Our common biography so far has been a display of fireworks, short-lived but intense. Our paths crossed at the 2017 Pelion Summer Lab, in a monastery in South Pelion. While sharing a background in Anthropology, what actually brought us together was our common interest in the how the regimes of truth are articulated in the public sphere today, in how social media affects modern knowledge production and dissemination, and in the role and responsibility of academics, and specifically anthropologists, to produce and mediate knowledge in this multi-fragmented, multimodal environment. In the Monastery of Pau we spent ten days of working and being creative together, in extreme heat and between intensive seminars. We also ate, drank, and cried laughing, so hoped we’d do it again. Here’s how we’ve been trying to give meaning to our lives in-between our Know-What-I-Meme projects: Joy Al-Nemri is a cultural anthropologist who earned a BA in Anthropology and has conducted research on Arabic-speaking refugees in both Greece and Connecticut. Nicholas - George Sykas is a social anthropologist applying for a PhD position and interested in affective labour, markets of affect and knowledge and the politics of entertainment. Panagiota (Penny) Paspali holds a BA degree in History and is currently writing her master’s thesis about Greek feminist movements’ interpretations of femicide, focusing her research on the affective dissemination of information on Facebook. Alexandros Papageorgiou has convinced some people that it’s a good idea to fund his research-to-become-thesis, in Social Anthropology, on the relationship between knowledge transfer and creation of hope in cooperative networks and specifically on the role of the ‘experts’ (knowledge brokers) mediating these processes.