Italian Brainrot: the AI memes only kids know
A walking shark in oversized sneakers, an orange with muscular arms and a twirling 'Ballerina Cappuccina' with a mug for a head are among the strange stars of the online phenomenon called Italian Brainrot.
'At first it's not funny at all, but it kind of grows on you,' 16-year-old Yoshi Yamanaka-Nebesney from New York told AFP.
'You might use it to annoy someone and find that funny.'
The name nods to the stupefying effect of scrolling through mindless social media posts, especially over-the-top images created with artificial intelligence tools.
Shouty, crude and often nonsensical Italian voiceovers feature in many of the clips made by people in various countries that began to spread this year on platforms such as TikTok, embraced by young Gen Z and Gen Alpha members.
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Friday, 2 pm Lifestyle
Our picks of the latest dining, travel and leisure options to treat yourself.
Sign Up
Sign Up
The dozen-plus cartoonish AI creatures have fast become memes, inspiring a stream of new content such as 'Brainrot Rap', viewed 116 million times on YouTube.
A YouTube Short titled Learn to Draw five Crazy Italian Brainrot Animals – including a cactus-elephant crossover named 'Lirili Larila' – has also been watched 320 million times.
'There's a whole bunch of phrases that all these characters have,' said Yamanaka-Nebesney, in Tokyo with his mother Chinami, who had no idea what he was talking about.
School-age Italian Brainrot fans can be found from Kenya to Spain and South Korea, while some of the most popular videos reference Indonesia's language and culture instead.
'I went on trips with my boys to Mexico' and people would 'crack jokes about it' there too, Yamanaka-Nebesney said.
'Melodic language'
Internet trends move fast, and Italian Brainrot 'hit its peak maybe two months ago or a month ago', said Idil Galip, a University of Amsterdam lecturer in new media and digital culture.
Italian – a 'melodic language that has opportunities for jokes' – has appeared in other memes before.
And 'there are just so many people in Indonesia' sharing posts which have potential for global reach, Galip said.
A 'multi-level marketing economy' has even emerged, with AI video-makers targeting Italian Brainrot's huge audience through online ads or merchandise sales, she added.
Nurina, a 41-year-old Indonesian NGO worker, said her seven-year-old loves the mashed-up brainrot world.
'Sometimes when I pick him up from school, or when I'm working from home, he shouts, 'Mommy! Bombardino Crocodilo!'' – a bomber plane character with a crocodile head.
'I know it's fun to watch,' said Nurina, who like many Indonesians goes by one name.
'I just need to make him understand that this is not real.'
Some videos have been criticised for containing offensive messages that go over young viewers' heads, such as rambling references in Italian to 'Bombardino Crocodilo' bombing children in Gaza.
'The problem is that these characters are put into adult content' and 'many parents are not tech-savvy' enough to spot the dangers, warned Oriza Sativa, a Jakarta-based clinical psychologist.
Tung Tung Tung Sahur
The best-known Indonesian brainrot character 'Tung Tung Tung Sahur' resembles a long drum called a kentongan, which is used to wake people up for a pre-dawn meal, or sahur, during Ramadan.
Indonesia has a young, digitally active population of around 280 million, and 'Tung Tung Tung Sahur' is not its only viral export.
This summer, video footage – not AI-generated – of a sunglass-wearing boy dancing on a rowboat during a race at a western Indonesian festival also became an Internet sensation.
Noxa, the TikToker behind the original 'Tung Tung Tung Sahur' clip, is now represented by a Paris-based collective of artists, lawyers and researchers called Mementum Lab.
'Noxa is a content creator based in Indonesia. He's under 20,' they told AFP. 'He makes fast, overstimulated, AI-assisted videos.'
'He doesn't call himself a 'contemporary artist', but we think he's already acting like one,' said Mementum Lab, which is focused on complex emerging issues around AI intellectual property, and says it is helping Noxa negotiate deals for his work.
Noxa, in comments provided by the collective, said the character was 'inspired by the sound of the sahur drum I used to hear'.
'I did not want my character to be just another passing joke – I wanted him to have meaning,' he said.
Cultural nuances can be lost at a mass scale, however, with one 12-year-old tourist in Tokyo saying he thought 'Tung Tung Tung Sahur' was a baseball bat.
And the generation gap looks set to persist.
'What's that?!' laughed a woman as she puzzled at the row of Italian Brainrot dolls.
'It's not cute at all!' AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Nylon
an hour ago
- Nylon
Hiroshima Toyo Carp Pop-up Store now at MUJI Singapore until 31 August
One of Japan's most beloved professional baseball teams, Hiroshima Toyo Carp, has launched its official pop-up store for a limited-time in Singapore. Image courtesy of MUJI. Happening from now to 31 August at MUJI Plaza Singapura, Open MUJI space, this pop-up is where you can find a combination of sports culture, Hiroshima tourism, and limited-edition merchandise. This showcase also marks Singapore's 60th birthday and the 50th anniversary of Carp Boy, the team's iconic mascot. Image courtesy of MUJI. The space is also home to a visually engaging showcase that brings the legacy of the Hiroshima Toyo Carp to life through a curated display of photos, videos, and fan-favourite items, allowing you an opportunity to deep dive into the team's rich history, iconic players, and the passionate culture surrounding Japanese professional baseball. On display too, are authentic baseball equipment such as gloves, bats and helmets, alongside a spotlight on Hiroshima's top travel attractions. Image courtesy of MUJI. Image courtesy of MUJI. Some of the exclusive merchandise you will find at the pop-up include the official team merchandise such as the player uniforms, team caps, and fan-favourite cheering goods; Singapore-Only collectibles like the Merlion x Carp Boy collaboration t-shirts; and a curated selection of products from Hiroshima featuring local delicacies, snacks, and unique souvenirs. The Hiroshima Toyo Carp Pop-up Store in Singapore runs from now to 31 August 2025 at MUJI Plaza Singapura (OPEN MUJI).
Business Times
18 hours ago
- Business Times
Taylor Swift announces 12th album for 'pre pre-order'
[WASHINGTON] US popstar Taylor Swift announced her 12th album, titled 'The Life of a Showgirl, for 'pre pre-order' just after midnight on Tuesday (Aug 12) in posts on her website. Her online shop displayed blurred images of a record, CD and cassette tape overlaid with a glittery orange lock, explaining the album artwork would be 'revealed at a later date.' A disclaimer also notes that the release date has not yet been announced, and the album will ship before Oct 13. 'So I wanted to show you something,' the singer says in a video clip posted to her Instagram as she holds up a vinyl album, its cover completely blurred. 'This is my brand new album The Life of a Show Girl', she says in the clip from the 'New Heights' podcast, hosted by her boyfriend, American football player Travis Kelce, and his brother, ex-NFL player Jason Kelce. The Life of a Showgirl is the follow-up to Swift's last studio album, The Tortured Poets Department, which was released last year and sold 1.4 million copies the first day. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 2 pm Lifestyle Our picks of the latest dining, travel and leisure options to treat yourself. Sign Up Sign Up Since 2021, she has been making good on her vow to re-record her first six studio records in a bid to own the rights to them. In May, the 14-time Grammy Award winner, who was locked in a feud with record executives since 2019 over the ownership of her music, said she had bought back the rights to her entire back catalogue for an undisclosed sum. The 35-year-old songwriting sensation shattered records with her nearly two-year-long Eras tour that ended last year. It raked in US$2 billion over 149 shows around the world, making it the most lucrative tour in music history. Tickets for the tour sold for sometimes exorbitant prices, and it drew millions of fans. AFP

Straits Times
21 hours ago
- Straits Times
One-time rapper MGK, formerly Machine Gun Kelly, does not want to be cool any more
NEW YORK – Before American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan delivered him an out-of-the-blue stamp of approval earlier in 2025, American rapper and singer MGK was on unsteady ground. He had just returned from an extended stay at a rehabilitation facility amid a high-profile break-up with American actress Megan Fox, who was expecting the couple's first child (their daughter was born in March). The Los Angeles fires had destroyed his favourite studio. And he had scrapped some two years of work on a new album, opting to pursue a new genre-agnostic, pure(-ish) pop direction. Everything felt far from certain. Then, in February, a decade-old clip of MGK rapping in a Central Florida record store appeared on Dylan's cryptic Instagram account. 'Everything on his grid is black-and-white and old – either it's Malcolm X or like dead jazz players,' said MGK, born Colson Baker and formerly known as Machine Gun Kelly. 'I'm like, okay, how do I fit in here? What's going on? It's like a D-side MGK video from, like, the 17th page of my YouTube channel.' After a period of disbelief, MGK began inching towards meeting the reclusive rock legend. They finally came face to face in May, following a Dylan performance at the Hollywood Bowl. Not long after, MGK announced his new album, Lost Americana, with a video narrated by that familiar – but rarely heard – voice, intoning about 'a sonic map of forgotten places, a tribute to the spirit of reinvention and a quest to reclaim the essence of American freedom'. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Power fault downs MRT service on stretch of North East Line; recovery may take 2-3 hours Singapore Live: NEL MRT disruption Business Singapore raises 2025 economic growth forecast but warns of uncertainty from US tariffs Singapore Circle Line to close early most Fridays and Saturdays, start late most weekends from Sept 5-Dec 28 Business Goh Cheng Liang, Nippon Paint billionaire and richest Singaporean, dies aged 98 Business StarHub buys rest of MyRepublic's broadband business in $105m deal; comes after Simba buys M1 World After tariff truce extended, a Trump-Xi summit in China? Asia Death of student in Sabah raises hurdle for Malaysian PM Anwar as he faces tough state polls soon 'He's the most elusive snow leopard,' MGK, 35, said of Dylan, 84, explaining his decision to take his idol's approval – along with that of Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger – as a sign that he was now on the correct path. Lost Americana, which came out on Aug 8, is the result of that newfound confidence, yet another reinvention for a polarising artiste. Having come to prominence as an aggressive white rapper claiming Cleveland, MGK made a mainstream name as a worthy opponent of American rapper Eminem, a fellow chip-on-his-shoulder outsider who had grown from a Midwestern battle rap scene. The Covid-19 pandemic saw MGK's pivot to pop-punk, which resulted in a pair of No. 1 albums, as well as his turn as a tabloid-trailed celebrity boyfriend. Now, he is doing dance choreography in the brightly coloured music video for Cliche, and attempting to meet his fans, detractors and lifelong demons with a clear head and a lack of pretence. 'There's no beguiling on this album,' he said. 'This album is not a character.' In a winding conversation, MGK was at turns edgy and gregarious, discussing how an adolescence filled with abuse and bullying led to his pursuit of being the 'anti-bro', and why he needs to self-destruct before he can create. These are edited excerpts from the interview. The Bob Dylan Instagram – what happened? I was having a rant in my sunken living room pit about, 'Is this the right album we're making?' Because in my heart, my DNA is hip-hop, and half of my fan base is like, 'Make this rap album that we have been promised.' I am having that conversation and tripping out. I am about to erase everything again. And someone goes, 'Dude, Bob Dylan just posted you.' We watched it and were like, damn, that was hard. Bob liking me as a rapper blew my mind. Bob's the original – (Subterranean Homesick Blues) is the original rap song. Then, I just came here a couple of days ago after having dinner with Mick Jagger in London. It is just these Thanos stones. That is the beauty of manifestation and how the universe has aligned with this album so brilliantly. Mick Jagger had that quote, something along the lines of 'MGK is making rock 'n' roll fun again.' When they sit down with me, I am so curious and also awkward, so I just want to immediately ask questions: Hey, any Michael Jackson stories, any Prince stories? You talk about yourself as a punching bag on the internet for people who say you make bad music. At the same time, you've had a huge amount of success in your life, dating all the way back to before you were famous. Do you not allow yourself to feel your wins because then you won't have any motivation left? MGK's Lost Americana surprise pop-up performance at Cellar Dog in New York City on Aug 5. PHOTO: AFP I say it on the first track of Lost Americana: 'All the pages are blank until my life goes to (expletive)/I know I do that on purpose just to write again.' Great bar. It truly sums up the totality of what I do almost before every album cycle. We watched it with this one; you can see it in the news. I've got to ruin everything so that I can talk about something because that is the only truth. I've put so much weight on my art that I will bleed out and die for this. But I've never even thought about kids on the internet associating me with bad music because when I walk the streets, when I sell out arenas – it is not easy to make some of the vulnerable or bold choices I've made. People know you as a tabloid figure, but they don't know that you lived all around the world as a kid. How did that influence who you are today and the enemies you're still fighting back against? MGK's Lost Americana surprise pop-up performance at Cellar Dog in New York City, on Aug 5. PHOTO: AFP I lived in Africa until I was six . So with that, your entire subconscious, those really formative years, you're growing up among so many different cultures, prayers, skin colours, ethnicities. I grew up with a very open heart and open mind. When I moved to America, I became a product of bullying. I was very tall; my mum and dad split; poverty ate up my clothes. I was the guy who went and got the wrong ear pierced, didn't know which one was the cool one. I acted goofy – I was obsessed with (Canadian-American actor) Jim Carrey, so I would do all these impressions, and everyone was just like, 'What's up with Ace Ventura over here?' At the same time, my house was very dark. I was living in my aunt's basement with my dad, and it was really abusive. Listerine to this day triggers me so hard because I shared a bed with my dad, and he would always go and throw up in the morning and come back in the bed and have Listerine on his breath. I grew up in a very masculine house. It was the type where I would come downstairs, and my dad would be like, 'You're dressed like a (expletive), go change.' I had many years of being like, 'Where's my mum?' And then, 15 years later, after he passed, my mum and I find this reconnection, and I ended up learning all of these false narratives I was fed as a kid. It was so unfair to that little boy because when you look around and the two people who are supposed to unconditionally love you, one isn't there and then the other person is just beating all of their own issues with life, all of their unsatisfaction into you, and then you go to school and you are getting jumped or laughed at. I didn't feel safe anywhere. I moved to the attic because at least I could hear the feet coming, so I could be prepared by the time my dad got upstairs for whatever was going to happen to me. You said you feel like you have stripped away all the cool. I think a lot of people from the outside looking in will look at you and say, well, this guy's been cool for more than a decade, but you are saying, hey, it is actually time to shed all that. MGK performing on the Today Show as part of the Citi Concert Series in New York City on June 20. PHOTO: REUTERS Any interview of me in my 20s, it makes me cringe to the max. But you need the arc of dumba** to be enlightened. I think there was a characterisation that I was playing into that really loved being a polarising figure. When I'm at home at night, though, if you look at my astrological chart, it's one of the most sensitive charts that exist. Among other gnarly diagnoses that I have, hypersensitivity is one. So, I have a hard shell. I grew up a battle rapper. I am prepped for war pretty much at all times. But the truth is, it felt much more satiating to the broken boy in me to be simpatico versus being the polarising figure. I also have been showing a lot goofier side of myself – the anti-bro. I don't care that my nails are painted. I don't care that I have an androgynous look. I don't care to fit into whatever the mould is of what they think a rapper should be. NYTIMES