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Tag: #Funny

Belly Conklin: Belly turns pretty one summer and the boys start giving her that look 👀👀
Bill Gates: Bill Gates really can dance and even jump over chairs!
Bob Knight: Bob Knight feels like throwing a chair
Oleksandr Usyk: Boxer Oleksandr Usyk feels ready to fight Fury with this walkout!
Bubbles: Bubbles makes the big monster go away with her unique bubbly charm 🫧🫧
Doctor Strange: Doctor Strange's name is confusing – but who are we to judge 🤷
Dom Toretto: Dom is a little late to the fight when he meets BRIAN a.k.a. the cop
Ed Bassmaster: Do you think the poor guy ever got a chance to look at it?
El Chombo: Can anyone on planet Earth understand what these song lyrics mean?
Happy Gilmore: Happy Gilmore and Shooter McGavin are back at it, and working together this time
Happy Gilmore: Happy Gilmore and Bad Bunny are working together like their lives depend on it
Homer Simpson: Homer Simpson hides his panhandling from Marge via avoidance
Laurie Bream: Venture capitalist wants you to know that you can sit down IF YOU WANT TO
Mister Terrific: Mister Terrific tells Lois Lane "Yeah, lady, I'm not into peoples' emotions"
Mister Terrific: Mister Terrific corrects Lois Lane: "They're not circles. Circles are flat"
Mister Terrific: Mister Terrific walking feels like he's a man on a mission
Oleksandr Usyk: Boxer answers "I'm feel" after becoming world champion
Oscar Mejías: Bad Bunny as Happy Gilmore's golf caddie is terribly funny when he daydreams about bears
Psy: What you didn't know about Psy's hit single Gangnam Style
Snoop Dogg: Snoop Dogg thanks himself for getting Hollywood Walk Of Fame star
Taylor Swift: Even loyal Taylor Swift fans missed something in 'Shake it Off'

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Ultra Low

0–5% percentile
An ultra low attribute score is exceptionally rare because it represents 5% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with an ultra low attribute score would be lower than 95 of them and higher than none of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Very Low

5–10% percentile
A very low attribute score is rare because it represents 5% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with a very low attribute score would be higher than five of them and lower than 90 of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Low

10–20% percentile
A low attribute score is somewhat uncommon and represents 10% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with a low attribute score would be higher than ten of them and lower than 80 of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Slightly Low

20–40% percentile
A slightly low attribute score is common and represents 20% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with a slightly low attribute score would be higher than 20 of them and lower than 60 of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Average

40–60% percentile
An average attribute score is typical and represents 20% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with an average attribute score would be higher than 40 of them and lower than 40 of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Slightly High

60–80% percentile
A slightly high attribute score is common and represents 20% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with a slightly high attribute score would be higher than 60 of them and lower than 20 of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

High

80–90% percentile
A high attribute score is somewhat uncommon and represents 10% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with a high attribute score would be higher than 80 of them and lower than 10 of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Very High

90–95% percentile
A very high attribute score is rare because it represents 5% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with a very high attribute score would be higher than 90 of them and lower than five of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.

Ultra High

95–100% percentile
An ultra high attribute score is exceptionally rare because it represents 5% of the entire population. In a room with 100 other people, a person with an ultra high attribute score would be higher than 95 of them and lower than none of them.
Note: Feels uses a 9-point scoring scale that ranges from Ultra Low to Ultra High according to a normal distribution. See our methodology.