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Discovering Something That Doesn't Exist

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About

Discovering Something That Doesn’t Exist is a video remix and image macro series based on a clip from the song opening theme for the animated television series Phineas and Ferb.

Origin

In the opening theme for Phineas and Ferb, the titular protagonists reveal a unicorn-turtle hybrid creature underneath a sheet while the lyric “discovering something that doesn’t exist” can be heard in the background (shown below)



Spread

On September 20th, 2016, YouTuber Doopliss uploaded a clip of the theme song that displays a list of “Tumblr genders” while the lyric “discovering something that doesn’t exist” is played in the background (shown below, left). On October 18th, YouTuber Tankspeed12 posted a similar remix featuring a transgender symbol designed by arist Holly Boswell (shown below, right).[3]



On March 26th, Redditor Cyznyski posted a screenshot of opening theme scene with the words “The Wage Gap” written over the creature to /r/dankmemes.[2] Within 24 hours, the post gained over 1,100 points (94% upvoted). The following day, Redditor theOGyug uploaded the same image with the words “My will to live” written over the creature to /r/dankmemes[1] (shown below, right).



Also on March 27th, Redditor kysdude submitted a post speculating that the image macros were a “safe investment” to /r/MemeEconomy.[4]

Various Examples



Search Interest

Not available.

External References


I'm Ready

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About

“I’m Ready” is a quote said bye the character from the Nickelodeon’s animated series SpongeBob SquarePants.

Origin

Spread

Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

Crusader Kings II

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Crusader Kings II (aka CK2) is a Grand Strategy game set in the Middle Ages, developed by Paradox Development Studio (PDS) and released in 2012 on PC (Feb.14) and OS X (May 24). A Linux version was also released on Jan.14, 2013. It is, to date, the most commercially successful strategy game PDS ever produced, with over 1 million copies sold as of September 2014[1].

Author’s Note : This entry was created in March 2017, 2 weeks after the release of the “Monks & Mystics” expansion. It is possible some of its content will no longer be up-to-date when you read it.


About

The game allows the player to incarnate a medieval ruler, historical or not, and help him protect, develop and grow his territory. Any kind of starting position can be chosen, from a simple count to an all-powerful emperor. The most prominent feature of the game being that if the character played dies, the game doesn’t end, but instead has the player take control of their heir. As long as the character played has a title and an heir of his dynasty upon death, the game continues until 1453 (historical date of the Turkish conquest of Constantinople).

Although falling under the Grand Strategy category of video games, Crusader Kings II is particularly appreciated by its fanbase for its roleplaying aspect : all characters have defining traits, which they can acquire or lose through their life, fleshing out their personnality and behavior, and influencing the opinion of others. This feature was prominently advertised in the “7 deadly sins” web series on Youtube prior to the game’s release :


While trying to survive and prosper in medieval Europe, the player will have to take care of numerous aspects of everyday life : finding a worthy wife/husband (preferably a cousin), ensuring the preferred heir receives a proper education, making sure the spymaster is loyal, plotting the assassination of a close relative, among many other chores. Furthermore, several text events popping up throughout the game add flavor and unexpected situations to it. The combination of those elements creates an “emergent narrative[2] that has since become the trademark of the game and its (very) numerous add-ons (see below).


Reception

Upon release, Crusader Kings II was favorably received by a majority of the press, with a metascore of 82%[3], mainly praising its unique gameplay for a title of the Grand Strategy genre, as well as its accessibility for newcomers.
Through unexpected word-of-mouth, its sales have remained stable months, and even years after its initial release[2].


Update and DLC policy

Patches

Paradox Development Studio has a history of long-term development on its games, which are constantly patched and improved according to the feedback received from the community[4].
As of today (March 2017), CK2 has received over 60 patches[5], from bug fixing to major updates. These updates contain new game mechanics, new religious features, new interactions, mostly (but not exclusively) tied to a major expansion released at the same time. This allows players who do not wish to buy the latest DLC to still be able to play online with anyone. The game is currently in v2.7.

Expansions

The expansions released for CK2 could be summarized as “unlockers” giving access to characters originally unplayable. The base game only allows to play as a christian (catholic, orthodox or miaphysite), while major expansions such as Sword of Islam (muslims), The Old Gods (pagans) or Rajas of India (dharmic religions) open new gameplay possibilities.
As of March 2017, a total of 12 major expansions have been made available. Owning them all is not mandatory however, as patches constantly keep the base game up-to-date.

DLC overload controversy

Aside from these major expansions, Paradox has also released numerous “cosmetic” DLCs adding new portraits for characters, new music or new coat-of-arms for major dynasties. These DLCs are often met with very relative enthusiasm, as they do not bring anything new to the game and are generally considered overpriced when not on sale.
Furthermore, if a newcomer wished to buy every single available DLC to date alongside the basegame, they would be in for a painful surprise at checkout :


“Tax this dude into space.”

Defenders of the game, however, point out that the CK2 and its DLC are systematically at a 75 to 80% discount during Steam Sales, most notably the Crusader Kings II Collection being available for 40 euros/dollars.

Sunset Invasion controversy

Even though it allows the player to reshape medieval history, Crusader Kings II is a game strongly rooted in historical accuracy, constantly adding new gameplay elements based on actual historical figures or events. One very notable exception, though, is the Sunset invasionDLC, released in Nov.15, 2012.


Not sure Deus really Vulted…

The base concept of this small expansion is to add an equivalent to the threat posed by the Mongol Hordes in late game for western kingdoms, who are relatively far and safe from the great Khan’s warriors :

It is the late 13th century and Europe is still reeling from the all-conquering Mongol Hordes. Just as the Lords of the West breathe a sigh of relief, another threat looms on the horizon. Strange ships bearing winged serpents and grinning skulls, symbols never before seen in the known world, have been sighted all along the Atlantic coast. As the sun sets on the shores of Morocco, Portugal and Ireland, the largest fleet that has ever set sail approaches land, ready to invade in the name of blood thirsty gods…[6]

This expansion received a tepid welcome from the players, who were alarmed by the ahistorical nature of the DLC and the lack of balance in its execution, many complaining about the invincibility of the Aztec army. Sunset Invasion remains the most controversial additional content to the game today, according to a recent community survey[7], and PDS never released any other “fantasy” mod since then. The Aztecs have since been the butt of many jokes for the fans.




Fandom

Communities

Aside from the official forum, many communities and discussion topics have emerged throughout the web as the game began to create a cult following.
One of the most prominent examples is the subreddit r/CrusaderKings, which in turn gave birth to r/ShitCrusaderKingsSay/, a collection of quotes who can seem particularly disturbing out of context or to someone unfamiliar with CK2 and its gameplay mechanics.


The kind of conversations players are having since the release of the Monks & Mystics expansion.

Modding

Crusader Kings II has been open to modding since day 1, and has revealed itself a wonderful sandbox which could be adapted to several types of universe.

CK2Plus (CK2+) is a mod originally created by Wiz, a member of the Something Awful forums who began working for Paradox in January 2013, which was then completely overhauled by a new team following the release of Rajas of India. The mod has had a lot of new features added since its original inception, and continues to be updated regularly. It also incorporates elements from other mods on the Paradox forums, as well as work done by other users on Something Awful’s Paradox thread.
Ultimately, CK2+ aims to deepen the CK2 experience, both in detail and enjoyment. Due to changes in mechanics that may make the game more difficult for new players, it’s recommended to have first played the vanilla version of the game to have a good understanding of how it works. CK2+ is currently in v.4.06b4, compatible with patch 2.7 and the Monks and Mystics expansion.

With its medieval theme and its gameplay focusing on characters, family and treachery, it was more than obvious that a mod adapting A Song of Ice and Fire/Game of Thrones would be soon created. AGoT is one of the most famous and played mods for CK2. It is currently in v.1.3.2 and waiting for a compatibility update with the Monks and Mystics expansion.

Elder Kings is a total conversion for Crusader Kings II set within the Elder Scrolls universe, in which a player may take on the role of a variety of different races and leaders in order to lead a people or a nation through the turbulent times of the 2nd era, or “interregnum” of the Elder Scrolls universe. It is currently in v.0.2.0 and waiting for a compatibility update with the Monks and Mystics expansion.

Memes

Border Gore

The term “Border Gore” has been coined to refer to an artistic cartographer’s nightmare, in which realms are manifestly non-convex or discontiguous. Borders seem to have been drawn with no regard for oceans, mountain ranges, or de jure territory. Whether due to war or inheritance conflicts, this situation tends to exacerbate regional instability.

Disgusting Double Chin

The “Double Chin” is a disgraceful facial feature from the base western european portraits, particularly dreaded due to its seemingly hereditary aspect. Once a character acquires it, chances are high his children and grandchildren on many generations will have it too, even if they have traits like temperate, strong or attractive.

The Karlings

Copypasta : We are the Karlings. Disband your levies and surrender your castles. We will add your titles and claims to our own. Your demesne will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile. You will be vassalized.
We impose order on the chaos of Western Europe, we will marry into your lands because we allow it, and we shall take over your lands because we demand it.
“Carolingian” : A title given to us by the Saxons to give voice to their destruction. In the end what you call us is irrelevant. We simply are.

The Karling dynasty (also know as Carolingian dynasty) was a Frankish noble family of the early middle-age. The name “Carolingian” derives from the Latinised name of Charles Martel: Carolus. The Carolingian dynasty reached its peak in 800 with the crowning of Charlemagne as the first Emperor of Romans in over three centuries. His death in 814 began an extended period of fragmentation of the Carolingian empire and decline that would eventually lead to the evolution of the Kingdom of France and the Holy Roman Empire.
Since the release of the Charlemagne expansion, the Karling dynasty has generated a lot of hate and anger, since game events tend to favor Karl (or, more rarely, his brother Karloman) into forming the powerful empire of Francia. If the dynasty prospers, the Karlings become very numerous, ending up holding several kingdoms, duchies and counties of importance.

Glitterhoof


A nod to Caligula and his horse Incitatus, which he famously planned to make a roman consul, Glitterhoof can appear randomly if the character has the lunatic trait and the Conclave expansion.

Event ID : ZE.15000 / Name : “Horse Chancellor”
Your horse has always struck you as being of a dependable sort, a quality you feel is sorely lacking in your councillors. Time to shake things up a bit. You will appoint him as your new [Root.GetChancellorName].
> Glitterhoof, I appoint thee as the [Root.GetChancellorName] of the realm.

Glitterhoof rapidly became an all-time favorite among players. The poor equidae, which gender remains to be clearly identified, has been seduced and “given a good tumble” by some, made a priest or sacrificed to dark forces by others.

More positive outcomes have also seen him become Pope, or his offspring Rainbow Dash become empress of the restored Roman Empire.
The would-be chancellor also inspired the creation of a mod unlocking their “Horse” culture.


Related memes

Deus Vult

Deus Vult! (“God wills!”) was the battle cry by the Crusaders at the declaration of the First Crusade by Pope Urban II at the Council of Clermont in 1095, when the Byzantine Empire requested help in defense from the Seljuk invasion of Anatolia.
The Crusades being one of the major features of the game, it was only natural for this cry to become a motto for the community. Deus Vult was already the name of an add-on to the first game of the series, and was also coined in the Europa Universalis series of games from the same studio. It has since become a meme on its own.

Remove Kebab

Quickly adopted by the fanbase in response to the threat posed by the Arabic Empire in the east and the Umayyad dynasty in Spain and Morocco, Remove Kebab, more than a catchphrase, has become an absolute priority for many Crusader Kings II players. A variation of this meme, “Remove Baguette”, was also invented in Europa Universalis IV and after the release of the Charlemagne expansion, in order to prevent the Kingdom/Empire of France from becoming all-powerful (see above, “The Karlings”).


Search interest

External references

[1]Crusader Kings II: Over 1 Million Copies Sold– paradoxplaza.com
fn2. How Crusader Kings 2 caught Paradox by surprise– PCGamesN (Webarchive)
fn3. Crusader Kings II on Metacritic
fn4. Official Forum for CK2
fn5. CKII Wiki – Patches
fn6. Sunset Invasion on Steam
fn7. CK2 Dev Diary #46: Surveying the Survey on the official forum.

Grim Reaper

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About

Grim Reaper is an image macro series featuring a photograph of a person wearing a Lord of the Rings Nazgûl standing next to a man wearing a baseball cap, which is often captioned with mock conversations as if the personification of Death is threatening the man’s life.

Origin

On March 22nd, 2017, a photograph of a man talking to a person in a Nazgûl costume was uploaded to 9gag[6] with the prompt “What did he said to death?” (shown below). Within one week, the post garnered upwards of 9,300 points and 760 comments.



Spread

On March 23rd, 2017, Twitter user @youngscrap[1] posted the photograph captioned with a joke about the man’s daughter swearing on his life that “she only fucked 4 dudes” (shown below, left). That day, Twitter user @leansquad[2] posted the photo captioned with a joke about the man swearing he is “dead” when looking at internet memes (shown below, right). Shortly after, the @daquan[3] Instagram feed reposted the tweet, garnering more than 376,000 likes within four days.



On March 24th, Redditor Benny_Andretti submitted a screenshot of @youngscrap’s tweet to /r/BlackPeopleTwitter,[4] where it gathered upwards of 29,300 points (91% upvoted) and 290 comments within 72 hours. Meanwhile, The Observer[5] highlighted several notable examples from the image macro series in an “listicle”: titled “Why the Grim Reaper Is the Best Meme of 2017.”

Various Examples



External References

Milo Murphy's Law

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About

Milo Murphy’s Law is an American animated television series from the creators of Phineas and Ferb, Dan Povenmire and Jeff “Swampy” Marsh, which premiered on October 3, 2016 on Disney XD. The series revolves around the title character, Milo Murphy, who is a descendant of Edward A. Murphy Jr., the namesake of Murphy’s law, which states that anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. It takes place in the same universe as Phineas and Ferb.

Plot

Murphy’s Law states that anything that can go wrong will. That doesn’t bode well for 13-year-old Milo Murphy, a descendant of the man for whom the law was named, and who feels like he’s living it. Milo is always expecting the unexpected. He’s prepared for anything that comes his way, though, as he is armed with knowledge, a backpack full of supplies and a strong sense of optimism to help him get through any problem. Milo has best friends Melissa and Zack by his side to help think outside the box to overcome the obstacles that life puts in their way. Multiple Grammy winner “Weird Al” Yankovic provides the voice of Milo, in addition to performing the show’s theme song and other tunes featured on the animated series.

History

W.I.P.

Reception

Fandom

Search Interest

Lomando.com

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About

Lomando.com (Fuanshi Airando/Fancy Island), is a Japanese horror puzzle game with the front page being disguised as a cute Nekomimi illustration gallery front. Upon clicking the catgirl in the middle, the game will begin. The objective is to reach the goal gallery in a point-and-click environment while avoiding jumpscares/monsters. It features a full story involving dark themes like depression and suicidal thoughts, despite being in Japanese only.


ᴼᶠᶠᶦᶜᶦᵃᶫ ᶜᵒᵐᶦᶜ ᵒᶰ ʰᵒʷ ᵗᵒ ᵖᶫᵃʸ

Spread

On YouTube, reaction videos visiting Lomando.com has been made. Notably: “Annoying Orange Gaming”

“Pear Forced to Play” getting startled and “SomeOrdinaryGamers” his mocking view of the game using terms as “cringey waifu jumpscare game”


Search Interest

Interest has notably increased during the year 2016 around the same time various YouTubers posted videos.

External References

[1]Twitter – Search results for #ふぁんしーあいらんど

[2]Screamer Wikia Page ( No Jumpscares ) click

[3]Fancy Island update page ( No Jumpscares ) click

Run, bitch, run

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About

Run, bitch, run, is a internet meme qutoe that used as reaction

Origin

the quote originates from Scary movie scene (show below)



Spread

the quotes used as when a character runs or as a reaction

Don't Say You Love the Anime If You Haven't Read the Manga

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About

Don’t Say You Love the Anime If You Haven’t Read the Manga is an image macro series in which pictures are jokingly depicted as anime and manga variations of each other, including religions, political ideologies and historical events.

Origin

On January 27th, 2017, Redditor ZherofyM8 posted an image macro featuring a Soviet Union flag next to the cover of the Communist Manifesto with the caption “Don’t say you love the anime / if you haven’t read the manga” to /r/FullCommunism[4] (shown below). Within two months, the post gained over 1,200 points (99% upvoted) and 50 comments.



Spread

The following day, Redditor Stanv13 submitted a version of the image with a map of the former Soviet Union juxtaposed next to the cover of the Communist Manifesto to /r/dankmemes[1] (shown below, left). Also on January 28th, 2017, Redditor MussolinisPasta posted a Bush Did 9/11-themed image macro to /r/dankmemes,[2] which garnered upwards of 930 points (95% upvoted) over the next two months.



The following day, the Museum of Internet Facebook[3] page posted a picture of The Last Supper painting labelled as an “anime” next to a photo of a Holy Bible labelled as a “manga” (shown below, left). On March 4th, Instagram[5] user @uncle.meme.head posted a Diary of a Wimpy Kid-themed image macro, which received upwards of 8,400 likes over the next three weeks.



Various Examples



Search Interest

Not available.

External References


I Had to Grind For This View

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About

I Had to Grind For This View refers to a series of images which grew popular in March of 2017 that show a person looking out over an expanse that has been photoshopped to be a landscape from a video game. The joke parodies social media posts where a person brags about how they had to work hard, or “grind,” to achieve success by using “grind” in the video game sense of the term,[1] meaning to achieve goals and boost stats by performing mundane tasks.

Origin

“I had to grind for this” is a popular phrase in social media posts in which a person is bragging about how their hard work led to their ability to lead a more expensive lifestyle (examples shown below).



On November 6th, 2016, Twitter user @RedAvea[2] parodied such posts by pairing the caption “I had to grind for this view” with two screenshots from a video game. Her tweet gained 8 retweets and 63 likes.



On March 17th, 2017, Instagram user mrgiveyogirlback[3] paired the caption with an image of a boy looking out over a landscape from Minecraft. This post, shown below, gained over 20,000 likes and inspired the spread of the meme.



Spread

The same day, mrgiveyogirlback’s post began appearing in copies on other social media feeds. On Twitter, user @FreeMemesKids[4] posted a version without credit and gained over 7,200 retweets. Instagram user Vicodins[5] reposted it in a post that gained over 48,000 likes. On the 18th, Redditor king_caleb177 posted the image to /r/dankmemes[6] where it gained over 20,000 points. The post began inspiring variations referencing various other memes, historical events, and pop culture references.

Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

[1]Urban Dictionary – Grind video game definition

[2]Twitter – @RedAvea

[3]Instagram – mrgivyogirlback post

[4]Twitter – @FreeMemesKids

[5]Instagram – vicodins

[6]Reddit – /r/dankmemes post

My Hands Look Like This

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About

My Hands Look Like This is an image macro series comparing the hands of a man and a woman, captioned with a confession that the man’s hands are dirty and worn in order to provide financial stability for the woman.

Origin

On August 17th, 2015, FunnyJunk[1] user professoraquard posted a photograph of a man’s dirty hand next to a clean woman’s hand, along with a paragraph explaining how he works hard to make his wife happy:



“I work daylight to dark. Bust my knuckles, my back and my butt. I hurt all day every day and take it to the max every second. When I feel like giving up, I just think about my wife and think about how this work is helping our household. There’s not a more important person in my life than her. My hands look like this, so hers can look like that.”

Spread

On January 5th, 2016, a photo of a dirt-covered man’s hand next to a manicured woman’s hand was uploaded to 9gag[3] with the caption “My hands look like this, so hers could look like that,” which gained more than 12,500 points and 780 comments over the next 14 months (shown below, left). On January 12th, Redditor LouisPillsHere submitted a screenshot of a similar social media post to /r/whiteknighting[4] (shown below, right).



On October 25th, the Garlic Bread Memes Facebook[6] page posted an image macro of a person holding a loaf of garlic bread (shown below, left). On November 27th, the @vaginarwhals[5] Instagram feed posted a picture of a hand peeling a tangerine next to a photo of a hand with stickers on the nails (shown below, right). Within four months, the post gathered upwards of 50,000 likes and 2,000 comments.



On January 15th, 2017, Twitter[2] user @shutyourhell posted photographs of chicken’s feet with the caption “his hands look like this so hers can look like this” (shown below, left). Within three months, the tweet gained over 1,000 likes and 430 retweets. On January 22nd, the @jimdidntcarrey Instagram feed posted a photograph of a man with breadstick hands next to a picture of hot dogs with finger nails, which gathered more than 57,000 likes over the next three months (shown below, right).



Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

Kirby's Human Feet

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About

Kirby’s Human Feet refers to a piece of fan art of the Nintendo character Kirby drawn taking off his classic pink shoes to show human feet. The art inspired disgust on social media, as well as media attention and more drawings of Kirby without shoes.

Origin

On March 17th, 2017, Twitter user @MarieBlue05[1] posted four images showing Kirby taking off his shoes to reveal human-like feet. The tweet gained over 4,700 retweets and 5,800 likes.



Spread

After a week of spreading slowly through Twitter, the tweet started gaining widespread attention after Kotaku[2] posted an article about it on March 23rd. Kotaku noted that the question of whether the pink items at the bottom of Kirby’s design were his shoes or feet since at least 2006, when an IGN[3] thread investigated the question. Paste[4] covered it the following day. Meanwhile, some Twitter users reacted to the viral drawing with disgust, while others began drawing their own fan art of Kirby with feet (shown below).



Various Examples







Search Interest

External References

LaVar Ball

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About

History

Reputation

#LavarBallSays

First Take Appearance

Search Interest

External References

Well Whadya Know

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[Work in progress]

About

“Well Whadya Know” is a line of dialogue from the film Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones. The phrase has been used online to sarcastically express surprise. It is frequently used in conjunction with screenshots from the film.

Origin

The phrase comes from a scene in _Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones. In the film, Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) visits the character Dex Jettser, owner of Dex’s Diner, for information on a poisoned dart.[1] Upon seeing the dart, Dex says, “Well, whadya know? I ain’t seen one of these since I was prospecting on Subterrel.”


The earliest known instance of the meme occurred on January 13th 2017, when Redditor A_Fancy_Lizard posted a TFW reaction image on the /r/PrequelMemes subreddit (shown below).[2] The post was made under the subject “Wow… whaddya know!”


Spread

On March 8th, 2017, two variations of the meme appeared on /r/PrequelMemes[3] and Instagram respectively. Again, under the subject “Wellllll whadya knoww” Redditor nighthawk8997 posted a variation on the meme, focusing on “well whadya know.” In 20 days, the post received more than 8,400 points (97% upvoted) and 175 comments. On the same day, Instagram[4] user @starwarsparody_501 posted the same image, also highlighting “well whadya know.” Within two weeks, the post had more than 2,500 likes.


External Links

[1]Wookieepedia – Dexter Jettster

[2]/r/PrequelMemes – Wow… whaddya know!

[3]/r/PrequelMemes – Wellllll whadya knoww

[4]Instagram – @starwarsparody_501

Anti-Barry

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It being based on the youtuber “Bullet Barry” all though it might seem we hate him this is not true we in fact love Barry and his videos. For the people who don’t know Bullet Barry does the videos talking about a wide range of topics. The most higher up members of Anti-Barry is Sweddy, CaptainEChan, ikeneeroy and Gametrain. Even spawning it’s own subreddit.

Send Me $5 and See What Happens

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Overview

Send Me $5 and See What Happens refers to a prank pulled by college student Maggie Archer in which she made her Tinder bio read “Send me $5 and see what happens.” Men then responded by sending her 5 dollars, at which point, she would un-match them.

Background

On March 22nd, 2017, Archer tweeted screenshots[1] of her scam in action, calling it “the best possible use for Tinder.” Her tweet gained 8,700 retweets and 21,000 likes (collage of the screenshots as posted on 4chan shown below).



Developments

Many on Twitter praised Archer’s scam as genius and attempted to imitate the prank.



The post went viral after Buzzfeed[2] posted about it on March 27th. After that, several other outlets covered Archer’s scam, including Men’s Health,[3] Refinery29,[4] ThoughtCatalog,[5] and more. One Reddit user CowsGiveUsMilk_[6] posted a thread to /r/Tinder chronicling his experience with a person attempting the same scam, gaining 613 upvotes (shown below).



Once Tinder became aware of the trending scam, it began banning users attempting it, as requesting money violates Tinder’s terms of service.[7]

Search Interest

Unavailable

External References


You Know What? I'm Just Gonna Say It

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About

You Know What? I’m Just Gonna Say It refers to a screenshot from a popular 2015 Vine video that resurfaced on Twitter in March of 2017 as a reaction image.

Origin

On June 28th, 2015, Andrew Proctor[1] posted a Vine of a high school kid threatening another with “You know what? I’m just gonna say it. I don’t care that you broke your elbow.” The Vine gained 111,900 likes, 61,700 revines and 49,600,000 loops (YouTube embed shown below).



Spread

In March of 2017, a screenshot of the kid in the video began circulating on Twitter as an image paired with people saying “You know what, I’m just gonna say it…” before proffering a potentially unpopular opinion. The first known post like this was posted by @pfharcyde on March 20th in reference to the television show Dancing With the Stars (shown below).



Over the course of the following week, dozens more variations of the meme appeared on Twitter, with people offering their unpopular opinion with the image while others twisted the format into a wholesome memes. On March 28th, the wave of jokes was covered by Twitter Moments.[2]

Various Examples



Search Interest

Unavailable

External References

Fake History Tweets

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About

Fake History Tweets are photoshopped screenshots of tweets made to appear as if they were predicting a disaster, terrorist attack or other tragic historical event, many of which are accompanied by the message “I’ve got a bad feeling about tomorrow, brothers.”

Origin

On May 15th, 2016, the A Wrestling Page That Doesn’t Treat Itself Too Seriously Facebook[5] page posted a photoshopped tweet attributed to wrestler Hulk Hogan with the message “I’ve got a bad feeling about tomorrow brothers” dated to one day prior to the September 11th, 2001 attacks (shown below). Within one year, the post received upwards of 4,400 shares, 1,900 reactions and 340 comments.



Spread

On March 27th, Redditor SoonyMoony reposted the fake Hulk Hogan tweet to /r/dankmemes,[4] where it gathered more than 2,400 points (96% upvoted) within 48 hours. That day, Redditor Theboss12312 submitted a similar photoshopped tweet attributed to George W. Bush to /r/dankmemes[1] (shown below).



On March 28th, Redditor Dwadjwaidj submitted a fake tweet by Columbine school shooter Eric Harris, referencing the date prior to the shooting along with the “Some of You Guys Are Alright” meme (shown below, left). That day, Redditor Kilo914 submitted a fake PewDiePie tweet screenshot with the message “These next 12 years are gonna be a blast, can’t wait,” with a fake date referencing the rise of Adolf Hitler (shown below, right). Within 24 hours, the post gained more than 4,000 points (94% upvoted) on /r/MemeEconomy.[3]



Also on March 28th, Redditor kysdude posted a fake tweet by the country “Japan”: , referencing the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima (shown below, left). (shown below, right). Within 24 hours, the image garnered more than 5,400 points (91% upvoted) and 70 comments on /r/MemeEconomy.[9]



Search Interest

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External References

Watched the new IT trailer

Pastor Maldonado crashes

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Pastor Maldonado – Venezuelan racer. Became popular for many crashes, caused by him. On 2007 he started racing on GP2 racing series and caused many accidents on a track. He became a meme when started to race on F1 on 2011 with Williams team, of 2011 season’s 19 races, he finished only 13 and scored 1 point. When he tryed to overtake others he caused a crash. On 2014 he came in Lotus team but still crashed too much. On 2015 from 19 races, he finished 9. When Renault buyed a Lotus team on 2016, he lost a sponsor and retired.

Flushed Away

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Flushed Away was a film made in 2006, made by Aardman, done in a CG/Stop motion style
it was made popular by the page ‘Flushed Away Slugposting’ on Facebook, with various memes spanning off its subject matter

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