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Who Made the “67” Meme?

Sep 29, 2025


Short answer: no single person. “67” (often said as “six–seven”) bubbled up from music, sports edits, and TikTok remix culture—then the internet did what it always does and turned it into a catch-all in-joke.

The seed came from rapper Skrilla’s track “Doot Doot (6 7),” released in late 2024 and widely used in early 2025. Editors paired the looping “6–7” vocal with basketball highlights, especially clips of LaMelo Ball—who happens to be 6′7″—and the sound became shorthand for swagger, height, or just playful noise. From there, the phrase shed a fixed definition and spread across TikTok and Reels as a quick, punchy audio cue.

Community faces helped cement it. Overtime Elite guard Taylen “TK” Kinney popularized the cadence by casually rating things “six, seven” in viral snippets. Then a youth-league clip—nicknamed the “6-7 Kid”—exploded: the boy bounces toward the camera, chants “six–seven,” and the internet instantly canonized him with remixes, captions, and parody lore. Teachers heard it in classrooms, parents heard it at dinner, and timelines filled with the number everywhere.

As memes do, “67” mutated again: horror-style edits labeled “SCP-067” cast the kid as a liminal, glitchy specter, proving the format can flip from goofy to eerie without losing its viral pull. Today, “67” works as a versatile punchline—sometimes a nod to height, sometimes pure rhythm, often just a vibe. Ask “who made 67,” and the real answer is: artists sparked it, athletes and creators amplified it, and millions of viewers finished the job.

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