Well, not yet, but it will be soon. Twitter, which owns the short-form video app, announced Thursday that Vine will be discontinued in the coming months.
For the sports world, it's the end of an era. Here are some of the best hockey Vines over the past three years. Never forget.
Ottawa Senators goaltender Craig Anderson will miss an undetermined amount of time to tend to a personal matter, and in turn, the club has recalled netminder Chris Driedger from the AHL, the team announced Thursday.
"With the support of the entire organization, we've provided Craig with a leave of absence so that he can attend to a personal matter at home," general manager Pierre Dorion said. "While we are uncertain of how long Craig may be away, he will continue to have our support for as much time as is needed."
Driedger, 22, started two games for the Binghamton Senators this season, posting a 0.96 goals-against average and .961 save percentage.
The forward's on injured reserve with a lower-body injury, and head coach Paul Maurice said Thursday the club is "shooting for the end of November" for his return to the lineup.
Little was hurt 2:48 into the Jets' first game of the season. He had already recorded an assist.
Winnipeg's opened the season with two wins in six games.
The 28-year-old missed the club's last four games due to an upper-body injury.
In three games this season, Lehtera hasn't recorded a point, but he collected 34 points in 79 games in 2015-16, and will be a welcome addition to the St. Louis forward corps.
Andersen has allowed 22 goals in five games, surrendering four or more in four of the five contests and coughing up seven in an embarrassing loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Tuesday.
He was due for an adjustment period after moving from a low-key hockey market to a pressure-cooker and becoming the unquestioned starter for the first time in his career, but his early returns with the Leafs have been concerning.
Andersen hasn't had much help in front of him, and that was to be expected from one of the youngest teams in the NHL, but he's better than this.
▲ Shea Weber
Now this is how you silence the critics.
The supposedly inferior piece in the controversial P.K. Subban trade is doing everything he can to quiet the doubters, and he's making a significant statement in the early going.
Weber scored a late game-winner doing what he does best - blasting the living daylights out of the puck - on Wednesday night, leading the Montreal Canadiens to a victory over the New York Islanders.
His six assists and nine points have him tied for third among all NHL skaters, and he's logging just under 26 minutes per game - a workload only seven players have exceeded so far.
▼ The Blackhawks' paltry penalty kill
The Chicago Blackhawks are allowing power-play goals at an astounding rate.
Sure, it's only been seven games, but the Blackhawks have somehow conceded twice the amount of power-play goals as the next-closest teams, the Nashville Predators and Colorado Avalanche.
Chicago's 46.1 percent kill rate is ugly, especially considering the majority of the damage has come on home ice.
The Blackhawks have killed only nine of 18 opposing power plays at the United Center, and they've given up five goals on eight man-advantage opportunities on the road.
It's still too soon to make drastic changes, but the NHL's modern dynasty is in trouble.
Wednesday's 4-1 loss to the first-place Edmonton Oilers marked the first time in 19 months the Capitals have lost back-to-back games in regulation, and the club is aiming to quickly rebound.
Washington hardly struggled last season, coasting to the Presidents' Trophy before a second-round elimination at the hands of the Pittsburgh Penguins.
The Capitals didn't play particularly badly versus the Oilers, outshooting Edmonton 35-29, but the loss created a peculiar feeling among the team nonetheless as Washington sits 3-2-1 on the season.
"Guys need to do their jobs," defenseman Matt Niskanen said. "It was a little uncomfortable in here tonight after the game. So, we'll regroup."
Washington continues its western road trip Saturday against Vancouver.
Follow theScore's fantasy feed on Twitter (@theScoreFantasy) for the latest news, features and more. And download Squad Up, theScore's free-to-win-money sports game.
Here is a look at the Squad Up daily NHL fantasy picture for Thursday, October 27:
Triple Threat
C Tyler Seguin (70K), LW Jamie Benn (54K) & RW Patrick Eaves (25K), Stars (at Jets): These three come together on the team's top power play unit. While the Stars have struggled with the man advantage so far, converting only four times on 25 chances, the goal-scoring upside is still huge. Eaves offers inexpensive opportunity to hit the scoresheet by virtue of playing with Benn.
C Aleksander Barkov (52K), RW Jaromir Jagr (40K) & D Aaron Ekblad, Panthers (at Maple Leafs): The bargain line stack of the day features the visiting Panthers in Toronto. Neither Barkov nor Jagr have looked as dynamic as a year ago, though Barkov has five points in six games. Only the Calgary Flames have allowed more goals than Toronto.
C Claude Giroux (62K), RW Wayne Simmons (60K) & D Shayne Gostisbehere (48K), Flyers (vs. Coyotes): Philadelphia's top line may sway toward contrarian because of the capital invested, but the traveling Coyotes relying on backup netminder Louis Domingue are not in a good position. Arizona is a NHL-worst minus-9 in goal differential.
Goalie Breakdown
TARGET/BARGAIN - Devan Dubnyk (75K), Wild (at Sabres): Despite starting on the road, Dubnyk's low salary and overall excellent play to start the season (2.01 GAA, .929 SV%) are enough to warrant confidence against a Sabres team that has managed to score only 14 goals though five games.
FADE - Marc-Andre Fleury (110K), Penguins (vs. Islanders): The Islanders suffered a hard-luck home loss to the Montreal Canadiens on Wednesday, unable to convert on their opportunities. Expect a different showing Thursday night. Fleury is the most expensive goalie on the slate against a team featuring some solid firepower.
CONTRARIAN - Steve Mason (100K), Flyers (vs. Coyotes): Somehow, Mason is the next most expensive option. The Flyers have not exactly shone in net, but Mason did relieve Michal Neuvirth on Tuesday, stopping all eight shots he faced to pick up the win against Buffalo. Favored to win, even if he isn't sharp, Mason should do enough against the Coyotes.
Bargain Plays
LW Jaden Schwartz (25K), Blues (vs. Red Wings): Schwartz has been doomed with injuries on a seemingly rotating basis and has only managed a solo assist through three games. This will not last. He's paired on a line with star scorer Vladimir Tarasenko and sees a bulk of the team's power play minutes. This savings allows spending big elsewhere.
RW Cal Clutterbuck (26K) Islanders (at Penguins): Producing above his head with four points in seven games, Clutterbuck could easily come up empty. He's fourth among Islanders forwards in ice time, and he doesn't skate on the power play. He's a 5v5 machine and opportunity increases his chances at converting against a shaky Fleury.
D Mattias Ekholm (25K), Predators (at Kings): Ekholm tallied 35 points in 82 games in 2015-16. While he isn't going to light the lamp with regularity, Ekholm is P.K. Subban's primary partner, offering greater scoring exposure, while also seeing plenty of time anchoring the power play.
Top Fades
C Auston Matthews (88K), Maple Leafs (vs. Panthers): There will be growing pains for Matthews, and despite the home game, his price tag is too high against G Roberto Luongo. He has been held without a point only once, but there are too many options with better matchups on Thursday night to sink this much budget into the rookie.
LW Tanner Pearson (55K), Kings (vs. Predators): Pearson's scoring comes with suspicion. He has scored on 36.4 percent of the shots he's taken, which is well above league average. With four goals, he is set to shatter his previous season-high of 15 set last season. He shot only 10.9 percent last season. Expect a correction.
D Brent Burns (97K), Sharks (vs. Blue Jackets): The most offensively-viable defenseman this side of Erik Karlsson is absurdly expensive. He needs a multi-point effort to truly be worth rostering, and though the Blue Jackets seem like the obvious streaming opponent, G Sergei Bobrovsky has a .929 save percentage through five starts.
Contrarian Options
C Steven Stamkos (78K), Lightning (at Canadiens): Canadiens G Carey Price got the night off on Wednesday and will be back between the pipes on Thursday. That should be enough to ease the Stamkos hype machine. Take him in tournaments as it's one of the few times he'll be largely faded.
LW Max Pacioretty (54K), Canadiens (vs. Lightning): With everyone from Paul Byron to Phillip Danault getting goals for the Canadiens, Pacioretty has somewhat underperformed having scored only once through seven games. His five assists are second on the team, but that's hardly enough. He's a perennial 30-goal scorer currently lost in his team's shuffle. A multi-point showing is coming.
RW Nikolaj Ehlers (44K), Jets (vs. Stars): Ehlers, and every line but the Jets' top trio, has stumbled out of the gate. The risk that Ehlers will come up empty once again creates reasonable doubt, but he's typically paired with Mathieu Perreault and Drew Stafford, who are superior to their paltry totals thus far. They need to take more shots to generate more scoring chances.
The Anaheim Ducks have agreed to a six-year contract extension with the defenseman worth $5.25 million per season, according to TSN's Bob McKenzie.
Lindholm reportedly needs to obtain a work visa, which could take as long as two weeks. He's now signed through 2021-22, but the Ducks need to make a move to get under the salary cap.
The 22-year-old became a restricted free agent this summer and hasn't played a game this season.
McKenzie reported earlier in October that the club wanted to sign Lindholm to a six-year deal at less than $5.4 million per season (Rasmus Ristolainen's deal with the Buffalo Sabres) and the blue-liner wanted more.
In his third season with Anaheim, Lindholm ranked second behind Cam Fowler among Ducks skaters in average time on ice, collecting 28 points in 80 games.
The Ducks selected Lindholm sixth overall in 2012.