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Gen Alpha’s viral ‘6-7’ trend takes over classrooms and disrupts live TV

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KEZI’s sports reporter Liv Cleary, who was covering the Oregon State-Lafayette game, went viral after fans interrupted her live footage with the new Generation Alpha meme trend.

One participant, who was bombarded by game observers during his report, shouted “6-7” repeatedly into a hot mic behind the journalist, several decibels louder than the others.

“At the beginning of the live shoot, the fans were kind and added a fun element to my streams. As it went on, a few fans started hanging around and things got a little out of control, and you saw that.” Cleary wrote about X. “Live TV is unpredictable and sometimes you just have to put up with it!”

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From teachers in classrooms to reporters on the street, no one is safe from the viral “6-7” meme that has taken the younger generation by storm after being popularized by Charlotte Hornets basketball point guard LaMelo Ball.

A 15-year-old high school sophomore he told the Washington Post“It’s more of an ironic situation. People make fun of the fact that it’s not funny.”

The meme The Wall Street Journal called “this fall’s most obnoxious classmate” meme originated from one song by rapper Skrillatitled “Doot Doot (6 7).” The rapper told the Washington Post: inspiration for lyrics It came after he passed a truck in Arizona with “6-7” written on it covered in dust.

The trend is triggered when any of the six or seven figures appear. The young people then shouted “6-7!” Repeatedly, with both palms facing up, pointing alternately like a balance scale.

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From teachers in classrooms to reporters on the street, no one across the country is safe from the viral “6-7” meme sweeping through Generation Alpha. (Erika Goldring/WireImage)

Teachers in particular have endured the storm of this internet trend and are faced with nonsense every day. A teacher now even avoids dividing his students into groups of six or seven and avoids using numbers when referring to a page or question number.

“If you say, ‘Hey, you should do questions six, seven,’ they immediately say, ‘Six Seven!’ They start shouting. “It’s like throwing catnip at cats.” Cara BeardenA math teacher at Austin Peace Academy in Texas told The Wall Street Journal:

While some increase views vent about fashion On social media, other educators used TikTok to share their plans to incorporate the trend into their lesson plans. embarrassing “6-7”.

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“South Park” also joins the “6-7” craze last episodewhere meme-obsessed students attend a parody assembly warning that it symbolizes “satanic numerology” and the “coming of the anti-Christ.”

Some millennials compared the trend to Fetty Wap and Lil Wayne’s childhood “6 Foot, 7 Foot” song “1738,” while Gen Xers compared the craze to Tommy Tutone’s popular song “867-5309/Jenny.”

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Whether completely pointless or mind-bogglingly intellectual, Alpha Gen has confused the masses with this latest internet obsession.

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