07/16/2009

The definitive list of meme-blogs

“Meme-blogs” are a growing internet trend, making up some of the highest trafficked sites on the web. Each meme accumulates tons of submissions, becoming a wealth of humor and curiosity. Some become books, and some get on tv, but they are all born on the internet.

I define a meme-blog as a stream of user-submitted content around a certain theme. Sure there are more than what’s on this list, but these are the original and best. So sit back and get your meme on. Here they are in two lists: Photo/video memes and text memes.

Plus, don’t miss the definitive twitter list of meme-blogs!

UPDATE: I made this list into its own site that YOU can contribute to! Check it out- memeblogs.com

Photo/Video memes:

  1. Accidental Dong – Please don’t let this first entry set the tone for this list.
  2. Animals With Casts – Cute porn.
  3. Average Cats – The reverse of Lolcats.
  4. Awkward Family Photos – Featured on the Today Show.
    family-tree-lr-b
  5. Cake Wrecks – Has amassed quite a following on twitter.
  6. The Celebrations Game – Real wedding and engagement announcements.
  7. Engrish – Hilarious mis-translations from Asia.
  8. The FAIL Blog– Joy gained from failure.
    snakefacefail
  9. Fail Dogs – Excellent canine spin-off of Lolcats
  10. Faces in Places – Found faces.
  11. Fancy Fast Food – Fast food disguised with a gourmet presentation.
  12. Fuck Yeah 4Chan – A meme of memes. Draws off of 4chan.org.
  13. Historical Tweets – If Historical figures had twitter.
    historicaltweet-tubman
  14. Lamebook – Facebook fails.
  15. Lolcats – Creators of “lolspeak”, always good for a smile.
  16. Lower-case L – Perhaps we will never know why people write like this.
  17. Look at This Fucking Hipster – Photos of especially obnoxious hipsters.
  18. Men Who Look Like Old Lesbians – yep.
  19. Passive-Aggressive Notes – Veteran of the memeblogs.
  20. People of Walmart – It was only a matter of time.
  21. Picture is Unrelated – WTF pictures.
  22. Photoshop Disasters – How did these mistakes not get caught?
  23. Play Him Off, Keyboard Cat – The meme that got featured on the Colbert Report, and even has a T-shirt dedicated to it.
  24. Post Secret – Grey’s Anatomy caliber drama on a postcard.
  25. Probably Bad News – You can always count on local news to screw up.
  26. Sexy People – Old photos of people that are not sexy.
  27. Skull-A-Day – Has gotten tons of press, and has featured my skull!
  28. Sleeveface – People completing the record album sleeve art with their own bodies.
  29. So Fucking Metal – If you get in this blog, you are so fucking metal.
  30. Sorry I Missed Your Party – Sometimes NSFW (you’ve been warned!) photos found on flickr of people’s parties.
  31. Sturgeonface – Can you make the sturgeon face?
  32. SUCCEED Blog – As you may Fail, so may you also succeed.
  33. There, I Fixed it – “Epic kludges, jury rigs”
  34. Things Marketing People Love – I am among these people, and these things are true.
  35. This is Photobomb – Greatest photobombs (NSFW)
  36. This is Why You’re Fat – “Where dreams become heart attacks”.
    i2dw5nf19joscfebgzITL5Syo1_500
  37. Totally Looks Like… – Characters, people and things that look strikingly similar.
  38. Unnecessary Quotation Marks – Pics of “just” that
  39. We Have Lasers!!!!!!!!!! – Portraits with the awesome laser backdrop.
  40. Why the Fuck do You Have a Kid? – “Why not, right?”

Text Memes:

  1. Dear Old Love – I bet you can guess.
  2. F My Life, Gives Me Hope, My Life is Average – Family of memes.
  3. Not Hired – Hilarious pleas for employment.
  4. Oh Crap, My Parents Joined Facebook – Priceless snippets.
  5. Overheard in New York – Apparently, New Yorkers are all assholes.
  6. Texts From Last Night – I hope they aren’t all real.
  7. You Suck at Craigslist and Jerks In Your Area – Craigslist excerpts.

I will update this list regularly, but chances are a more up-to-date list will be the tag memeblog on my delicious. If you have a suggestion for this list, please comment them, or tweet me.

29 comments:

  1. Don’t read this if you’re unemployed | Brokelyn writes:

    […] there were blogs about cute animals with casts and unnecessary quotation marks? See the full list here. A fun one not on the list: Stuff Unemployed People Like (yeah #122: getting new emails even if […]

  2. Christine writes:

    Don’t forget livingwithmyparents.com!

  3. Jo writes:

    And this wedding one “The Celebrations Game” It features the Best of the Worst newspaper wedding and engagement announcements. They’ve got mullets, half-staches, inappropriate touching and couples who aren’t the least bit happy about this milestone event in their lives. You can follow them on Twitter: @CelebrationGame

  4. Jo writes:

    That is, “http://thecelebrationsgame.wordpress.com”

  5. Work Sucks! – The Drunch writes:

    […] inorganik 2.0 | The definitive list of meme-blogs. Share and Enjoy: […]

  6. A day of blogful procrastination. « Kiki Brown Bear writes:

    […] in Uncategorized by Kiki Brown on July 20, 2009 A few days ago inorganik released a list of the best meme blogs. Most of them I’ve been familiar with, but some were just a great find. I don’t know […]

  7. Tricia writes:

    You should also add http://www.dontevenreply.com. This is even better than You Suck At Craigslist!

  8. Diana writes:

    You should put http://www.tackyweddings.com on the list, it’s my favorite!

  9. A. writes:

    You need the nom meme up there http://www.omnomnomnom.com/

  10. Katie Perkins writes:

    you find such awesome sites! all my roommates and i were looking at them for at least an hour last night!

  11. Katie Perkins writes:

    check out this one bro! girl at the hookah bar showed it to me after i told her about this blog entry.
    http://crappytaxidermy.com/

  12. Katie Perkins writes:

    i should warn you, it’s a bit disrespectful. to animals, i mean.

  13. mystic_eye_cda writes:

    http://itemnotasdescribed.com/
    Items offered for “free” on craigslist or similar that are:
    a) Can’t be moved
    b) Actually garbage
    c) You would normally have to pay hundreds of dollars to get removed (ie you have have the shutters off my house if you come and take them down)
    d) are completely insane (guy offers to show women the best “tricks” for shaving their pubic area)

    etc

  14. Chris writes:

    One of the newer meme sites…pretty good.

    typicalcollegelife.com

  15. inorganik 2.0 | PostSecret video confessions writes:

    […] know the popular meme-blog, PostSecret? It’s one of the originals, you can find it on my definitive list, a popular post I made of all the best meme-blogs. Well they rolled out a video series. It’s […]

  16. Megan writes:

    I love this list, thanks for posting.

    I wanted to add: http://notalwaysright.com and http://www.fupenguin.com

  17. Dave writes:

    I can’t believe you forgot http://www.deletetweet.com!

    and LOL x 100 at ‘so fucking metal’. I had never seen that one before.

  18. Simpsons writes:

    How about http://www.bottledsecrets.com

    Kinda new but seems to be picking up. Thought some of the stuff on there was worthwhile.

  19. Nancy López writes:

    The Internet Meme Data Base can be found at Know Your Meme: http://knowyourmeme.com/
    They have all the classic memes plus the newest memes.

  20. FC writes:

    Another new funny site is http://quefunny.com/. It’s like the spanglish version of engrish.com.

  21. Willy writes:

    http://lolatme.com should also be in there!

  22. Steve writes:

    http://textfails.com
    Funny and embarrassing texts and SMS messages.

  23. graceanna writes:

    that snail photo is so horrible!

  24. John writes:

    Centered around people sharing stories of the bad things they do and laughing about it. Kick ass.

  25. John writes:

    Messed that up.
    http://www.neverashamed.com

  26. Memepunk42 writes:

    Check it out..

  27. SD writes:

    I am confused. What do you call a blog that uses book memes (self created) to talk about books ? Does that come under the category of a meme blog ??

    booksandalotmore.wordpress.com

What?!?! Make a comment.






Albums you should check out.
Boy Kid Cloud

boy-kid-cloud

Stunningly original, multi-genre, unclassifiable excellent electronic music. All the EP’s are good, but I can’t get “Keep Hold” from “A Better Version of Me” out of my head.

found in April, 2014

C2C ~ Tetra

tetra

C2C seems to have come out of nowhere but it’s the group name of 4 accomplished French DJ’s. C2C is the rare combo of easily-digestible radio-friendly electronica that still has enough complexity to have a long shelf-life. With a different vocalist on nearly every track and plenty of soulful samples, this album is diverse and energetic. Highly recommended.

found in May, 2013

Obsessed with Little Dragon

ritualUnion

machineDreams

I’m way late to the Little Dragon party, even though I raved about the lead singer Yukimi Nagano’s appearance on the Gorillaz 2010 track “Empire Ants”. But even after I fell in love with the Calyx and Teebee remix of Little Man, I still didn’t check them out. Finally I got my hands on several albums, Machine Dreams and Ritual Union. Initially not wowed, these albums languished in my iTunes library for several weeks before I finally started to warm up to them. The hooks are subtle, but they’re there. And once you’re hooked, you’re hooked for good.

found in February, 2013

CSS ~ La Liberacion

La Liberacion

La Liberacion may be a pop album, but CSS is and always will be strikingly original. For this most recent release, CSS’ sound has been carefully produced and mastered, and seems poised for radio play. As a radio-hater myself, I don’t know what exactly radio producers deem worthy of airtime, but I know what I like, and this album I definitely like.

The same simple hooks that made the Violent Femmes a permanent fixture in pop culture are what you’ll find in La Liberacion, but with a very endearing punk edge and eurotrash beat. There are plenty of hits, but among my favorites are Echo of Love, Red Alert and Hits Me Like a Rock.

found in September, 2011

Kraak & Smaak ~ Discography

Kraak & Smaak - Boogie Angst

Kraak & Smaak - Plastic People

Kraak & Smaak - Electric Hustle

Recently stepping into Spotify, a friend told me to check out Kraak & Smaak. It instantly agreed with me, and the more I listened, the more I liked. After several weeks of listening on Spotify and enduring the most annoying ads ever (there’s no such thing as hiring voice talent at Spotify), I decided to buy the whole damn discography. Every single album is a straight-through listen, without skipping tracks.

The trio from the Netherlands blends funk, jazz, electro and house beats into a weird electronic amalgam that’s delightful, and always changing. There’s some hip hop, big beat, meringue and more mixed in. Since I’ve discovered them, I’ve become a Kraak & Smaak evangelist. What are you waiting for, you could be listening to Kraak & Smaak right now.

found in August, 2011

See all found music »
Not necessarily recently written.
Steve Jobs ~ Walter Isaacson

The Steve Jobs book was more than a biography, it was a story. From a bare-foot acid-dropping kid to Tech mogul. From abandoned child to abandoning father. From getting ousted from Apple to becoming Apple’s savior.

For me it was just as interesting to see the inception of silicon valley’s most behemoth companies – Apple only one of them – start from such humble beginnings, and cross paths so many times. But history aside, it was like watching a hero save the day over and over again in the book when Jobs would come in as say something like, “Fuck this, let’s show them what a tablet can really be” – then turn everything around, and get everything right.

Steve Jobs led a life in relentless pursuit of creating the best products, and defined himself and his company as being at the intersection of technology and liberal arts. He was never a philanthopist, but he spawned new industries and made a dent in the universe. Anyone, whether a fan-boy or not would enjoy this book. And like any good Steve Jobs story, it’s got an “oh, and one more thing” at the end.

finished in May, 2012

Fall of Giants ~ Ken Follet

Fall of Giants

I learned more about world history reading Fall of Giants than I can remember from school. In fact, I don’t think there’s a better way to learn history than to read historical fiction.

This book follows characters from around the globe and through their varied perspectives, traces world history from 1913, to 1923, including World War I from start to finish, womens’ suffrage in Britain, and the Bolshevik revolution in Russia. In true Ken Follett fashion, the book is soaked with love affairs, which helps bring the history to life.

The overall theme of the book is the rise of the working class, and the fall of wealthy aristocrats. It’s one thing to look at history, and see all that’s changed. But it’s another to see how it affected people, from the poorest to the richest, and it gave me chills on more than one occasion. It’s amazing how far the human race has come in a short 100 years.

finished in March, 2011

Survivor ~ Chuck Palahniuk

Survivor is one of those books that is nothing you expected. Palahniuk uses a unique writing style that delivers deadpan humor and heavy satire. Dark themes like suicide and death are explored. It can be a little depressing at times, but you can’t help but be drawn in by all of the unexpected events that occur in the book.

Told in first-person, this is the story of a survivor of a suicidal religious cult. Cared for by a government program, the protaganist, Tender Branson is placed in a job, and provided a new life. Life goes on uneventfully, until he meets Fertility Hollis. From there, nothing and everything go as planned, in a tragic story saturated with symbolism and rife with satire of modern American life.

finished in June, 2010

In Defense of Food ~ Michael Pollan

InDefenseOfFood

I’ve been a fan of Michael Pollan ever since I heard him interviewed by Terry Gross on NPR some years back. They talked about his book, The Omnivore’s Dilemma, which brought to light many things I had never considered about food, and encouraged us to foster a better relationship with the food we eat.

2007’s In Defense of Food goes a step further, exploring what food to eat. It’s a question a whole industry has sprung up to answer. But IDoF raises questions about food most of us have never considered.

For instance, the degree to which our government influences what we eat. One example of this are government subsidies that make corn and soy cheaper to buy than they are to produce- which floods the market with cheap corn syrup and soybean oil. This enables highly processed, unhealthy food to be cheaper than fruits and vegetables.

Pollan singles out the “Western diet” as a cause for most of the maladies that are unique to the western world- diabetes, cancer, obesity, hypertension, and stroke. He points to those cheap sugars and fats lacking in nutrition as the cause-

A diet based on quantity rather than quality has ushered a new creature onto the world stage: the human being who manages to be both overfed and undernourished, two characteristics seldom found in the same body in the long natural history of our species.

And the thing is, it all makes very good sense. Without summarizing the book, Pollan makes a case for the importance of foods as a whole, rather than the nutrients we generally value them for, and a case against the nutrient injected processed foods that dominate an American diet.

He finishes with no hard rules for what to eat but some very good rules of thumb such as, “Shake the hand that feeds you” and “Pay more, eat less”. Pollan points out that in 1960, Americans spent 17.5% of their income on food and 5.2% on health care. Today we spend about 10% on food and 16% on health care. What does this say about the quality of food we’re eating?

In all, In Defense of Food is an excellent evaluation of how we eat as Americans, and how we should eat. Look for Pollan’s next book, Food Rules in January.

finished in December, 2009

The Art of War ~ Sun Tzu

The Art of War

The Art of War has been adapted to all sorts of training and self-help books, but the original is quite literally a guide to conducting war… in Asia, circa 6th century B.C.E. The book consists by and large of clearly stated guidelines for war. There are many simple statements like this:

When the common soldiers are too strong and their officers too weak, the result is insubordination. When the officers are too strong and the common soldiers too weak, the result is collapse.

And there are more conceptual principles such as this:

Do not interfere with an army that is returning home because a man whose heart is set on returning home will fight to the death against any attempt to bar his way, and is therefore too dangerous and opponent to be tackled.

When you surround an army, leave an outlet free. This does not mean that the enemy is allowed to escape. The object is to make him believe that there is a road to safety, and thus prevent his fighting with the courage of dispair.

I believe these principles transcend the scope of just ancient warfare. Many of the principles in the book appear simple and obvious, but upon examination of the United State’s war history, you have to wonder if some of these principles weren’t ingored, how our history may have been changed.

finished in November, 2009

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