Source: GENEralities Anticipation: a Sermon for the Second Sunday of Advent delivered at Celebration Church, Regina, Saskatchewan—7 December 2025 Heavenly Father, we bow in your presence this Advent.
Move over "skibidi," there's a new slang term delighting Generation Alpha and Gen Z while confusing "the olds." Dictionary.com named "6-7" its 2025 Word of the Year. It can also appear as "67 or ...
TikTokers have been proudly flaunting their membership to “Group 7,” an exclusive club dictated by the mysterious whims of the algorithm. Despite the numerical similarity, Group 7 has nothing to do ...
If you've been hearing your teens or children muttering '6-7' under their breath or posting it nonstop on TikTok and Instagram, you're not alone. This new Gen Z phrase, paired with a double-hand ...
It’s a phrase running rampant online and in classrooms among Gen Alpha and Gen Z. If you're confused by your teenager's use of the phrase "six, seven," you're not alone. Often paired with a double ...
The "Group 7" trend has taken social media by storm this week. Are you in "Group 7?" There's only one way to find out (open TikTok), and there is nothing you can do to change your group. These are the ...
Not since 69 has a number caused this much disruption. “6-7,” pronounced “six-seveeeeen,” is haunting school halls across the country (including South Park Elementary), making it the Gen Alpha ...
On October 15, 2025, roughly eight months after Skrilla—the 26-year-old Philadelphia native who has been dubbed the “King of Kensington” due to his deep ties with the infamous Philly hood—officially ...
The teaching profession requires a certain degree of patience, particularly when students discover a new trend to latch onto and repeat at every given opportunity. The latest so-called brain rot ...
If you have kids, you’ve probably heard them blurt out “6-7” recently, with emphasis on the seven. Something like six-seven. Gen Alpha are randomly repeating the numbers and laughing at the inside ...
A new viral trend has taken social media by storm, and now it’s creeping into classrooms across Australia. It’s called the “six seven” trend. While the name suggests numbers, there’s no math involved.