6-7 meme
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Six-seven. It’s the internet’s latest obsession, a phrase that exploded in 2025 across TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts. But what does it even mean? Honestly, it doesn’t really have a fixed meaning.
It all started with the song "Doot Doot (6 7)" by Skrilla. Videos featuring professional basketball players, especially LaMelo Ball, who stands at a commanding 6-foot-7, began to blow up. Then came Taylen "TK" Kinney, an Overtime Elite player who just couldn't stop saying it. And who could forget Maverick Trevillian, the "67 Kid," who went viral for yelling "six seven" with a wild hand gesture at a basketball game?
Some are calling it "annoying," others a "plague," linking it to the whole "brain rot" phenomenon of low-quality digital content. But it's also seen as a sign of Generation Alpha truly making their mark on internet culture.
The slang itself? It's rooted in that drill rap track. Skrilla raps, "...I know he dyin'... 6-7, I just bipped right on the highway." The number's meaning in the song is a total mystery. Some guess it’s about 67th Street in Philly or Chicago. Others, like linguist Taylor Jones, speculate it could be a police radio code for a death, fitting the violent lyrics. Skrilla himself? He’s kept it ambiguous, saying he never put a meaning on it and still won't.
The song, unofficially out in late 2024 and officially in February 2025, quickly found its way into edits of basketball stars, particularly LaMelo Ball. A few weeks later, Taylen Kinney, then a high school prospect, became synonymous with the phrase after ranking a Starbucks drink with a "six, seven." His constant use in Overtime Elite content earned him the nickname "Mr. 6-7" and even led to his own branded water line.
You saw "6-7" everywhere: NBA highlights, WNBA press conferences, NFL touchdown celebrations, even Shaquille O'Neal joined in, admitting he didn't get it. College sports were buzzing with it too.
As it spread beyond sports, people started using it for anything. A 67% on a test? Six-seven. Even lawmakers got in on the joke, with Connecticut Representative Bill Buckbee and Utah's Blake Moore referencing the trend. Vice President JD Vance even jokingly proposed banning the numbers, calling for a "narrow exception to the first amendment."
Because it’s so widespread, "6-7" has jumped offline, especially in schools, with some even banning it for classroom disruption. In the UK, Prime Minister Keir Starmer had to apologize after joining school kids in the gesture, which had been banned at their school. And there’s even a stereotype: the "Mason," a white boy who just can't stop saying "six-seven."
Then there's the "67 Kid" himself, Maverick Trevillian. A viral video in March 2025 showed him yelling "six seven" with that now-famous hand gesture. By August, users were creating bizarre, analog-horror-style edits of him, dubbed "SCP-067 Kid," satirizing the SCP Foundation.
It’s not the only numerical meme, either. "41," from Blizzi Boi's "41 Song (Saks Freestyle)," is similar. Others like "6-1" from Spartan Swot and "56" from YungJayyJayy have also popped up.
Media and brands jumped on board too. South Park’s 28th season even featured the kids being brainwashed by the meme. Clash Royale added an emote, Overwatch 2 announced one, and Fortnite dropped a "67" emote after their Chapter 7 update.
Food chains got in on it. Pizza Hut offered wings for 67 cents. McDonald's in the UAE gave away nuggets between 6 and 7 pm, with special stickers. Domino's had a $6.70 pizza deal with the code "67." Google even added an Easter egg: type "6-7" and your screen shakes. But not everyone was promoting it. In-N-Out actually removed "67" from their ordering system because teens were flooding their restaurants.
The reception? Well, outlets like Business Insider have linked it to "brain rot," that endless scroll of low-quality digital content. Many see it as Gen Alpha’s undeniable stamp on internet culture. Dictionary.com even named "67" their 2025 Word of the Year, calling it "a burst of energy that spreads and connects people long before anyone agrees on what it actually means." Merriam-Webster described it as "a nonsensical expression connected to a song and a basketball player." Pitchfork's Alphonse Pierre lamented that Skrilla, the artist behind the original song, had been reduced to a one-dimensional mascot, stripped of his complex artistry.
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6-7 (pronounced "six seven"; also written as 67, 6 7, or 6, 7) is an Internet meme and slang term that emerged in 2025 on TikTok, Instagram Reels, and then later spread to YouTube Shorts. It has no fixed meaning.
The phrase originated from the song "Doot Doot (6 7)" by Skrilla, which became popular in video edits featuring professional basketball players, especially LaMelo Ball, who is listed at 6 ft 7 in (2.01 meters) tall. The meme was further popularized through Overtime Elite player Taylen "TK" Kinney's repeated use of the phrase. In March 2025, a boy named Maverick Trevillian became known as the "67 Kid" after a viral video showed him yelling the term at a basketball game while performing an excited hand gesture.
The meme, described as "annoying" and "like a plague", has been linked by multiple news outlets to the wider "brain rot" phenomenon—digital media deemed to be of poor quality. Some commentators also see it as evidence of Generation Alpha's growing presence in Internet culture.
== Origin and spread ==
The slang originated from the drill rap song "Doot Doot (6 7)", in which American rapper Skrilla raps, "... I know he dyin' (oh my, oh my God) 6-7, I just bipped right on the highway (Bip, bip)" as the beat drops.
The meaning of the number in the song remains ambiguous: some have connected it to 67th Street in Skrilla's hometown of Philadelphia, or to 67th Street in Chicago. Linguist and African-American English expert Taylor Jones has speculated that it may refer to "10-67", the police radio code used to notify officers of a death. This aligns with the previous lines' descriptions of gun violence and his interpretation that the line depicts the narrator playing innocent during a traffic stop. Skrilla himself stated, "I never put an actual meaning on it, and I still would not want to."
The song was unofficially released in December 2024 and officially released on February 7, 2025. It was soon used in video edits of professional basketball players, particularly LaMelo Ball, who is 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) tall.
A few weeks after the song's unofficial release, Taylen Kinney, a high school basketball prospect at Overtime Elite, became strongly associated with the phrase after a clip of him ranking a Starbucks drink by saying "six, seven" went viral on social media. His repeated use of the phrase during Overtime Elite content led to his nickname "Mr. 6-7", and he later launched a "6-7"-branded canned water line.
The meme has been referenced in NBA highlights, WNBA news conferences, NFL touchdown celebrations, and also by celebrities, including former NBA player Shaquille O'Neal, who participated in a video referring to it despite admitting he did not understand its meaning. Additionally, the term has been frequently used throughout college sports.
As the meme expanded beyond sports, social media users began to employ the meme in unrelated contexts, such as joking about getting a score of 67% on an exam. Lawmaker Bill Buckbee, who represents the 67th District in the Connecticut House of Representatives, jokingly used the phrase during a special legislative session. Representative Blake Moore of Utah's 1st congressional district also made reference to the trend while presiding over the United States House of Representatives on November 18, 2025. In December 2025, U.S. vice president JD Vance jokingly proposed to ban the use of the phrase, stating: "And now I think we need to make this narrow exception to the first amendment and ban these numbers forever."
6-7's identity as a slang term has allowed it to spread in offline contexts, especially in schools, with some banning its use due to disruption in classrooms. In November 2025, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer apologized to a headteacher after joining school children in the gesture when a schoolgirl sitting next to him noted the book they were reading was turned to pages 6 and 7; the gesture had been banned at the school.
The moniker "Mason" has been used to refer to a stereotypical white boy who overuses the slang.
=== 67 Kid ===
On March 31, 2025, YouTuber Cam Wilder posted a video titled "My Overpowered AAU Team has Finally Returned!" (stylized in all caps) in which a young boy, Maverick Trevillian—later nicknamed "67 Kid"—is seen yelling "six seven" while performing a hand gesture in which he moves his hands up and down with upward-facing palms.
In August 2025, social media users began creating photo edits distorting Trevillian in a bizarre or grotesque fashion, likened to analog horror. This meme, called "SCP-067 Kid", satirizes the SCP Foundation, a collaborative fiction project about fictional paranormal anomalies. "SCP-067 Kid" is not related with the canon "SCP-067", which is about a supernatural fountain pen.
=== Variants ===
41 (pronounced "forty-one") is a meme of similar origin, deriving from the song "41 Song (Saks Freestyle)" in which rapper Blizzi Boi raps the number throughout. Other variants include 6-1 (pronounced "six-one"), a variant created by TikTok creator Spartan Swot, and 56 (pronounced "fifty-six"), popularized by TikTok creator YungJayJayy.
=== Use by media and brands ===
On October 16, 2025, the 1st episode of season 28 of the adult animated show South Park aired with a prominent plot point in which the children are brainwashed by the 6-7 meme. This season of South Park, along with season 27, also targeted other online trends such as Labubu, TikTok, and prediction markets.
In October, the mobile game Clash Royale added an emote referencing the meme after its Instagram account reached 6.7 million followers. On November 5, first-person shooter video game Overwatch 2 announced that it would be adding a "67" emote to the game. On November 29, 2025, Fortnite Battle Royale teased their new Chapter 7 update with a reference to the 6-7 meme. Following the update's release, the emote made its debut.
From November 6 to 7, Pizza Hut sold chicken wings for 67 cents each. During the same period, McDonald's in the United Arab Emirates gave away free chicken nuggets between 6 and 7 pm. Each 6-piece chicken pack featured a special "6(7)" sticker and contained seven nuggets instead of the usual six. Domino's offered members a one-topping pizza for $6.70 when they used the promo code "67". Later, in December 2025, Google introduced an Easter egg in which typing "6-7, "67", or "6 7" causes a user's screen to shake up and down, mimicking the gesture associated with the meme. Not all responses were promotional, however: In-N-Out removed the number "67" from its ordering system after mobs of teenagers started flooding the restaurant because of the meme.
== Reception ==
Multiple news outlets, such as Business Insider, have attributed the meme to the wider phenomenon of "brain rot"—the spread of digital media considered to be of poor quality. Many viewed the meme as a sign of Generation Alpha's increasing involvement in Internet culture.
In October 2025, Dictionary.com named "67" as its 2025 Word of the Year, describing the interjection as "a burst of energy that spreads and connects people long before anyone agrees on what it actually means". The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines it as "a nonsensical expression connected to a song and a basketball player".
Alphonse Pierre of Pitchfork lamented that, in exchange for virality, Skrilla had been reduced to a one-dimensional mascot, and "not a human artist with music packed with complicated views and morals worth considering".
== See also ==
23 skidoo – Early 20th century American slang phrase; has ambiguous origins and is used nonsensically
42 (number) – Arbitrary number popularized in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
47 (number) – Arbitrary number popularized by Pomona College alumni and Star Trek writers
Skibidi Toilet – YouTube web series by Alexey Gerasimov that spawned a similar nonsense word
Italian brainrot – 2025 AI-generated Internet memes
== References ==
== External links ==
Original viral TikTok
Cam Wilder's Video with the 67 Kid on YouTube
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