‘My Favorite Catholic Lore’ Holy Water Facts Meme
Can anyone really make holy water, but only in exigent circumstances? And can you really make infinite amounts of holy water with a quantity loophole?
Can anyone really make holy water, but only in exigent circumstances? And can you really make infinite amounts of holy water with a quantity loophole?
A popular screenshot shared to Facebook by “The Other 98%” purportedly explained a concept known as the “velocity of money.”
A post to a Facebook group called “Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Dank Meme Stash” contained a purported Bible verse about the immorality of hoarding wealth and exploiting workers.
A touching anecdote about David Bowie’s purported kindness and care of a young person at a premiere of “Labyrinth” has been circulating since at least 2017.
A 1992 image of Madonna was digitally edited to look like Frida Kahlo alongside words lifted from young Mexican poet Estefanía Miter.
A viral “Boomers vs. Millennials” post claims that “I only made $6 an hour” is a flawed metric when comparing costs of living between generations.
A number of people on social media railed against “snowflakes” complaining about Mario’s “MAGA hat,” not realizing their ire was wasted on satire.
A meme popular across social platforms claimed that the fast food chain had lost its European Union Big Mac trademark, only to lose out to a rival corporation.
A reasonably accurate — if opinionated — story about a state vote controversy went viral in screenshot form.
Social media gave new life, on at least two separate occasions, to the story of a $14,000 mishap in Italy.