The beloved animated series makes it's return to pop culture, for new and old fans to enjoy. However, not to the small screen ...
A notorious '90s anime pushes violence, profanity, and absurdity to the extreme, making even R-rated entertainment seem tame.
The British Film Institute is preserving 430 viral videos and memes, including Charlie bit my finger, Badgers, and the Liz ...
If you were to travel back in time to 1996 with a 2TB thumb drive, you’d be able to fit the entire World Wide Web on it. All that’s on top of the Archive’s vast collection of other digital resources, ...
The Internet Archive has been responsible for saving and providing access to trillions of websites over the past 30 years. AI is putting a damper on the organization’s work, as large language models ...
As part of its mission to preserve the web, the Internet Archive operates crawlers that capture webpage snapshots. Many of these snapshots are accessible through its public-facing tool, the Wayback ...
The internet has produced some truly unhinged animations and this video proves it. From strange characters to logic that makes zero sense, every clip feels slightly illegal. You will laugh, question ...
The “Friangle” phenomenon began when a single low-angle sketch of Frieren, the elven mage protagonist of the fantasy anime Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, streaming on Crunchyroll, hit social media ...
Just blocks from the Presidio of San Francisco, the national park at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge, stands a gleaming white building, its façade adorned with eight striking gothic columns. But ...
Last month, the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine archived its trillionth webpage, and the nonprofit invited its more than 1,200 library partners and 800,000 daily users to join a celebration of the ...
Uh-oh, Internet! A new report from Nieman Lab (via Gizmodo) reveals that there was a steep decline in snapshots collected by the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine beginning in May of this year. Of ...
For the first time in nearly two decades, prepare to have your minds blown out of your butts yet again. Starting in 1977, Craig "Spike" Decker and Mike Gribble introduced Spike and Mike's Festival of ...