The Trend radar: 201M Views
1. Damn, I Forgot My AirPods
This trend turns one small problem into a group performance.
The setup usually starts with someone in an airport or public place realizing they forgot their AirPods.
Then their friends become the entertainment acting like the person’s personal playlist.
How to use: This is a strong format for social apps, music apps, travel apps, events apps, or any product that works better with friends.
@hayleybuix No headphones? No problem :)) #bestfriend #friendsforever
♬ original sound – Hayley
More examples at 5.5M views.
See the full trend here.
2. OK Wow
Creators are using this sound as a reaction to suddenly remembering how good something is.
Pair the hook with a strong reaction and there you have it.
How to use: Turn your app into the “ok wow” realization. Show someone coming back to the product or realizing they should have used it earlier.
More examples at 8.3M views and 3.9M views.
Get the sound here.
3. Everyone has their version
This sound shows the gap between what people say and what is actually true.
Creators use it for group videos and slideshows where everyone says the same thing, but the labels reveal a completely different reality.
How to use: Use this format to show different types of users, behaviors, or outcomes inside your app.
More examples at 3.9M views and 1M views.
See the full trend here.
4. I Do Whatever I Want
This sound is a defiant punchline.
Creators use the line “I do whatever I want” to show someone ignoring rules, making a chaotic choice, or doing exactly what they were told not to do.
Eg: Booking the trip, texting them back, buying the thing, skipping the plan.
How to use: Make your app the tool behind the chaotic decision. A travel app could use: “Me booking the trip after one minor inconvenience.”
More examples at 23.2M views and 15.7M views.
Get the sound here.
5. When Someone Mentions
This audio is all about emotional triggers.
Creators use it to react like someone just mentioned the one topic they cannot handle.
How to use: Pick the trigger your audience instantly understands, then connect your app to the reaction.
More examples at 1.9M views and 872k views.
Get the sound here.


