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Memes like "Bad Luck Brian" and "Disaster Girl" are selling for six figures as NFTs. Once nearly impossible to monetize, memes are in the midst of a gold rush.
In 2011, internet users captioned the meme “I Hate Sandcastles.” It initially suggested that the child in the photo had destroyed another kid’s sandcastle.
The Indiana Pacers guard shared a hilarious social media post after receiving his gold medal as part of Team USA. Haliburton likened himself to the kid in school who contributes nothing to a group ...
The mother of the kid from the iconic meme is threatening to sue Republican Representative Steve King for using her copyrighted image for his "disgusting" campaign.
Thank you!!” The “success kid” meme originated in 2007, when Laney Griner posted a photo of her then 11-month-old son Samuel to Flickr.
A photo of then 11-month-old Sammy Griner trying to eat sand on a Florida beach turned him into an internet sensation. The photo became known as the "Success Kid" meme.
The mom of "Success Kid," the empowered toddler who has become a popular meme, has sent a cease-and-desist letter to Republican U.S. Rep. Steve King of Iowa for alleged copyright infringement.