The Out-of-Touch Adults' Guide to Kid Culture: What Does '7x7=49' Mean?
This week's collection might seem like a random assortment of odds and ends, but there's a throughline: vibes and absurdism over logic and order. Slang words like 7x7=49 and lowkenuinely don't make logical sense, but they are intuitively perfect. The Sea Lion is a purely absurdist anti "dance-craze" taking over TikTok, and Pizza Movie takes "drug flick" tropes to surreal new levels. In other words, Gen Z and A are not trying to make sense of anything anymore.
What does the "7x7=49" meme actually mean?
This piece of math-slang is growing popular on TikTok as a way of explaining what women find attractive in men. It's about how the equation feels. 7X7=49 makes intuitive sense in a way that something like 51÷3=17 does not. It's an attractive equation, so it's becoming a shorthand way of saying "man that is attractive in a self-evident way."
Here's an explanation:
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And here's how the phrase is used in meme videos:
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Because young men are in a very dark place right now, this generally silly meme is being misinterpreted and overly explained to mean "women are attracted to numbers themselves, so men don't have a chance," in videos like this:
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But it's more about how some things are just right and require no explanation, as you can see in this compilation of other "attractive things that aren't attractive in a way you can explain."
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On a deeper level, seeing 7x7=49 as "attractive" is an example of "Ordinal Linguistic Personification" a kind of synesthesia, a sensory cross-over where unlike things are grouped together cognitively. There isn't enough research to say why so many people agree that certain numbers and/or equations are more "attractive" than others, nor do we know if these associations are universal or cultural, so more study must be conducted. Or we can just go with vibes.
Is "Pizza Movie" Gen-Z's defining stoner flick?
This week, Hulu released Pizza Movie, a coming-of-age film that might prove to be Gen-Z's iconic example of a "youth drug movie." In it, Stranger Things' Gaten Matarazzo and Sean Giambrone play a couple of dorm-mates who take an experimental drug, then must go to their dorm lobby to pick up a pizza while experiencing bizarre hallucinations (and coming of age) along the way.
It's a silly comedy on the surface, but a deeper dive reveals something about young people in 2026. You can judge a generation by the stoner-buddy comedies it enjoys. Boomers had Up in Smoke, in which getting really high was a political and cultural "statement" against "The Man." Smoking weed was a coping mechanism for the ennui of the suburbs and an abdication of adult responsibility in Fast Times at Ridgemount High and Dazed and Confused. Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle featured very millennial stoners who were also high-achievers by societal standards. In 2026, weed is so commonplace in real life, that the stakes have to be raised with a surreal experimental drug thats users are not ready for. It feels like a reaction to Gen Z being poorly prepared and clueless in a post-everything world where nothing makes sense, but you're still expected to go down to the lobby to pick up your pizza.
What is the sea lion?
The sea lion is ostensibly a dance move, but you probably won't see it at the club. It's just too silly. You do the sea lion by lying down on your belly, grabbing your ankles behind your back, bouncing up and down, and making sea lion barking sounds. It comes to us by way of meme-heavy rapper Yuno Miles' "Sea Lion Rap."
What do you think so far?
Miles doesn't actual do the sea lion in the video, however; he just exhorts others to. TikTokers took up the challenge, and sea lioning videos started appearing, like the following:
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This has no relation to the older online slang term "sea lioning," which is a way of derailing online arguments by peppering people with so many "polite," persistent questions that it becomes a form of harassment. Kids are into acting silly instead. This weapons-grade ridiculousness contains a hint of rebellion too. Unlike the polished, attractive dancers who tend to go viral too, sea lioners have no skill or coordination, and it doesn't look good on anyone. It just looks fun.
What does "lowkenuinely" mean?
This portmanteau of "low key" and "genuinely" expresses sincerity but in a way that says "let's not make a big deal about it." As @etomologynerd points out in a TikTok video, lowkenuinely doesn't make sense, but it's perfectly expressive anyway. "Genuinely" is a factual assertion, "low key" is a value judgment, and a fact can't be low or high key. But "genuinely" is being used here like "literally" has been in the past. It is no longer meant as a factual statement, and instead adds emphasis. So it's a perfect expression of belief in a post-reality setting.
Viral video of the week: Olaf animatronic collapses, dies
This week's viral video comes from Disneyland Paris, where a robotic version of popular Frozen character Olaf malfun