List of Internet phenomena

For people who have achieved fame through the Internet, see Internet celebrity.

This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.

This is a partial list of social and cultural phenomena specific to the Internet, such as popular themes, catchphrases, images, viral videos, and jokes. When such fads and sensations occur online, they tend to grow rapidly and become more widespread because the instant communication facilitates word of mouth.

Advertising

Animation and comics

Evan and Gregg Spiridellis, founders of JibJab
The adult brony fans of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic grew from its 4chan roots
xkcd's "Wikipedian Protestor" comic

Challenges

A person doing the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge
A hand after doing the Salt and ice challenge

Challenges listed below generally feature Internet users recording themselves doing the challenge and then distributing the resulting video through social media sites, often inspiring or daring other users to repeat the challenge.

Email

See also: Virus hoax and Chain-letter

Film

Gaming

"The cake is a lie", based on the false promise of a Black Forest cake as a reward, is popularized from the video game series Portal.
Actor Kevin Bacon is the centerpiece of the game Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon.

Images

U.S. President Barack Obama jokingly mimics the "McKayla is not impressed" expression in the Oval Office, November 2012.

Music

Gary Brolsma, aka "The Numa Numa Guy"
Psy's "Gangnam Style" video has been the most-watched video on YouTube as of November 2012.
The band OK Go in their first viral video "Here It Goes Again".

Videos

Two screenshots from before and after the drop in a Harlem Shake video.
An example of the anime-style moe images of Natalia Poklonskaya following her press conference
Amber Lee Ettinger, a.k.a. "Obama Girl"
A Rick Astley impersonator rickrolling a basketball game
YouTube musicians from Lisa Lavie's online collaboration video "We Are the World 25 for Haiti (YouTube Edition)" met on the same stage for a live reunion performance ten months later in Washington, D.C.[315][316]

Other phenomena

The paperclip that Kyle MacDonald converted into a house, after 14 trade-ups.

See also

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