You know you've made it as a meme when someone put a giant mural up ...
Josh Zubkoff did one on the Invisible Bike LOLcat in a building in San Francisco: Link - via MySA Blog Favorite office Time Wasters
John of The Zeray Gazette asks this interesting question: what causes an Internet meme? What gives some web sensation staying power?
What makes some video, idea, or motif a predominant meme? Why do people blog about bacon, zombies, and lolcats, but not so much about pork shoulder roast, mummies, and parakeets? Why does one guy mouthing the words to Numa Numa in front of his PC become famous, while almost all others who do likewise do not?
John went on to explain his theory, which includes penetrability (i.e. how a successful meme crosses niche web communities) and instantaneous comphrehensibility (how easily it can be grasped in under 10 seconds).
Actually, I can answer that question with one word: 4chan.
What do you think? Link
But almost all memes came from involuntary attemps at being funny... Whenever a forced meme (a meme specifically intended to be a meme) is created - and that happens a lot in 4chan - the creator is ridiculed and the said meme spirals into oblivion.
Who would've dreamed that the goofy I Can Has Cheezburger cat would get so popular?
I believe there is no magic recipe for the creation of a meme...
Kinda like the viral videos that once were funny but now that the marketing companies THINK they have our tastes figured they stretch the rope until it snaps and it feels like exploitation. Losing all humor in the process...
I've never been to 4chan, and will most likely never visit, but I like most of the stuff that makes it out.
It's a survival mechanism that has kept this species going, no matter how annoying it is.
@juri
You got to start somewhere, not everybody is a Michelangelo at a young age. Before you start making good pieces of work your bound to crank out a lot of ass.