1. Public permission prank
This one is a social-chaos machine.
The setup is always the same: ask your partner if you’re “allowed” to order something (fries, dessert, a snack) in front of someone else waiter, cashier, family member, whoever.
The joke is the public setup. The partner instantly looks confused, embarrassed, or defensive because the question makes them seem controlling, even though it’s clearly a prank.
Read more about this trend here.
2. What are you doing!?
This trend is a simple “caught” reaction format: the video sets up a moment where someone notices you doing something suspicious then hits you with a side-eye or a controlling question.
Built around a viral audio from The White Lotus, it’s spreading across couples, friends, and workplace scenarios. The setup is always some version of:
“getting caught doing something suspicious / embarrassing / secretive.”
3. Putting myself on time out
This trend is a dramatic self-callout format.
Creators use the hook “putting myself in timeout…” and then confess something embarrassing, impulsive, or too-delusional-to-admit out loud.
The video is usually simple:
front-camera clip, small movement, text-on-screen confession.
Read the full article here.
4. Here’s the thing
This sound is for those late-night overthinking moments when you have to get a thought out of your system.
The format is simple: start with “okay but here’s the thing,” then drop one unfiltered, hyper-specific thought that feels way too real.
See the full trend here.
5. Get them banned
Name a situation where someone did something you cannot stand (minor inconvenience, social crime, opinion they’ll die on).
Think “I’m taking this personally” energy.
Small accounts are pulling real numbers with this sound.
Read more examples here.

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