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The trend right now updated June 2026
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World Cup, Everybody Jump meme

The trend, right away

The official-ish World Cup anthem told everyone to jump — so the internet sat perfectly still.

Also known as: Everybody Jump · refuse to jump · Tayo Ricci World Cup song

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The best-of

The best videos riding the trend, hand-picked. Click to play — they stay hosted on their original platform.

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The trend, broken down

What it is, why it’s blowing up, and how to get on it without forcing it. No theory — just the essentials to ride at the right moment.

What is it?

What is World Cup, Everybody Jump meme?

Tayo Ricci dropped a 2026 World Cup song, 'WORLD CUP,' whose chorus begs 'everybody jump.' TikTok decided it was the worst World Cup song ever and turned it into a meme: at the 'everybody jump' beat, posters sit completely still with a deadpan caption on why they absolutely will not jump. A second strain is 'accuracy reenactments' that lovingly recreate Ricci's own dance frame for frame.

Why it’s buzzing

Why it goes viral

Refusal comedy is irresistible — being told to do something and pointedly not doing it is a clean, universal joke anyone can film in one take. The song's earnest cheesiness made it the perfect target, and the World Cup gave it a massive built-in audience. Two formats (the deadpan refusal and the over-committed reenactment) doubled the ways to participate and kept it snowballing.

The method

How to ride the wave

Nail the deadpan — the funnier you keep your face while everyone 'jumps,' the better it lands, so let the caption do the punchline. Or go the other way and over-commit to a note-perfect reenactment. Comedy and sports-banter accounts should grab this while it's peaking; a sharp take on a fast-rising meme is one of the quickest ways to a breakout clip, and a breakout is the best possible on-ramp for turning first-time viewers into followers.

FAQ

The questions we get asked

The essentials on the trend, in short answers — enough to decide in ten seconds whether it’s for you.

What is World Cup, Everybody Jump meme?
Tayo Ricci dropped a 2026 World Cup song, 'WORLD CUP,' whose chorus begs 'everybody jump.' TikTok decided it was the worst World Cup song ever and turned it into a meme: at the 'everybody jump' beat, posters sit completely still with a deadpan caption on why they absolutely will not jump. A second strain is 'accuracy reenactments' that lovingly recreate Ricci's own dance frame for frame.
Why is World Cup, Everybody Jump meme going viral?
Refusal comedy is irresistible — being told to do something and pointedly not doing it is a clean, universal joke anyone can film in one take. The song's earnest cheesiness made it the perfect target, and the World Cup gave it a massive built-in audience. Two formats (the deadpan refusal and the over-committed reenactment) doubled the ways to participate and kept it snowballing.
How do you ride the World Cup, Everybody Jump meme trend?
Nail the deadpan — the funnier you keep your face while everyone 'jumps,' the better it lands, so let the caption do the punchline. Or go the other way and over-commit to a note-perfect reenactment. Comedy and sports-banter accounts should grab this while it's peaking; a sharp take on a fast-rising meme is one of the quickest ways to a breakout clip, and a breakout is the best possible on-ramp for turning first-time viewers into followers.
Worth riding too

Other trends right now

In the same vein — each with its own window. Post while they’re hot.

And you?

Ride the wave → boost your TikTok

A good trend puts you on the launch pad. But let’s be honest: an account that already looks alive makes new arrivals want to follow. A few first followers and likes isn’t faking talent — it’s just clearing the silence of the early days so your trend-riding video finally gets noticed.

We don’t make a trend go viral for you. We just give your visibility a little push.