25 Classic Memes from the Internet’s Back Pocket

Phil

23 hours ago

Classic meme compilation: A collage featuring the "Nintendo Switch 2 Fish Button" leak, a potato masher jamming a kitchen drawer, and Lalo Salamanca smiling menacingly at an airport.

Classic memes are where the internet stores its best bad ideas, neatly labeled, for later use. This batch runs on viral tweets, vintage memes, and relatable memes that alternate between domestic irritation and the kind of absurdity you can only learn by living online.

A dark humor classic meme featuring Lalo Salamanca from Better Call Saul smiling menacingly at an unaware traveler at an airport gate, captioned "eyeing up his next victim."
A hilarious old meme Reddit screenshot asking the oddly specific political question: "If it came to light that Joe Biden wrote SpongeBob fan fiction while in office, how would people respond?"
A dark humor classic meme showing colorful 90s-style sand art in bottles, accompanied by a text message request to a mortician: "Please do this with my remains."
A nostalgic old meme settling the deep dish vs. thin crust debate by declaring that "Cartoons have the best pizza," showing the impossibly cheesy slices from A Goofy Movie, TMNT, and All Dogs Go to Heaven.
A relatable classic meme advising students to "choose a major you love," only to deliver the crushing punchline: "you'll never work a day in your life bc that field isn't hiring."
A bizarre old meme featuring a fake vintage horror paperback titled "The Room Where Dracula Sucks His Own Dick," parodying the aesthetic of 70s pulp fiction.
A chaotic classic meme thread defining the "worldwide Latino belt," accompanied by a wild story about a Spanish student defending his heritage with a "toilet tank lid."
An absurdist old meme mocking tech leaks, claiming the "Nintendo Switch 2" will disappoint fans by not including a large "FISH" button that does absolutely nothing.
A wholesome classic meme tweet documenting a lifelong obsession, listing the user's status at ages 7, 11, 14, 17, and 19 as simply "been getting into Star Wars lately."
A romantic old meme proposing a date in the "accordion part of the bus," describing the bendy section's seats as "the most magical place in the universe."
A socially anxious classic meme using a Lego figure with a simple smiley face to represent the awkwardness of accidentally saying "Thanks" when someone compliments the weather.
A satisfying old meme photo of a sandwich with a jagged bite taken out, captioned "Peep this bite I just set myself up for," celebrating the perfect ratio of ingredients.
A rage-inducing classic meme about kitchen organization, showing a potato masher threatening "The fuck you will" when the user attempts to open a jammed drawer.
A classic meme tweet where a husband realizes he has been committing a relationship crime for 8 years by throwing away his wife's bobby pins found on the floor.
A dark humor old meme tweet joking about treating "slight inconveniences" with "substance abuse" as a rational coping mechanism.
A relatable classic meme tweet stating a strict boundary: "if you call me and you're talking to people in the background i'm hanging up."
A bizarre architectural classic meme showing a seemingly normal closet that is revealed in a second photo to be a terrifying, unusable 25-foot deep shaft.
A funny old meme factoid revealing that the reality show Jersey Shore is delightfully translated in Japan as "Macaroni Rascals."
A nostalgic classic meme photo roasting the early 2000s X-Men cast for attending a premiere dressed for five completely different events, from beachwear to black tie.
A literary classic meme praising Hunger Games author Suzanne Collins for writing a hit trilogy and then "vanishing" with her money instead of ruining her legacy with weird tweets.

Somewhere in these classic memes is the full range of modern feeling. Dark humor shows up first, smiling politely, like it knows your flight number. The internet has always had a gift for turning dread into a punchline, then daring you to laugh in public. That’s why these vintage memes travel. Not because they’re “nice,” but because they’re accurate in a way your face can’t admit at work.

Then you get the small, ordinary rage. A kitchen drawer that becomes a moral test. A pile of tiny objects you thought were trash but were, apparently, a relationship treaty. A phone call ruined by background noise, which is the audio version of stepping on wet socks. Relatable memes don’t need big stakes. They just need the exact wrong detail, perfectly placed.

And woven through it all is pop culture as a shared filing cabinet. Nostalgia for fictional food that looks better than anything real. A fake leak that reveals what we actually want from technology: nonsense, novelty, and a button that does nothing but makes us feel seen. Even the little translation oddities hit the same nerve. The world is large, and somehow the joke still fits.

The funniest part, honestly, is how quickly the internet turns sincerity into a running bit. Someone spends years being “lately” into something, forever. Someone proposes romance in a place nobody would ever call romantic, and it still works because the pitch is honest. Someone makes a social error so small it should evaporate, and instead it becomes a permanent internal mural. Viral tweets don’t just document our lives. They preserve the aftertaste.

If you want to keep wandering through this specific museum wing of classic memes, try 35 Cursed Images That Ruin Your Day, 35 Pop Culture Throwbacks We’ll Never Heal From, and 39 Book Memes That Feel Like Accidental Literature.

Phil M. catalogs the internet’s strangest truths, mostly to prove they happened.

Phil M., Co‑Founder & Content Strategist Phil is one of Thunder Dungeon’s co‑founders, doubling as our resident meme analyst and dark‑room brainstormer. He specializes in trend‑spotting across social platforms and shapes the editorial calendar to keep our galleries fresh, topical, and worthy of your valuable procrastination.

Read Memes

Get Paid

The only newsletter that pays you to read it.

A daily recap of the trending memes and every week one of our subscribers gets paid. It’s that easy and it could be you.