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How 'Group 7' became TikTok’s biggest inside joke

What started as singer Sophia James promoting her song turned into a viral inside joke and full-blown TikTok community
 By 
Tim Marcin
 on 
screenshots of three tiktoks about Group 7
Group 7! Credit: Mashable composite / Screenshots: TikTok: @popsamcam / @sophiajamesmusic / @wesleyryann

If you've been on TikTok lately, you've likely seen the Group 7 meme, and you'd be forgiven if you don't quite understand what's going on with it. The whole thing connects back to a single source and, strangely enough, it's actually a remarkably well-conceived bit of promotional posting.

And don't worry, it's not too difficult to understand.

We covered Group 7 as it first broke onto the online scene, but it has since grown even more popular. As Mashable's Chance Townsend wrote earlier this week, the trend stems from singer Sophia James promoting her song "So Unfair" on TikTok. James posted seven separate videos promoting the single that put people in "groups" based on which video showed up on your algorithm, and, for whatever reason, the final TikTok labeling "Group 7" went viral. It's now racked up some 63 million views.


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So why did it go viral? Simply put, it became an inside joke — the thing to be because TikTok collectively decided it was. Everyone suddenly wanted to be in Group 7. The lore unfolded in the comments: Group 7 was elite. Top replies on James' original post read, "I didn’t choose Group 7, Group 7 chose me!" and "Group 7 is a group full of baddies that always win, just saying." It’s kind of like the 6-7 meme — meaningless on the surface, but rich with meaning because we, as a collective, decided it mattered.

"I was just trying to promote my song. That's all it was," James told Mashable over email earlier this week. "But the reason I make and perform music in the first place is to foster community and connect with people, so the way this thing is bringing people together is literally a dream come true."

And the trend has brought an (albeit strange) sense of community to TikTokkers. People really want to be a part of Group 7.

User @popsamcam explained how that fact is a bit of marketing genius.

As user @not.bethel explained, TikTok loves to just run with something. Once it reaches a certain point, there's no stopping the momentum.

Soon enough, it spread to the real world — workers asking their colleagues if they're Group 7, for example. It's an inside joke for millions of people on the app.

With time, everything became attached to the Group 7 meme. This TikTok about bringing back the word "grody" from @wesleyryann racked up nearly 200,000 views and, yes, mentioned Group 7 at the end.

Soon enough, what was once niche had the relatively stodgy PGA Tour (yes, the golf league) posting about it. Once the Normie brands arrived, the trend ballooned to a massive size.

It's wild, but exceptionally like TikTok, to take such a benign thing and blow it up. We all learned this week that Group 7 is forever — or at least until the next big thing takes off.

From YouTubers and TikTok stars to streamers and podcasters, Mashable covers the creators shaping digital culture today. Meet The Mashable 101, our list of the internet’s most exciting voices; and explore our other series, on how creators are building their platforms; on the gear they swear by; and on the trends of today and tomorrow.

close-up of man's face
Tim Marcin
Associate Editor, Culture

Tim Marcin is an Associate Editor on the culture team at Mashable, where he mostly digs into the weird parts of the internet. You'll also see some coverage of memes, tech, sports, trends, and the occasional hot take. You can find him on Bluesky (sometimes), Instagram (infrequently), or eating Buffalo wings (as often as possible).

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