If you’ve recently overheard a group of kids shouting “67!” and dissolving into laughter, you’re not alone. Teachers are baffled, parents are confused, and the internet is flooded with attempts to decode the meaning behind the latest wave of absurd slang. Spoiler: there is no meaning. And that’s exactly the point.
What’s funnier than absurdity—especially when no adult has any idea what you’re talking about?
Kids love these random phrases because they’re part inside joke, part rebellion, and part social experiment. It’s a shared secret language that says, we’re in on this together, and you’re not. When adults lean in with furrowed brows, trying to make sense of it, that just adds another layer of comedy. After all, what could be more satisfying than watching grown-ups attempt to analyze nonsense as if it’s Shakespeare?
The Rise of “Brain Rot” Humor
What adults call “brain rot,” kids experience as liberation. It’s humor that’s deliberately illogical, anti-narrative, and hyper-speed. It’s the punchline without the setup, the meme before meaning.
In a world where every moment is captured, captioned, and dissected, Gen Alpha’s humor has become the antidote to over-explanation. Their jokes resist interpretation. They exist for a second, make everyone laugh, then vanish—kind of like the digital equivalent of blowing a raspberry at the seriousness of life.
Why Teachers (and Parents) Can’t Keep Up
Teachers are struggling to manage this kind of humor in classrooms because it’s fast, viral, and contagious. It’s not just one phrase—it’s a constant churn of micro-memes, sound bites, and inside jokes that spread through TikTok, Discord, and YouTube like wildfire. The moment adults figure out “67,” the kids have already moved on to “fish funeral” or “Skibidi.”
For educators and parents, the real challenge isn’t decoding each joke—it’s understanding what’s driving them. These nonsense trends give kids something deeply human: connection, play, and a sense of belonging in a world that often feels serious and high-stakes.
What This Says About the Future of Communication
Absurd humor may actually be preparing Gen Alpha for the chaos of modern communication. It rewards quick wit, creativity, and comfort with ambiguity—skills that are increasingly essential in a world of algorithms and AI.
They aren’t rejecting meaning altogether; they’re redefining it. Their humor says, not everything needs to make sense to be meaningful.
The Takeaway
Before we roll our eyes at the next viral nonsense phrase, maybe it’s worth remembering what it feels like to laugh just because it’s fun. Kids aren’t losing their minds—they’re reminding us to loosen ours.
In a culture obsessed with productivity and sense-making, their collective silliness might actually be a form of resistance—a reminder that joy, connection, and nonsense still matter.
So the next time you hear a random “67!” echoing through your home or classroom, resist the urge to Google it. Smile. Let it be meaningless. Maybe even join in.