Shawty like a melody в чем прикол

Обновлено: 03.07.2024

Девчонка – как мелодия у меня в голове,
Которую я не могу отогнать.
Заставляет меня петь типа
«На-на-на-на» каждый день,
Как будто мой айпод завис на повторе, повторе-е-е-е-е!

Spread

On November 27th 2018, YouTuber [3] William Pirker posted a ear rape version. The video hit 87,000 views in 3 years (shown below). On July 4th 2018, YouTuber [4] Nightcore Lab NCL posted a nightcore version. The video hit 25 million views in 3 years (shown below, right)


TikToks

On TikTok, the song has become a bait-and-switch meme, as users will often go to extreme lengths to weave it into their content as a punchline. It's different from many of TikTok's musical trends in the respect that it's not tied to a dance challenge and doesn't soundtrack another trend, rather "Replay" is the meme itself (examples by @sprubin, @willmcb, and @sutherlandphys shown below).


Ay, na na na na na na na
Na na na na na na
Shawty got me singin
Na na na na na na na
Na na na na na na na
Now she got me singin

New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast


Ay, na🙈 na⌚ na⏹🚞🕺 na⏹ na😋 na🚖 na🚃🙈
Na🙈⌚⌚ na🏤🙈 na🚱 na😋 na🙈 na💃🏽💃🏽
Shawty got👃🏽 me💦👍🏿 singin
Na💃🏽 na😋 na⛸ na💃🏽 na〰 na🍯 na🏟🙈⛸
Na🚱☕🕺 na🙈 na💃🏽 na🙈 na⛸ na🙈 na🙈
Now🕥🧮👋 she👩 got🍔📦🍸 me🔥👀 singin

Похожие цитаты

I've said it once, I've said it twice.
I've said it a thousand fucking times, that I'm ok, that I'm fine.
That it's all just in my mind, but this has got the best of me and I can't seem to sleep.
It's not just your alone with me, it's just you'll never leave.

Я говорил это однажды, говорил это дважды,
Я повторил это грёбаную тысячу раз,
Что я в порядке, что у меня всё хорошо,
Это всё просто у меня в голове, но это забрало всё лучшее у меня и я не могу уснуть.
Ты не просто со мной, ты меня никогда не оставишь.

Gen Z has created its own version of Rick Rolling on TikTok with this classic 2000s banger

replay tiktok spotify code iyaz

Rick Rolls have been the de facto, music-based bait-and-switch meme for over a decade at this point. The classic trick is now built into the fabric of meme culture itself, drawing people to click on a link that unexpectedly leads to Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up." In time, however, people have adapted the Rick Roll bait-and-switch to other culturally significant songs, and the latest is Iyaz's 2009 single "Replay."

The song pops up like a Rick Roll in unexpected places, as users go to extreme lengths to weave it into their content as a punchline. It's different from many of TikTok's musical trends in the respect that it's not tied to a dance challenge and doesn't soundtrack another trend: rather "Replay" is the meme itself.

Over the course of May and early June 2020, however, the song has become a popular meme, to the extent that you almost start to expect it to pop up in videos that seem to be leading up to a sound-based punchline. The generic formula takes an object that makes a certain sound when used in a certain way, but when used differently, "replay" begins to play.

A picture of the Insider crossword

Another salient strain of the "Replay" meme features TikTokers going to great lengths to create tangible Spotify Codes by embroidering them on fabric, printing them and creating temporary tattoos, or 3D printing them, among other methods. All roads lead to "Replay."

The joke is the same basic format as a classic Rick Roll, which helped to popularize the bait-and-swtich format online in the late 2000s and 2010s. One TikToker highlighted the similarities in a roundabout way by pretending to herald that "Never Gonna Give You Up" had reached approximately 420 million views and 6.9 million likes (the most popular upload of the video actually currently stands at around 705 million views and 5.6 million likes) before cutting to "Replay."

"Replay" seems poised to potentially become a spiritual successor to the Rick Roll in Gen Z circles on the app. In fact, it seems to tick many of the same boxes as the original "Never Gonna Give You Up," but shifted a generation forward.

An oral history of the Rick Roll from MEL's Brian VanHooker dives into the origins of the meme, which began in 2006 and 2007 (primarily on 4chan) and exploded online in 2008. At the time, the 1987 "Never Gonna Give You Up" was about 20 years old and Rick Astley was cemented in public consciousness as a one-hit-wonder. As VanHooker puts it, the song's 1980s musical sensibilities and low-budget music video made it "a symbol of a bygone era."

"Replay" seems to have many of the same qualities. While the single peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart on Jan. 9, 2010, it didn't seem to have made a particularly salient mark on the 2010s zeitgeist from that point onward, nor did any of Iyaz's other singles ever reach the same heights on the chart. Some of its lyrics date it to the late 2000s as well — particularly the, "Na na na na everyday, like my iPod's stuck on replay."

While the trend hasn't been exclusively executed by members of Gen Z (some of whom are now as old as 23, per the Pew Research Center), it's steeped in their pop-culture history. "Replay" was released during Gen Z's middle or elementary school years, and as a result, bears a specific brand of nostalgia that traces back a period of life typically viewed through a cringe lens. For teens and young adults, those years can already feel like a "bygone era."

As one of the most popular songs of the time, "Replay" is a powerful nostalgic signifier that ties back to a shared experience. Ultimately, that's what makes it a great meme.

Replay (Shawty's Like a Melody)

Replay, sometimes referred to by its initial lyrics "Shawty Like a Melody", is a 2009 song by Iyaz. In 2019 and 2020, the song gained popularity as a bait-and-switch meme on YouTube and TikTok, similar to Rickroll or You've Been Gnomed. While some use the song's iconic opening hook "Shawty's like a melody in my head" as a punchline, others create tangible Spotify Codes via 3D printing or embroidery that link to the song.

Origin

"Replay" was released in 2009, with the music video published to YouTube on October 19th, 2009. The music video hit 213,000,000 million views in 12 years (shown below).


On March 7th, 2010, YouTuber [2] Mysuperanime posted a lyrics video with a blue and green spiral background. The lyric video (shown below) hit 10.7 million views in 11 years.


Читайте также: