Memes are a universal language of the internet. Not only do we share them to laugh, but also to communicate, criticize, and reflect on the current trends. Essentially, they speak of, or rather make a meme of what’s really buzzing right now: think of 2020 and 2021 memes, Squid Game memes, and Mike Pence’s fly on the head memes.
Some memes, on the other hand, refer to the things that most of us find very relatable. They identify a common experience, a feeling, and even an opinion. How come such personal things are so universal, you wonder? Well, we may not have the answers to the phenomenon, but we surely have a lot of hilarious memes of our daily lives in the hooman world to chuckle upon.
And thanks to the Instagram page “Is You Funny,” below is a whole collection of them to scroll through. According to the page’s description, it’s the “most relatable page on the gram,” and it seems like a whopping 2.7M followers would totally agree.
This post may include affiliate links.
For real though. I miss Tupac, he would've taken out this trash years ago.
Memes are a quintessential part of the internet culture. It’s where they’re born, where they spread and where they evolve. Seemingly fun and lighthearted, they create a culture of unspoken referential importance by using explicit cultural knowledge, which is a big deal of its own accord. Thanks to them, it seems like there’s never a dull moment online. Today the concept of a meme has evolved into elaborate structures that can come in many forms, like challenges, videos, viral sensations, GIFs, and images with accompanying captions.
I've seen this photo a bunch I laugh every time. However, I've never seen the "before" photo and it does not disappoint.
Look! F*ck off! I was there when Mr potato head, The pong TV console game, The Evel Knievel stunt bike and dragster, scalextric, Kerplunk, Action Man and Frustration were popular. The one toy that got confiscated and disappeared into oblivion was when I was 7 and had a great big chemistry set, which was fun because I made things with it that were not in the booklet and would be considered terrorism by today's standards. Chemistry sets these days are just not worth the hassle of opening your wallet
Tilt it to the left. Get the angle right, and you can drop the rings on the pins with no problems
Load More Replies...You can find it in the Flying Tiger shop, if you have one nearby.
Load More Replies...Hey Now, I still have the ones I bought for the kids, and! they still work, so there!
Older. Had already graduated high school and in my own flat when this came out.
I’m 14 and I played with those still do sometimes if I find one
The first time I saw one of these was in my orthodontist office and I was absolutely fascinated by it lol
Yes! My grandpa still has this game on his shelf in the hallway! It's the best. I can still feel what it's like to push the buttons.
I'm definitely this old. Considering buying some more of these soon, actually.
Sure am! We had a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles one! Sorry, I mean my big sister had one.
OK, a lot of you didn't beat this thing. You tilt it to the left-hand side slightly. It was more trial and error at that point. Eventually you would find the sweet spot and the water jet would drop the rings right on target
I got one of these this last Christmas it's gr at to play with at work when we're slow
I am old enough to have bought this for my children who are now adults.
I am old enough to remember getting this for Christmas non-ironically.
I had one where the button was a chicken and you had to get the chicks into the eggs.
i drank the water from one of these when i was a kid......it tasted......interesting....
....i drank the water from one of these when i was a kid...............it tasted.....interesting...
I don't know how old you think I am, but yeah. I grew up with these.
While standing at the register, a boy about 5/6 was looking at the small cylinder one. He was confused about it and asked his mom what it was. I looked down at him and said, that was your mom's gameboy was she was your age. Instead of batteries, it uses water. Mom was not amused
Was this an early 2000’s thing because I remember getting these in this restaurant called Antonio’s when I was little?
my childhood best friend had one of these in her toy closet, so yeah..
I remember frantically pushing the button trying to get the last ring on.
It shouldn’t come as a surprise that from a linguistic point of view, memes are incredibly sophisticated. In fact, meme creators use “multimodal grammar,” which refers to a post which has both images and captions, to express and share ideas and opinions. As soon as a meme lands on social networks, people start sharing it and add their own personal meanings to the content. That’s why there’s never a final nor single meaning of a particular meme.
That's clever, because anyone can understand it the way that comforts their own opinions.
The fact that internet memes, units of popular culture, constantly circulate, imitate and transform with the help of users, makes them so special. Limor Shifman, a scholar who specializes in the study of internet memes, believes that a meme is not a single idea or image which is spread across social sites, but a group of items that were created with awareness of each other. Think of the internet’s beloved Grumpy Cat meme. Shifman would say that it’s not the cat itself, but the whole set of memes generated with its image, which is the meme.
Dude forgot the eye patch, and the devil horns, and the ear rings, and the nose rings
On the other hand, with memes evolving so much in the past years, in some cases, they become vehicles for political messages, often used to spread aggressive or racist messages and to incite hatred. Emiliano De Cristofaro, an associate professor from UCL, has recently carried out the largest scientific study of memes to date, using a dataset of 160m images from various social networks.
“We showed how 'fringe' web communities associated with the alt-right movement, such as 4chan’s 'Politically Incorrect' board (/pol/) and Reddit’s 'The_Donald' are generating a wide variety of racist, hateful, and politically charged memes—and, crucially, spreading them to other parts of the internet,” De Cristofaro explained.
Remember when you wished you were all grown up so you could be free to do anything you'd like?
What De Cristofaro’s team found was that fringe social networks like /pol/ and Gab “share hateful and racist memes at an impressive rate, producing countless variants of antisemitic and pro-nazi memes.” Moreover, “memes like Pepe the Frog (and its variants) are often used in conjunction with other memes to incite hate or influence public opinion on world events, such as Brexit or the advance of Islamic State,” he said.
Moreover, the team at UCL found that, alarmingly, /pol/ was by far the most influential disseminator of memes, in terms of the raw number of images originating there. “In particular, it was more influential in spreading racist and political memes,” De Cristofaro said.
Just like with any other content on the internet, so with memes, users have to be aware of what kind of content they engage in, share and react to. While having a laugh at relatable memes like these ones in the post can indeed make your day brighter, encountering hateful memes is a whole other thing that’d better be reported.
Ok who took a peek into my life and exposed it in this very pithy meme
Also your phone when your partner across the room says they want to buy something
As soon as you put in that piece you turn into a raging tax evading a$$hole that would rather burn money trying to fly real high than pay their employees a living wage.
And then it becomes breakdance, salsa, work, salsa, breakdance, NEXT SONG
Come on, anyone can look good with her resources, make-up artist, cosmetic surgery and wardrobe. Bernie is just a normal ass guy.
I guess all kids enjoy both, just choose the appropriate moment to do one or the other.
Note: this post originally had 120 images. It’s been shortened to the top 50 images based on user votes.
It appears that my entire day can be described via a series of memes.
It appears that my entire day can be described via a series of memes.