MakeIt Meme is a funny game where you create and score memes with your friends or real players online. Simply create or join a lobby and wait for other players to join. Once the game starts, each player gets a random meme and has to come up with a funny caption within the given time. Every player then has 15 seconds to rate these meme creations. Finally, the meme that gets the most points wins the round. There are 3 game modes to choose from: Normal, Same Meme, and Relaxed. Pick the mode that you are the best at and show everyone your funny side! Don't forget to download your favorite memes and share them with your buddies!
Click using the left mouse button or tap using your finger to select a text field and type in your captions. When it's your turn to vote, use the red button to upvote, the blue button to downvote, or the "Meh" button to not give a score.
Groove Battle or Dancing Stickman is a viral video originally created by YouTuber Cyranek that uses the stickman from oh yeah woo yeah on YouTube and other platforms. From there, it primarily was used as a surprise bait-and-switch punchline featuring the audio from the Tom Morello Guitar Battle meme when the stick figure begins dancing.
On August 23rd, 2019, YouTuber Cyranek[1] uploaded a video called "Groove Battle" to YouTube, featuring two dancing stickmen while the Tom Morello Guitar Battle theme played in the background, helping to popularize that audio as a meme itself. The video went go on to gain over 7.2 million views in three years, with YouTube analytics showing the first seven seconds are the "most replayed" part of it (shown below).
The stickmen in question come from an example of a Bronze Age rock art, also known as a Petroglyph, from Tanum, Sweden[4]. While the image was likely created between 1800-500 BC, the entitled "Petroglyph Group Nordic Bronze Age" comes from Wikipedia,[5] which was "self-made" by Wikipedia user Lidingo and uploaded on March 16th, 2008 (shown below).
After being in low usage for roughly three years, the stick figures and dancing suddenly had a reemergence in June 2022. For example, on June 6th, 2022, the Chinese YouTube account 鉴无虚发[2] uploaded a meme in which the dancing stick figures were added to a video about doing the morally correct thing, which was intended to show someone that being greedy does not go well, which went on to get over 4.2 million views in four months (shown below).
While many more of those videos would be posted during June 2022, the actual stickman himself started to see inclusion in static memes as a visual element apart from Groove Battle variants. This can be seen in the Chainsaw Man meme uploaded to Twitter by the artist @giganticbuddha[3] on August 28th, 2022, in which the stickman is used as a fake Jordan's logo (shown below).
It's a free online image maker that lets you add custom resizable text, images, and much more to templates.People often use the generator to customize established memes,such as those found in Imgflip's collection of Meme Templates.However, you can also upload your own templates or start from scratch with empty templates.
Yes! The Meme Generator is a flexible tool for many purposes. By uploading custom images and usingall the customizations, you can design many creative works includingposters, banners, advertisements, and other custom graphics.
Yes! Animated meme templates will show up when you search in the Meme Generator above (try "party parrot").If you don't find the meme you want, browse all the GIF Templates or uploadand save your own animated template using the GIF Maker.
The images first started appearing on timelines late last year, but have surged in popularity in January, thanks to a dedicated Facebook page simply called "Be like Bill" - which has gained more than 1.25 million likes.
Bill was created by Eugeniu Croitoru, a 23-year-old Moldovan meme-creator, who enlisted Debabrata Nath to help run the Facebook page, which has a constant stream of content covering everything from trolling to gym selfies.
But despite the number of anti-Bill Tweets, the meme's success is such that - quite independently of its creator - foreign variations of the page have begun to spring up on Facebook. Versions of Be like Bill in Spanish, Arabic and Malay have appeared on the site - many targeting political issues as well as online etiquette - and each boasting their own burgeoning following on the site.
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