearing in discussions relating to any upcoming pop culture phenomenon for which there was no exact release date. An video from the /mu/-favorite music critic Anthony Fantano (in which he is wearing a close replica of the Three Wolf Moon shirt) may have done its part to enshrine the phrase in infamy with his added layer of both humor and aggression.


#RapAlbumsThatCausedSlavery

Racism was a hot topic on college campuses this year, not least in part to an incident at the University of Oklahoma where a fraternity sang a racist chant at a party, which was recorded and leaked to nationwide disgust. With controversial events like these, it’s not unheard of for people to reveal their own unpopular opinions; but later in the week, when the anchors of MSNBC’s Morning Joe asserted that rap music itself was to blame for white students saying the n-word in a racist context, many took offense at their jump in logic.



One of the more humorous responses took place on Twitter, with rapper Talib Kweli using his retweets as ammunition to shoot the commentators’ arguments out of the clouds. The hashtag, #RapAlbumsThatCausedSlavery, reached 44,000-tweets strong, and featured all sorts of titles and cover images altered to satirically back up the point, usually with more historical context than Mika Brzezinski could hope to learn in a lifetime.



Nu Metal

Obviously Nu Metal was not born in 2015 – historians actually trace its roots back twenty years, to that fateful age known as 1994. It’s also not accurate to say that the genre, which is a combination of low, grinding rock riffs and scat-style or rap lyrics, came back into an unqualified vogue. Rather, in an effect somehow related to ’90s Nostalgia, it was actually making fun of nu metal that became popular.



At least four separate memes related to the lyrics of nu metal songs reached popularity independently: Wake Me Up Inside, in which the phrase was often paired with photos of WWE wrestler Dean Ambrose or pictures of a Skeleton; Crawling In My Skin, which parodied the second line of the chorus in Linkin Park’s“Crawling”; Let the Bodies Hit the Floor, which was usually videos of characters singing the song “Bodies” by Drowning Pool, but also featured a standout GIF of Nicolas Cage; and Cut My Life Into Pieces, which used word-replacement to parody the melodrama of the original lyrics by Papa Roach. Aside from these main instances, other references to the genre were scattered around shitposting forums everywhere. All in all, it might have been the biggest year for Nu Metal since 1999, but we don’t know if Korn are very happy about it.



Trap Music

While Nu Metal might have reached ironic fandom, the true breakout genre of the year was a subculture of rap referred to as Trap Music. Known for its use of 808 kick drums, multi-layered synthesizers and generally dark hip-hop sound, the genre gained notoriety online with the song Turn Down For What, and was also present in hits such as Watch Me by Silento, tracks by Canadian artist Drake, and most prominently the Patterson, New Jersey native Fetty Wap who had perhaps the summer’s most infectious hit with his song Trap Queen.



Trap music made other stars as well, like O.T. Genasis, who scored a mainstream hit with “Coco” and viral attention on Vine and elsewhere on social media for explicit references to illicit drugs and humorous mondegreens.



Mark Ronson’s “Uptown Funk”

Bruno Mars and Mark Ronson created this infectious boogie of a song and its fun, collaborative dance party of a music video with a little help from the ghost of Michael Jackson, but the parodies that resulted from this massive hit belonged to the Internet and the Internet alone. From the silly chorus (“Uptown Funk You Up!”) to the borderline-cheesy dance moves, the song was a ripe fruit for the parodic-plucking, and many took advantage, including, for better or worse, the world of YouTube Poop.



Fall Out Boy Fan Protecting Ferguson Police



This exploitable of a young girl standing in front of police officers at a protest to commemorate the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown’s Death is only musical because of her t-shirt, but the fan makes the band, if you know what we mean. Her name is Lexi, and she was 19 at the time the photo was taken, but she will live forever as an icon of defense of the indefensible.



Hello Darkness, My Old Friend

“Hello Darkness, My Old Friend” is the opening lyric from the 1964 soft rock song “The Sound of Silence” performed by the American folk rock duo Simon & Garfunkel. So why is it a meme in 2015? Some combination of the American sitcom Arrested Development, the Sad Brazilian Fan, and electronic dance music producer David Guetta combined to make it this throwback tune into the dankest of memes, and this year, the action crested, with the opening bars being added to everything from videos of the Gnome Child to reverse bungee sadness videos.



Simon and Garfunkle are probably thrilled to hear that their epic classic has found a new audience. Maybe. We’re not sure, actually.



Vine Remix Memes

After adding the ability last year for users to easily upload edited videos straight from their phone’s camera roll (instead of the previously-mandated in-app recording), Vine sprung back from the world of dead or dying apps and became a central clearing house for short, repurposed clips in hilarious contexts. With people using simple apps to combine video clips and music, an entire new genre of short-lived, quickly distributed (and even more quickly old sauce) comedic films were born.



Some of the best examples this year came directly from music videos and performances, like Beyonce Always on Beat and it’s sub-meme Drake Always on Beat, which matched the superstars’ dance moves to music from across the spectrum. Or, sometimes the meme took the opposite tack, like the longer-lasting and immensely popular Little Einstein’s Theme, a song taken from a Disney show, remixed dubstep-style, and tossed onto videos as varied as Chief Keef’s gangster opus "“I Don’t Like ft. Lil Reese” to Drop the Cane / Old Man Dancing.



Other Vine remix memes were all about the nonsense. One, featuring the “rapper” Iggy Azalea“freestyling” incomprehensibly, splattered various videos with spittle for weeks, while another, featuring a video of an earthworm spasming to everything from Nu Metal (see above) to classical riffs, kind of got us wishing we could join a party under the soil.



Drake Memes

Without a doubt, the biggest impact on musical memes in 2015 was the all-star rapper Drake, who at times became a meme until himself, elevated from music to another plane. At times he seemed to embrace his memedom; take for instance the episode of his feud with rapper Meek Mill, which blew up Black Twitter for weeks, involved government representatives of Toronto and corporations worldwide, and generally caused a huge sensation online. Drake celebrated his victory in the feud by playing a slideshow of tweets, image macros, and other online burns at a victory lap concert called Ovo Fest; he also spent a considerable amount of time sharing them with his friends Kanye West and Will Smith, an almost touching moment recorded below.



A selection of feud-related reaction images and memes


Other times, Drake let the memes wash over him, like with his record cover for If You’re Reading This Its Too Late, the graffiti-inflected writing of which inspired not only home-made parodies, but its own meme generator. The art, by New York City graffiti artist Jim Joe, quickly entered the cultural lexicon and shaped the year’s aesthetic.



But the biggest Drake meme of the year was one he almost certainly had a hand in intentionally creating: the video for his sleeper single “Hotline Bling”. Filmed in a James Turrell-influenced gradient light world, the video referenced trap music, vaporwave and weird white people dancing in all the right ways, and it set off a furor that will probably continue strong into 2016.



KYM Review: Ironic Memes of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



W

hat the f**k did you just f**king say about me, you little b**ch? I’ll have you know I graduated top of my class in Dankology, and I’ve personally confirmed over 300 memes. I am trained in triggering and I’m the top memer on /r/AdviceAnimals. You are nothing to me but just another fedora-tipping neckbeard. I will meme on you with precision the likes of which has never been seen before on this Earth, mark my f**king words. You think you can get away with posting my memes on 9gag? Think again, normie. As we speak I am contacting my secret network of robots across /r9k/ and your IP is being traced right now so you better prepare for the storm, s**tposter. The storm that wipes out the pathetic little thing you call upvotes. You’re f**king rekt, kid. I can post anywhere, anytime, and I can blaze it in over 420 ways, and that’s just with Mountain Dew. Not only am I extensively trained in 360 no-scoping, but I have access to an entire collection of rare Pepes and I will use it to its full extent to flood the market and wipe your memes off the face of the continent, you little s**t. If only you could have known what unholy retribution your little “clever” comment was about to bring down upon you, maybe you wouldn’t have posted those stank memes. But you did, you had to, and now you’re paying the price, you goddamn cuck. I will spew jet fuel all over you and you will melt in it. You’ve just been memed on, kiddo.

- Internet Meme Guy


Wake Me Up Inside

  • Type: Music
  • Profile: These lyrics from the 2003 alternative rock song “Bring Me To Life” by Evanescence are often associated with images of a calm-looking subjects juxtaposed next to a picture of the same subject appearing distressed.
  • Highlights: Alarm Clock | Marge Simpson | David After Dentist
  • Figures: Starting in July, Google searches for the keywords “wake me up inside” began increasing dramatically, reaching their peak for the year in December.

Barnie Sandlers


Fefe

  • Type: Character
  • Profile: Fefe is an adorable scorpion character with an anthropomorphic face who was ironically created as a replacement for Pepe the Frog on 4chan’s /s4s/ (shit 4chan says) board.
  • Highlights: Rude | Pepe-Wojack-Fefe Hybrid | Sir Fef
  • Figures: Nearly all mentions of Fefe occurred in early April 2015, rapidly decreasing before the end of the month.

It’s Just a Prank!

  • Type: Expression
  • Profile: Originally popularized by obnoxious YouTubers to calm their victims in harassing “prank” videos, this expression is now used to mock the offending vloggers as annoying douchebags.
  • Highlights: Ravioli Ravioli | H3h3productions Reaction
  • Figures: Google searches for the phrase “just a prank” reached their highest peak in December 2015.

Shitposting

  • Type: Internet Slang
  • Profile: This all-encompassing term used to describe thread jacking, circlejerking and non-commercial spamming has become one of the Internet’s favorite past times. In 2015, shitposting has morphed into a sport, with some Internet users becoming top tier athletes.
  • Highlights: I;m Thinking About Thos Beans | Vertical Posting
  • Figures: Google searches for “shitposting” have been steadily increasing since October 2013, reaching their highest point yet in December 2015.

Well Meme’d


REEEEEEE

  • Type: Onomatopoeia
  • Profile: The sound a user from 4chan’s /r9k/ board makes when agitated, typically as a result of being confronted with a “normie”. It is often compared to the a defensive screeching noise made by several species of frogs when under duress.
  • Highlights: “On All Levels Except Physical” | Normies Get Out
  • Figures: Google searches for “reeeeeee” peaked in March 2015 and saw a sharp decline the following August.

Jet Fuel Can’t Melt Steel Beams

  • Type: Expression
  • Profile: This erroneous assertion made by 9/11 truthers that burning fuel from crashed planes could not have melted the supporting beams of the World Trade Center became the laughing stock of the Internet this past year.
  • Highlights: Winnie the Pooh Eats Government Secrets | Jet Fuel Job Interview | That Awkward Moment
  • Figures: Google searches for “jet fuel can’t melt steel beams” peaked in May 2015, seeing short spikes in activity the following September and December.

Rare Pepe

  • Type: Illustration
  • Profile: The international meme economy nearly crashed this year when an anonymous 4chan user attempted to flood the market with rare illustrations of Pepe the Frog. How this crisis was thwarted remains a mystery to this day.
  • Highlights: Donald Trump Tweet | Medium-Rare Pepe | Rare Pepe Pumpkin
  • Figures: Google searches for “rare pepe” saw their first spike in May 2015, where they remained high for several months before dropping in September.

Dank Memes

  • Type: Expression
  • Profile: What originally began as a term used to mock cliche in-jokes and viral media has since become an entire way of life. We are now living in the Dank Ages, and it is glorious. Dank memes really do make the world go ’round, it seems.
  • Highlights: Meme Cop | ISIS Lures Women | That Makes Me Dank |
  • Figures: Google searches for the keywords “dank memes” exploded in 2015, steadily climbing throughout the year other than a brief dip in July.

KYM Review: Slang Memes of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



S

lang is perhaps the original meme – new derivations in language that spread quickly and completely far pre-date the Internet, and probably helped us invent all the different languages we have today. Nonetheless, we admire the quickness by which new slang spreads online; new coinages pop up everywhere, all the time, and with use pervade into the deepest corners of culture.

We need new words online to describe new practices, like freebooting and kinkshaming, or new concepts, like a Trump presidency. But lots of slang comes fom needing new ways to describe ancient concepts that we talk about constantly, like cute animals or asking people over for “intimate purposes,” because otherwise language would be boring. If poetry is the dynamic description of the everyday, slang is poetry, adopted by the masses.

Here are our favorite slang terms of 2015, complete with deliberate, step-by-step instructions on how to restore your chill.

Freebooting

In 2015, many content creators saw their videos downloaded and re-uploaded to Facebook and other portals, which effectively nixed their ability to monetize their own work. Viral content aggregators ripped videos off YouTube and re-hosted them, hoping to get some of that sweet, sweet cash. This practice was named “Freebooting,” and was reviled by those who love to see good people make money from their hard work. Freebooters were banned from the viral video central aggregator /r/videos, but that didn’t stem the flow.



Slide Into Your DMs

This possibly mutated slang term, which means “to smoothly direct message someone on social media”, epitomized the year in connecting and meeting new friends online. See a cute new buddy on Instagram? Go ahead, slide on in. Of course, not everyone was smooth about their slide. . .



This phrase was so popular that two separate songs were written about it, the first by a teenage rapper known as M-Boy; the second, by the much more famous Yo Gotti, is now receiving regular airplay on hip hop stations nationwide.



Problematic

Social Justice Blogging, political correctness, and identity politics were as contentious in 2015 as they have been in recent memory, but luckily this year people who had concerns about the content of other’s posts had a single, simple word with which to voice their concerns: problematic. See someone being racist in a reposted meme? That’s problematic. Draw fan-art that doesn’t represent the character in a completely unbiased way? Problematic. Several controversies this year resulted from arguments about what was problematic or not; for instance, the Tumblr craze Poot Lovato was deemed problematic by many who saw it as ridiculing the differently-abled.



In one severe case, called the Zamii070 Harassment Controversy, a fan artist who’s drawings of characters from Steven Universe were deemed problematic by the fandom attempted suicide, showing that even the idea of calling someone out for being problematic can cause its own set of – well, problems.

Anime Tiddies

On the other hand, this popular slang term might be considered problematic. Since the beginning of time, man has admired the Tiddies of Anime, but it was only in this year that the descriptor really took off. The Internet loved anime tiddies, and it liked them big, but of course everyone was just watching it for the plot.



The image above was perhaps the progenitor of the misspelling that led to the bountiful assets of anime and manga females being referred to as “Tiddies” but once it spread, it spread far and wide.

Make America Great Again

Donald Trump infected the consciousness of 2015 with his strange rhetoric and endless viral presence, but what many associate with the politician is the catchphrase that adorns his campaign’s trademark canvas “baseball” cap. He claimed to invent the phrase, but many of our parents will remember when Reagan used it in his 1980 election – if Trump came up with it, well, that sure would be quite the coincidence.



But back to the hat: it proved so popular that it sold out quickly and inspired much bootlegging; people began posting pictures of themselves wearing it over the summer. As the year went on, Trump’s campaign became less humorous and more frightening, causing the phrase to take on new, ironic meanings, but we’re sure that a “Make America Great Again” hat is going to worth something on eBay soon enough.

No Chill

The first of the chill-flavored slang memes to make the list, to possess no chill is to be irrational or psychotic. If you need to be told to chill out, then you have no chill. How do you get back this mysterious “chill?” With Netflix, of course, but we’ll get to that later. In the meantime, as accusing your friends, parents and bosses of having no chill became de rigueur, people started to wonder: if no one has any chill any longer where did it all go? Such was the beginning of an adorable image macro trend, where many tried to search for their chill. Is it under the couch cushions? Nope. No chill here.



Real Nigga Hours / Smash the Like

These slangs, often combined, both come from the same impulse: social media begging. “Real Nigga Hours” is technically a photo trend, usually accompanied by a strange hyper-compressed, artifacted and multi-layered image of a character like Squidward, straining to stay awake with bloodshot eyes. But it also specifically means “the time between 2:30 am and 5 am when no one else is usually awake;” what our parents called “the witching hour.” Posting about real nigga hours is a way to find out if you have friends who also suffer from insomnia. If so, you can figure out if they want to chat by suggesting they “smash the like,” a way of asking for social media attention that began in YouTube video game playthrough videos and spread quickly throughout the web. On Instagram especially, the image type paired with both phrases became popular, perhaps as an invitation to “slide into one’s DMs.”



Smol

If the adoration of cute baby animals could be converted into electricity, the world would finally have a clean source of renewable energy, and all war would end. Unfortunately, that’s not possible, and instead we just have to come up with new words to describe these tiny, precious things. Enter “smol,” a mutated spelling of “small” that provides inflection and tone. First used to describe a childish member of a boy band, smol came into vogue as a creature descriptor on Twitter and Tumblr in 2015 and brought with it an entirely bizarre new way to baby-talk about the animal kingdom. Those outside of the trend were either incredibly confused or brutally annoyed, but smol continues to be used widely as a way to make sure everyone knows that the animal you are describing is not just cute, but awwdowable.



Sheeple

You can read about the year’s conspiracy theories, hoaxes and lies here, but if there was one rallying cry that erupted around them all, it was the phrase “Wake up, Sheeple!” This pejorative combination of “sheep” and “people” (get it, because sheep are followers?) can be traced back all the way to 1950, when it was used in a volume of the Emory University Quarterly, and was later popularized in the 1980s, but it made a comeback into fashion in 2015, especially with the use of conspiracy theories like Jet fuels can’t melt steel beams in ironic memes.



Netflix and Chill

So, you have no chill; how can you refill your chill? Well, in 2015, we learned that you use Netflix! The web-streaming service was thrilled to become an essential part of the Internet’s shorthand for inviting someone over to half-watch television while boning, so much so that it created a “Netflix Switch;” which would dim the lights, connect to the show, and otherwise set the scene for the viewers to get busy.



The exact origin of the phrase is unknown, but it started out in the lexicographically influential world of Black Twitter, and moved on from there. A longer form, “30 minutes into Netflix and Chill and (S)He Gives You This Face” became a popular image-style meme, featuring creepy, lecherous faces from all sorts of humorous sources. The trend became so pervasive even parents purportedly began to find out about the meme; one widely-distributed hoax post claimed that a mom had sued Netflix after her daughter had become pregnant during a Netflix and Chill sesh.



KYM Review: People of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



I

n June 2014, a jihadist extremist group calling themselves The Islamic State began drawing the attention of the Western hemisphere with the proclamation of a worldwide caliphate, accompanied by a series of gruesome beheadings and other acts of terror against innocent civilians and foreign hostages, many of which were filmed and uploaded to social media for the world to see. One year and a half later, ISIS has further advanced itself as the world’s public enemy number one through relentless waves of deadly and sinister attacks in the war-torn regions of Syria, and now, in Europe.

  • In politics at home, the Republican candidates’ race to the White House dominated the online discussions in the social media, almost entirely thanks to Donald Trump who quickly singled himself out as this year’s most generous donor of soundbites for internet memes, while Bernie Sander emerged as the social media dark horse candidate in the Democratic presidential primaries. Overseas, Russian president Vladimir Putin made the trending charts on Twitter during his mysterious ten-day absence from the public in March; In Europe, British prime minister David Cameron found himself under the heat of a bizarre scandal after an unauthorized biography’s claim of him allegedly partaking in an unsavory secret society ritual during his early years as a student at Oxford University (hint: he put his penis into a dead pig’s mouth); In Canada, Justin Trudeau, the son of the revered former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, became the first social media-certified leader of the country; Meanwhile, Down Under, Australians saluted the departure of Tony Abbott from the office by re-enacting his favorite public pastime of eating raw onions on Vine.
  • In news and entertainment, the phenomenon of minor character fandom really began seeping into reality with regular memeification of everyday people in the backdrop of TV screens, from The Left Shark and Sad Virginia Fan at live sporting events to the Hot Debate Guy spotted at the GOP primary debate, while red carpet fashion at award ceremonies proved to be the perfect fodder for instant photoshop memes. And like every year, 2015 saw the induction of relatively new and up-and-coming faces into the hall of Internet stardom, such as Chris Pratt, Anna Kendrick, Hannibal Buress, Major Lazer and Fetty Wap, while some power players like Adele, Taylor Swift and Kanye West enjoyed their staying power in a seemingly effortless manner and others like Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart made departure from their comfort zones for something new. But the biggest shocking news from Hollywood came rather late in November with Charlie Sheen publicly speaking out about his HIV-positive life for the first time on television.
  • In sports, more professional athletes shone under the spotlight of internet fame in 2015 than ever before. New England Patriots’ star quarterback Tom Brady stood on social media trial for his alleged involvement in the so-called DeflateGate; Manny Pacquiao suffered a defeat in the highly publicized showdown against Floyd Mayweather; Golden State Warriors’ point guard Stephen Curry’s daughter Riley became a sensation after stealing her dad’s show during post-game interviews. Oh, and all Shaq O’Neal had to do was fall down on a set floor to become a meme.
  • In the tech world, the ripple effects of #GamerGate and the gender war continued to resonate throughout this year, if not intensified; Reddit struggled with internal strife on several occasions as the company’s then newly-appointed CEO Ellen Pao drew intense backlash from the community for what many perceived as hasty attempts at combating online harassment; Moot, the founder of the long-running imageboard site 4chan, handed over the keys to Hiroyuki Nishimura, Japanese Internet entrepreneur who founded 2channel. In the gaming industry, Nintendo mourned the loss of one of its brightest visionaries and the CEOSatoru Itawa, and Konami parted ways with Hideo Kojima who went on to start his own studio.


And now, check out the ten most notable people who found themselves at the center of the Internet spotlight in 2015.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg



  • Type: Judge
  • Profile: Lauded by liberals as the beacon of progressivism in the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Ginsburg now officially has the support of the Internet on her side. In January, Ginsburg’s name began popping up on the social media radar after the aptly named fan blog Notorious RBG went viral on Tumblr and the Internet’s obsession with the badass justice only continued to grow from there. In February, the 81-year-old justice was spotted dozing off at the State of the Union address (and who could really blame her?). In April, she scored her biggest lot of points from the liberal camp after her sharp-witted argument against the opponents of same-sex marriage circulated the online news circuit, decisively swaying the public opinion of the undecided and those of her peer sitting next to her towards the landmark ruling in June.

Pope Francis



  • Type: Cleric
  • Profile: Known as the pope of many firsts, Pope Francis truly proved himself to be the humble and down-to-earth leader of the Catholic Church that the Christian communities has long been waiting for. In 2015, the Pope further built upon his already favorable reputation by casually taking selfie with his followers and embarking on a papal visit to Cuba and the United States in September, during which he held meetings with President Obama, other religious leaders, immigrants, the poor, and even a private chat with Kim Davis":/memes/kim-davis-marriage-license-controversy. In late November, just a few days after Pope Francis dropped his first Christian rock album (!), a photograph of the pontiff giving a speech during his visit to Central African Republic inspired a hip-hop lyrical wordplay meme known as #PopeBars.

Ronda Rousey



  • Type: Mixed Martial Artist
  • Profile: The mixed martial artist and the current UFC Women’s Bantamweight champion known for quickly winning many of her matches within the first round, often defeating opponents using variations of the armbar submission technique. This year, Ronda Rousey was the third most searched person of the year on Google.

Drake



  • Type: Musician
  • Profile: 2015 proved to be yet another year of success for Drake, as the Canadian actor-turned-rapper continued to grind out hit tracks, headlines in the news and, lest we forget, more memes. Drake’s year in memes kicked off with a photoshop meme based on the cover art of his fourth mixtape album _ If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late; In July, Drake got tangled up in a diss track feud with Meek Mill and came out on top, or at least according to the stats on SoundCloud. In October, Drake wrapped up the year on a high note with the release of the music video for “Hotline Bling”, which went on to spawn the hilarious Vine remix meme dubbed #DrakeAlwaysOnBeat.

Bernie Sanders



  • Type: Politician
  • Profile: Bernie Sanders may be fighting an uphill battle against the Democratic Party’s hardly contested presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, but the 74-years-old Senator from Vermont has managed to gain a lot of grounds on the Internet this year, including the informal title of the social media-favorite Democratic candidate and endorsing parodies from the fictitious Facebook account Barney Sandlers, not to mention the hard number of over one million individual donations which makes him the most authentically grassroot presidential candidate in the race altogether.

Shia LaBeouf



  • Type: Actor
  • Profile: American actor best known for his portrayal of Sam Witwicky in Michael Bay’s Transformers film adaptations went through some rough patches last year in the aftermath of a plagiarism controversy surrounding his director debut film Howard Cantour.com, but the 29-years-old actor pulled off a surprisingly smooth recovery in 2015 with a couple of really awesome stunts that ended up taking the Internet by the storm: the now legendary “Just Do It” faux-motivational speech video and his uber-meta livestreaming project #ALLMYMOVIES.

Ellen Pao



  • Type: Businessperson
  • Profile: The American corporate lawyer served as the CEO of Reddit for just a little over half a year, but the 44-yers old Sillicone Valley executive garnered a shitstorm of online notoriety for implementing several controversial community policy decisions during her short-lived leadership, most notably the removal of several subreddits in June and the firing of the community’s director of talent behind the AMA interviews in early July, which led to a mass exodus of Redditors from the site in protest, ultimately resulting in her resignation from the position by mutual agreement.

Donald Trump



  • Type: Businessperson
  • Profile: The American celebrity billionaire and businessman who was once best known for the catchphrase “you’re fired” from his NBC hit reality TV show The Apparentice flipped the game of American politics this year with slogans like “Make America Great Again” and “Can’t Stump The Trump”, not to mention a prolific trail of blatantly uninformed and offensive remarks against immigrants he has uttered at campaign rallies and during interviews, which precisely made him the frontrunner of the 2016 Republican Presidential Primaries, and for non-believers, arguably the best unintentional satirist of the year, if not the century.

Satoru Iwata



  • Type: Video Game Designer
  • Profile: Satoru Iwata was a Japanese video game developer and businessman who served as the fourth CEO and president of Nintendo. Ever since rising to leadership in 2002, Iwata has been widely credited with reinvigorating the company’s stature within the video gaming industry by introducing next-generation hardware consoles, namely the Nintendo DS handheld system and Wii, as well as improving its public relations by personally interacting with the fans through social media. On July 12th, the Internet’s gaming community mourned the loss of Iwata, who passed away at the age of 55 due to complications with bile duct tumor.

John Cena



  • Type: Professional Wrestler
  • Profile: The veteran American professional wrestler reached a new height in his stardom this year by reclaiming the United States Championship title (though not long before he was defeated by Seth Rollins and his double-agent cohort Jon Stewart), taking over the social media with a huge collection of “Unexpected John Cena” mashup videos.

The State of the Internets in 2015

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The Year In Review

  • Meta-memeosis of the Internet Culture: With the meme culture (as we know) now passing its first decade mark on the timeline, the Internet has been slowly digging deeper into itself. One of the most noticeable and exciting developments in the internet memescape this year can be described as the evolution of meme elitism into a higher-level of ironic appreciation for memes that have been either abused to excess or misused by newcomers, as we can observe from the recent influx of slang words and expressions that are specifically used to comment on the quality of an internet meme, like “Dank Meme”, “Well Meme’d!” and “Nice Meme”, as well as the widespread practice of deliberate shitposting well on its way to becoming the new norm in the creative process.
  • Problematization of Identity Politics Everything: The year 2015 can be also characterized by the aggrandization of gender and culture wars and ever-increasing use of inherently biased language in online discussions and debates, with words like “problematic” and “trigger” being tossed around and labeled onto practically any hot-button topic or issue that the speaker cannot tolerate or agree with (for instance, see microaggression and cultural marxism), a phenomenon which in itself seems to be a …problematic and worrying trend that reflects the extreme polarization of public opinions on the Internet as discussions of identity politics continue to intensify without a plateau in sight.
  • Xerox-ification of Memes in the Social Media: While virtually all major social media networks have enabled ways to reblog and share an existing post without breaking the chain of authorship, this year was also marked by the mass proliferation of secondary-source memes and digital artifacts that were scooped up and transplanted across a wide range of platforms, whether it be freebooting of video clips from Vine to YouTube or sharing screen-captured images of tweets on Tumblr, essentially creating a black hole for proper attribution of original content in the meme world.
  • The Epic Rise of Black Twitter: Ever since the term Black Twitter first began seeping into the mainstream consciousness a few years ago in 2011, what was still then understood by many as a relatively minor-scale subculture on the microblogging network (and even disputed by some as a racially segregating label) has now grown into a juggernaut, if not the new standard, in the realm of online humor and memescape at large, well beyond the ethnocultural boundaries.


The Know Your Meme Reader’s Choice Meme of 2015 Goes To…




And His Name Is John Cena (31% of Total Votes)






KYM Review: Fandoms of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



I

n 2015, a slew of films, television shows and video games grew significant fan followings online.
In film, the campy short Kung Fury became a hit online, reaching over 22 million views by the year’s end. The trailer for the live-action film Jem and the Holograms was widely mocked online, with many expecting the movie to ruin childhood memories about the 1980’s animated television show. Jurassic World made a splash online as well, inspiring its own photo fad known as “Prattkeeping”.
On television, Law and Order aired their cringeworthy “Intimidation Game” episode, which hilariously portrayed GamerGaters as a misogynistic terrorist group. Trevor Noah took over for Jon Stewart as host of The Daily Show, but saw a bit of a backlash regarding several jokes found in his Twitter history.
In video games, a slew of anticipated games were released, including Unravel, Bloodborne, Metal Gear Solid V and The Witcher 3. On the web, the flash game Agar.io exploded in popularity, serving between 100,000 and 150,000 simultaneous players each day in June. Additionally, many minds were filled with f**k with the release of the disturbing mini game compilation Sonic Dream Collection.
In anti-fandoms, Minions became some of the most reviled fictional characters in history in reaction to an incessant and ubiquitous marketing campaign.


Mad Max: Fury Road

  • Type: Film
  • Profile: Post apocalyptic action film featuring a drifting loner and a group of women fleeing a ruthless gang leader.
  • Highlights: Feminist Mad Max | “You Will Arrive At The Gates Of Valhalla, Shiny And Chrome!”
  • Figures: Grossed over $375 million worldwide and has a 97% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Splatoon

  • Type: Video Game
  • Profile: Third-person shooter for the Wii U video game console in which players control squid-human hybrids armed with ink-spraying guns.
  • Highlights: Squid Kid Commercial | Splat Tim | Squid Sisters | Woomy | Inklingification
  • Figures: Became the fifth fastest-selling Wii U game of all time, selling upwards of one million copies by December 2015. Has a Metacritic score of 81/100.

Fallout 4

  • Type: Video Game
  • Profile: Open world action role-playing game in which the player explores a post-apocalyptic Boston in the year 2287.
  • Highlights: Fallout 4 Character Creations | Dogmeat | Fallout Shelter Mobile Game
  • Figures: Sold 1.2 million copies on Steam and 12 million shipped copies within the first 24 hours of release. Holds a Metacritics of 84/100 for PC, 87/100 for PS4 and 88/100 for XONE.

Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U

  • Type: Video Game
  • Profile: A crossover melee fighting video game featuring playable characters from a variety of Nintendo franchises.
  • Highlights: Several downloadable characters were released this year, including MewTwo from Pokemon, Lucas from Mother 3, Roy from Fire Emblem, Ryu from Street Fighter and Cloud Strife from Final Fantasy VII. Corrin from Fire Emblem Fates and Bayonetta were announced for release in Feburary 2016.
  • Figures: Sold more than 4.03 million units for the Wii U and 7.37 million units for the 3DS by September 30th.

Berserk

  • Type: Anime and Manga Series
  • Profile: Centers around the adventures of the protagonist Guts, an orphaned mercenary who wields a giant broadsword known as the “Dragonslayer” who travels throughout a medieval Europe-inspired land.
  • Highlights: In November this year, Guts and his party finally left the boat they had been trapped on since 2008.
  • Figures: The manga series sold over 27 million copies in Japan and 8 million overseas by July 2015.

Steven Universe


Rick and Morty

  • Type: Cartoon Series
  • Profile: An Adult Swim animated series centering around an alcoholic scientist-and-inventor Rick and his grandson Morty who embark on dangerous and bizarre adventures together throughout space, time and alternate dimensions.
  • Highlights: Screaming Sun | Simpsons Couch Gag | Back to the Future
  • Figures: Holds a score of 85/100 on Metacritic.

Star Wars VII: The Force Awakens

  • Type: Film
  • Profile: The seventh installment in the space opera film series Star Wars which takes place 30 years after the events in the 1983 film Return of the Jedi.
  • Highlights: Crossguard Lightsaber | Poster Parodies
  • Figures: Made a record breaking $57 million on opening day in the United States and received a 95% fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes in the first 24 hours of release.

One Punch Man

  • Type: Manga and Anime Series
  • Profile: Follows the story of Saitama, a powerful hero who easily defeats his opponents with one punch, and his disciple Genos, a cyborg who seeks revenge against a powerful enemy who destroyed his home town.
  • Highlights: Puberty Hit Caillou | Captain Hair
  • Figures: The manga sold more than 4.5 million copies and the anime tops the IMDB television series chart.

Undertale

  • Type: Video Game
  • Profile: An independent role-playing video game created by Toby Fox in which the player controls a small child who explores an underground world full of Monsters, a race that used to live peacefully alongside humanity until a war broke out between them.
  • Highlights: Temmie Covers | Papyrus’ Spaghetti | You’re Gonna Have a Bad Time
  • Figures: Raised more than $51,000 on Kickstarter prior to development and sold approximately 450,000 copies on Steam.

KYM Review: Events of 2015

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual Top Ten Review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2015 as we know it.



T

o no one’s surprise, the Internet in 2015 served as the battleground of many socio-political causes and hot-button issues, in part fueled by the acceleration of gender and cultural identity wars in the social justice blogosphere and the intensification of the Republican presidential candidates’ race to the White House in 2016, not to mention the endless chain of mass shootings, civil unrest and other senseless acts of terrorism that shocked the world with persistence; In the United States, dozens of innocent citizens fell victim to the hands of heavily armed psychopaths in numerous bouts of mass shootings while one too many episode of police brutalities continued to make the headlines in the news and trending topics in the social media, which in turn resulted in the rapid escalation of tensions in the realm of identity politics spanning over gender inequality, body shaming and cultural appropration, as well as heated protests over the current state of political correctness in major cities, suburbs and campus grounds across the country. Meanwhile in Europe, a number of deadly and sinister terrorist attacks undertaken by ISIS rocked the continent, most notably in Paris, where the year began with armed assaults against freedom of speech at the expense of innocent lives and ended with one of the worst terrorist attacks that the world has witnessed since the 9/11 attacks in 2001.

And now, let’s take a moment to reflect upon the top ten most notable events that defined the Internets in 2015.

Charlie Hebdo Terrorist Attack

Charlie Hebdo Terrorist Attack was a mass shooting that took place inside and near the headquarters building of the French weekly satirical news magazine in Paris in early January 2015, which resulted in the deaths of at least 12 people, including many staff journalists and cartoonists, as well as police officers, and left many more wounded. Following the attack, the unknown group of armed assailants fled the scene and the suspects were eventually tracked down and killed by the GIGN following an hostage situation two days after the tragedy.



Jared Fogle Child Porn Investigation

The Jared Fogle Child Porn Investigation was a United States federal investigation that began as an inquiry into the existence of child pornography at the residence of Jared Fogle, the celebrity spokesman for the Subway sandwich chain. The months-long investigation, during which many jokes and parodies ridiculing “Subway Jared” were spawned online, uncovered that Jared had sex with underage girls on several occasions in exchange for money, ultimately resulting in a sentence of 15 years and eight months in prison.



Charleston Church Shooting

Charleston Church Shooting was a mass murder by a lone gunman that resulted in the deaths of nine churchgoers at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in downtown Charleston, South Carolina on the evening of June 17th, 2015. Due to the racially charged nature of the shooting, as all nine victims were black and the suspect identified as a young white male, the act was widely condemned as an act of hate crime in the news and social media. Meanwhile on Twitter and elsewhere online, many pointed out what they perceived as a racial bias in the official and news media description of mass murder suspects, as well as inappropriateness of the Confederate flag flying at the South Carolina State House in Columbia.



Planned Parenthood Body Part Controversy

The Planned Parenthood Sells Parts controversy refers to a viral video campaign by a pro-life organization called the Center for Medical Progress wherein actors, pretending to be medical professionals, secretly filmed a discussion with a Planned Parenthood employee where the employee appears to be suggesting that Planned Parenthood sells fetal body parts it extracts in partial-birth abortions. Months later on November 29th, 52-year-old Kentucky resident Robert Lewis Dear went on a mass shooting spree at a Planned Parenthood clinic office in Colorado, killing three people, including a police officer, and wounding many others. During the police investigation, Dear was quoted as saying “No more baby parts” while expressing his anti-Planned Parenthood sentiments, a reference that was likely pointed to the viral video.



Ahmed Mohamed’s Arrest

On September 14th, 2015, a 14 year-old boy named Ahmed Mohamed was arrested in Irving, Texas, after bringing a home-made electronic clock to school. Police and school administrators described the device as a “hoax bomb,” but later declined filing charges against the student after determining that the device was not designed for any other purpose outside of being a clock. The arrest gathered much attention on social media, ranking high on trending lists and receiving many reactions from notable individuals including US President Barack Obama.



Volkswagen Emission Scandal

Also known as #DieselGate, the Volkswagen Emission Scandal refers to the uncovering of German automaker’s intentional programming of turbocharged direct injection diesel engines to provide fraudulent nitrogen oxide emissions results during laboratory testing. An estimated 11 million cars produced between 2009 and 2015 are estimated to have included programs known as “defeat devices” to manipulate data in order to meet government auto emissions requirements around the world.



United States Supremem Court Gay Marriage Ruling

*_Obergefell v. Hodges_ was a landmark case reviewed by the United States Supreme Court in which the court determined that same-sex marriage is a fundamental right guaranteed by the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Upon its ruling on June 26th, the decision effectively legalized same-sex marriage across the country, though one naysayer":http://kymdb.com/memes/events/kim-davis-marriage-license-controversy at the county clerk of Rowan County, Kentucky stirred up a controversy after refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples.



European Migrant Crisis

The European Migrant Crisis is the ongoing exodus and resettlement of emigrants from the Middle East, Africa and Central Asia, the majority of whom are Syrian refugees and asylum-seekers displaced by the ongoing civil war in Syria, in European countries. The dramatic growth of migration from Europe’s neighboring regions was observed as early as in 2013, but the trend rapidly escalated to the level of a European humanitarian and political crisis during the summer of 2015.



h2. 2016 Republican Presidential Primaries

The 2016 Republican Presidential Primary is the preliminary round in the Republican party’s candidate selection process for the upcoming 2016 general election for the presidency of the United States. The series of state caucuses and primaries will begin in February 2016 and end the following June.



Paris Terrorist Attacks

2015 Paris Terrorist Attacks were a series of coordinated mass shootings and suicide bombings that took place at multiple locations across the Paris Metropolitan Area in France on the evening of November 13th, 2015. As a result of the attacks, at least 129 people have been confirmed as victims of casualties and 415 others who sustained injuries of varying degrees were admitted to hospitals in the area. Immediately after the attacks, which were the deadliest in France since World War II, the French government declared a state of emergency. On November 14th, the Islamic State claimed responsibility for the acts of terrorism in retaliation against the ongoing airstrikes in the group’s strongholds in Iraq and Syria.



Q&A with Shiro Ulv

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S

hiro Ulv is a 21-years-old IT security consultant living in Brunswick, Georgia. Born Matthew Schimmel, Shiro identifies himself with the growing subculture known as the Otherkin movement. In April 2013, Shiro was featured in Logo TV’s special documentary I Think I Am an Animal. Since the airing of the documentary, Shiro has gained online notoriety for being “The Wolf Guy” after a screenshot of him identifying himself as a “wolf therianthrope” from the program began circulating on Tumblr and elsewhere online. What is more, Shiro has been an active member of the Know Your Meme community for over a year. In the light of this discovery, our longtime research moderator MisterJ reached out to the wolf-man himself to chat about his Internet fame.

Interview

Q: How did you come to appear in the Logo TV documentary?

A: I was contacted because I am the administrator of a large therianthropy and therein website. I originally declined, because the media has a way of portraying our community badly. I was eventually asked to provide background information on the community, and to help fact check. I was then manipulated into appearing on TV.


Q: How do you reflect on your internet fame? And how has others in your life reacted to your internet fame?

A: I have mixed emotions about it. I pretty much joke around about it for the most part. Others in my life think it’s amusing, funny, or cool. I’ve been asked to pose with people on the street. I’ve also gotten a lot of negative backlash. It’s funny, because a lot of the scenes were coached and I was told or encouraged to do certain things. In the famous meme, I was told, by the person filming, “look at the water and give me a bark”.


Q: Do you regret appearing in the documentary?

A: In a sense, very much so. I embarrassed myself and the community I am a part of. In another sense, I met some true friends from the experience as well.

Q: How often were you requested to repeat the famous memetic line thus far?

A: I’d say more times than I can count. It’s become a local trend in my area for people to take Vines with me. I don’t normally bark in real life. Sometimes if I’m with friends and we’re goofing off, sure. Or if I’m asked to for a Vine with someone.



Q: Since your appearance in the documentary, alongside with your identify as a wolf, went viral on the internet, has the attention it gathered resulted in positive consequences on your private or social life, and within the therein community?

A: Well, my girlfriend sort of found me through the documentary. She knew me from High School, and had a crush on me for several years. I had legally changed my name as explained in the documentary, so she was unable to look me up on Facebook or anything. When she saw it, she found my name, we talked, became friends, and now we’ve been together for six months. I’m told by some therians that I have inspired them, but I honestly get sad when I am told this. My behavior on the documentary isn’t an inspiration, it is an example of what NOT to do.


Q: Are you aware of the furry fandom, and would you identify yourself as a member?

A: Aware of the fandom, participate to a slight degree, but am not really a member.


Q: How would you say the otherkin/therian community is treated online and in society at large?

A: Badly. We’re a laughing stock. The most vocal members of our community are idiots, or in my case, portrayed as such. It’s fashionable to make fun of our community, just like it is to make fun of furries. The Tumblr therein community is the worst place to go for info; it’s full of idiots. The community existed long before Tumblr, and like everything else on the internet, Tumblr tends to ruin it. The Tumblr community has decided that it’s okay to identify as objects, and various other nonsense. They’ve also decided they’re a part of the transgender community, and that they need nounself pronouns. I don’t support any of this, by the way.


Q: What would you like people to understand regarding the otherkin/therian community?

A: We’re a bit odd, but we’re also pretty normal. We have jobs, and contribute to society like everyone else. It’s a spiritual and/or psychological belief and nothing more.


Q: Is there any significance behind the name Shiro Ulv?

A: It means White Wolf.


Q: Are there any variations of your meme that you find interesting?

A: The Sonic one. I’m a Sonic fan and I’m actually wearing a Tails shirt right now.


Q: Are there any plans in the future regarding your internet fame?

A: Not much. It’s kind of embarrassing. :P


Q: How did you first find out about the therein community? And how did you find out that your phrase was made famous online?

A: I first found out through my online friend. I was a volunteer staff member of the game Furcadia. I thought I was a furry, but was told therian fits me better.


Q: How did you find out that your phrase was made famous online?

A: A friend of mine showed it to me on Facebook. I figured it’d be pretty well known because I was on TV.


Q: What are some of your go-to sites? Are you active in any specific online communities?

A: I administrate Kinmunity.com


Q: Do you have any favorite internet memes?

A: Sonic Dreams Collection.


Q: Any favorite Internet-famous people?

A:Chad Vader.


Q: You have said you are a fan of the Sonic franchise; have you created an original character related to it?

A: Ew. No.


Q: What would you tell someone who is in a similar situation as you right now? Regarding both otherkin/therian and internet fame.

A: I’d tell them that they shouldn’t let the haters get to them. A lot of people on the internet are mindless drones and hate machines, and there’s no point in paying any attention to them. The positive is better to focus on. Don’t judge somebody you don’t know by a one hour block on television. There’s a lot of things I’d change about the documentary, and I had no editorial control over it. It was filmed over a period of about a week, and cut down to one hour. I was joking around with some of the film people and such, and got friendly, and was willing to do stupid things before I caught myself doing something that probably wouldn’t look good on TV. Over the course of several days, that’s enough material to piece together fake stuff.


Q: To close up the interview: do you still stand by what you say when you said “on all levels except physical I am a wolf”?

A: It’s a lot more complicated than that. I still identify as a wolf in a spiritual and psychological matter, so yes.


Q: You do not bark in real life like you did in the video, correct?

A: No, not normally.


Q: Do you have anything else you would like to add?

A: Yes. My trademark “Woof”.



Shiro Ulv is an American I.T. security consultant and the founder of Kinmunity, an online community and resource website for Otherkins, therianthropes and other individuals who identify themselves as non-human, based in Brunswick, Georgia. In addition to his active presence within the Otherkin subculture, Ulv has spoken at various panels as an advocate of autism rights movement. For more information, visit his official website at shiroulv.me. This interview was conducted over email by Know Your Meme research moderator Mister J in November 2015.

Decision 2016: Elect Your Meme!

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All Hail The Presidential Meme of UNITINU




MOONMAN

The First Presidential Meme of UNITINU

27% of Total Votes (133 / 492)

The Ballot

Disclaimer: The list of presidential meme candidates were nominated by the Know Your Meme Council, which consists of both members of the staff and moderators of the community, based on the following qualifications which specify that each entry must be either: A) a mutated, devolved or parodic incarnation of a fictional character or B) a caricature of a politician or electoral candidates in real life, both former and incumbent.




KYM Review: Ironic Memes of 2016

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Editor’s Note: This article is part of Know Your Meme’s annual review series looking back at some of the most memorable and popular memes, events and people that defined the Internet culture in 2016 as we know it.


I

rony in 2016 was the universe’s answer to an extremely chaotic set of circumstances. As the world got weirder, so did the memes. There was new random shit being meme’d daily, which created the need for a meme stock market. Weird Facebook grew into a thriving subcommunity of pages filled with bizarre aesthetics and depressed texts, which Mark Zuckerberg started attacking for reasons unknown. Youtube poops came back. People just read the entire script to Bee Movie, for reasons they didn’t understand. It was as though every sad emotion could be shared with the aesthetic and voice of a Sonic the Hedgehog cartoon and that was just how the internet worked this year. It was madness, a chaotic war of meme magic and meme lords. A time traveling meme even showed up in the end. The ironic memes of 2016 were a return to the sort of anti-humor that characterized the early internet, only with a lot more darkness behind them. But we also got wholesome memes, Dat Boi, visions of a more wholesome, positive new day. The meme war may be over, but the battle for meme souls still rages.

Layers of Irony



(Extremely Tim & Eric voice) Layers of Irony… what a concept. Made famous by one Meme Man comic, “Layers of Irony” came to define 2016 meme culture. You don’t understand a meme going around? Well then, you’re just not on enough layers of irony, my dude. From the deepest levels came some of the most bizarre, short-lived, but weirdly hilarious memes without punchlines or context. They simply appeared, and you had to be in the know. Or not; part of the fun of the ironic meme surge was just going along for the ride. What are we talking about today? Long Boy? Okay, sure. BIGBOYZONE.



It’s absurd yet it makes perfect sense. In the original comic’s fourth panel, when Meme Man’s eyes light up as he says “SUCC,” it is understood that he has seen irony levels you and I could never dream of reaching. He is within the deepest layer of irony, manipulating us little babies by giving us new memes we are too stupid to understand. And we are grateful, for, like nirvana, the deepest layer of irony is impossible to achieve, yet is the most noble of goals.

Dat Boi

Here he is. It is the frog on the unicycle. It is dat boi who says “o shit waddap.”



Dat Boi was truly the moment which demonstrated that memes have changed. No longer does a meme need to be a pop culture reference or a relatable joke. Dat Boi proved a meme could be successful as a self-contained entity, shared for nothing other than some strange sense of obligation. And sure enough, soon he rode through social media, brightening the days of those he passed. “O shit waddap,” they said. “It’s dat boi!” He’s like that one car everyone in your neighborhood knows because it looks super weird, or the guy who wanders around dressed like a wizard every day. Dat Boi was just there, no context or meaning behind him, just a jovial little dude on a unicycle who became one of the memes of the year. Now that’s a beat we can all O Shit Waddap to.

The Meme Renaissance of Me_IRL

Picture it: October, 2016. It’s been a week since the last good meme had quenched the Reddit’s everpresent thirst. Forced memes had been trickling through the Me_IRL subreddit, but they could not sustain the populace. People starved. Children wept as their mothers cradled them, praying that God may bless them with a new meme. And then, he came. A savior. A bear. In a Big Blue House.



On October 4th, 2016, redditor Zonemasta8 submitted a post titled [BREAKINGNEWS] Bear in the big house meme speculated to be meme of the month during the prolonged meme drought to /r/memeeconomy speculating that Bear In The Big Blue House memes could be the possible solution the the Great Meme Drought of October. And he was. Zonemasta8’s post made the Reddit front page that day. But no one could anticipate what would happen next. Soon, the meme economy grew unstable. Memes lived and died in the span of hours. People spent their life savings on Trebuchets memes, only to watch the stock plummet like a 90kg projectile thrown over 300 meters. It was a wild, unpredictable time, but it revived the meme economy by flooding the market. Many memes that may have lived wonderful lives died in that time. Bionicle. Watch Those Wrist Rockets. Today, we honor their sacrifice.

/r/MemeEconomy

With so many memes flooding the market, it can be difficult to tell which are worthy of your time and which are simply flashes in the pan. Luckily, a subreddit community devoted to tracking memes came to help. /r/MemeEconomy became a thriving subreddit in which users debate the long-term sustainability of memes, ultimately asking the age-old question: sell or buy?



Sure, there isn’t actual money involved, but that doesn’t make the work done at /r/MemeEconomy any less important. Rather than cash, users of the subreddit trade using Good Boy Points (GBP), and GBP is literally invaluable. For example, one may have thought that the recent rise in How Many Upvotes for Our Boys in Blue? memes may have made it a valuable property, but aficionados at /r/MemeEconomy knew that the shelf life of the meme would be short lived. Those in the subreddit who advocated selling shares of the meme likely made a killing.

In all seriousness, the meteoric rise of /r/MemeEconomy demonstrates that memes are something people want to take seriously--while not actually being all that serious about them. That a subreddit which works on the premise of a meme stock market took off in 2016 illustrates that people follow memes extremely closely and likely, if they really wanted to, would buy and sell shares if there was real money involved. That’s wild.

Meme Lord

The idea of a Meme Lord grew to prominence in 2016 as memes became a cultural force in 2016. To know memes was to know a language of the internet everyone else struggled to understand. Suddenly, knowing memes garnered cultural credibility. And followers of so-called meme lords responded in kind with devotion and praise to those who deliver daily keks.



The idea of a meme lord underscores the importance memes took on in 2016. It also helps illustrate the seemingly random happenings of the meme universe, making it easy to believe that, like Gods, the meme lords are working in mysterious ways. It’s an imaginary title only few can achieve. Even I, who work all day on the memes, cannot yet claim the title of Meme Lord. For There can only be one Lord of the Meme. And he does not share power.



Meme Magic

If you were to tell me in January that 2016 would see a surge in a thing called Meme Magic, I would have laughed in your face, but one election later and suddenly I believe in the Cult of Kek.



The evidence is undeniable. Did you know The Cult of Kek values the number 7? And that the 77777777th post on 4chan said “Trump Will Win”? Do you think this is mere coincidence?



Or maybe people like to invent fun ironic conspiracies to keep themselves entertained in this wild and crazy world. Either way, the magic of kek inspired the internet this year, and considering what transpired, meme magic is as good an explanation for 2016 as anything else I’ve heard.



Wholesome Memes

Memes undoubtedly became more than just vehicles for jokes in 2016. For many, they became practically a legitimate form of communication. Nothing demonstrated this phenomenon more than Wholesome Memes, a trend where familiar meme templates used genuine, supportive text instead of jokes.



Wholesome Memes achieve the goal of relating positive and intimate emotions while remaining safely behind a layer of irony, which is extremely useful for the emotionally stunted mememakers of the internet. From an outside perspective, the memes provide a much-needed breather from snark, irony, and jokes that punch down, the general modus operandi for memes. It feels weird to add memes whose very point is sincerity to a list of “ironic memes,” but a look at the reactions to some wholesome memes will reveal just how many people can’t wrap their head around a meme that is genuinely supportive. Love them or hate them, you have to admit it’s nice to see some good-natured memes now and again.

Meme Wars

This year brought the greatest meme war of the modern era. The 2016 meme war had genuine, real life consequences. Think about Pepe the Frog, The Deplorables, the alt-right. It was ugly and bloody, and it may have actually helped elect Donald Trump. There will never be another like it.



The Meme War of 2016 proved that people want to participate in politics, even if that participation is as silly as editing swastikas onto a cartoon frog. Memes grew into weapons of counterculture, the trade of trolls who suddenly had the eyes of the mainstream media. The campaign for Hillary Goddamn Clinton wrote a post condemning Pepe after a 4chan guy shouted the name of Matt Furie’s frog at her for the lulz. The lulz shook America like they never have before. Our grandparents regale us with stories of when they stormed the beaches at Normandy. We will regale our children with stories of whether we were on the side of Pepe or Kermit.

This Meme Is From the Future

The year of ironic memes, shitposts, and random popular images concluded with one final hurrah: This Meme Is From the Future. A post by Redditor DanknessIn_MemesOut on Me_IRL lampooned the year in irony by posting a photo of an old man falling with the caption “This meme is from the future. You don’t get the reference yet.”



The joke is a simple wink to the randomness of the year’s memes, but that didn’t stop it from taking on a lore of its own. Soon the old man was understood to be from the year of 42069 (because of course he is), where he was the meme from December of that year and traveled back to our time. It then inspired a number of variations as folks reveled in the randomness of the future. As a meme, it bizarrely summed up the year in irony. The meme needed no context. Memes this year could have come from any time, with a reference point totally optional. The future looks bright and dank.

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