We gather newly rising and long-lasting memes. We don't judge — we show them as-is. The interpretation is up to you.
Drake's two-panel format: rejecting something in the top panel, approving something in the bottom panel.
A meme format contrasting a "Zoomer" wojak with a "Boomer" wojak to highlight generational differences in attitude or behavior.
"Tell me X without telling me X" is a participatory challenge format from 2020-2021 where people show evidence of something being true without stating it outright.
A meme pairing old photographs with the phrase "nobody wants to work anymore," mocking generational complaints about work ethic.
"POV: you're in X situation" — a TikTok/Reels format that places the viewer in the first-person perspective of a scenario.
A meme format of a man standing alone at a party thinking "they don't know I'm X," used for self-deprecating humor.
A photo of a car abruptly swerving off the highway onto an exit ramp, labeled to depict an impulsive last-second change of plans.
A meme about choosing to draw 25 cards in Uno rather than follow a simple rule, representing stubborn refusal to do something easy.
A labeling meme of someone losing their grip on a balloon (something good) because they got distracted by something else.
A 4-panel comic where a person giving a great idea in a boardroom meeting gets thrown out the window — punchline is an absurd final suggestion.
A Toy Story template of Buzz putting his arm around Woody saying "X, X everywhere" — used to point out that something is everywhere.
Two muscular forearms locking in a firm handshake, from the film Predator — a meme for two very different parties finding common ground.
A comic where a character finally unrolls a scroll containing 'the truth' after a long quest, reads it, says 'nope', and throws it away. Used when refusing to accept an unwanted truth.
A parody of Facebook's Safety Check feature, declaring oneself 'marked safe from' some mundane or absurd event. A joke format for surviving trivial situations.
From the Dos Equis beer ad, a suave gentleman saying 'I don't always X, but when I do, Y.' A widely used template for stating exceptions with flair.
Oprah Winfrey exuberantly giving away cars, shouting 'You get a car! You get a car! Everybody gets a car!' Used as a format for distributing something to everyone.
A 5-panel sequence from the reality show American Chopper showing a father and son pointing and shouting at each other. Used to depict an internal argument with oneself, step by step.
From The Office, Pam is asked to compare two photos and replies 'they're the same picture.' Used to mock two things presented as different that are actually identical.
A woman in bed worries her partner is thinking about other women, while he's actually thinking about something completely unrelated and mundane. A format contrasting assumed thoughts with the actual (absurd) ones.
A photo of Donald Trump holding up a signed document toward the camera. A labeling meme where the document's text is replaced with a joke caption.
A cartoon character pointing at an empty trophy case saying 'this is where I'd put my trophy if I had one.' A self-deprecating joke about lacking any real achievement.
A 4-panel exchange from Star Wars where Anakin makes a statement and Padme nervously asks 'that's not gonna be a thing, right?' met with silence. Used to express ominous, uncomfortable silence.
Yoda's signature inverted sentence structure from Star Wars. A format for mimicking wise-sounding statements through reversed word order.
A 3-panel comic where a man sticks a stick into his own bike wheel, falls, then blames someone else. Used to depict self-inflicted misfortune blamed on others.