The Out-of-Touch Adults' Guide to Kid Culture: What Does 'Dah Bih Gah' Mean?

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Stephen Johnson

Stephen Johnson Senior Staff Writer

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Stephen Johnson is a senior staff writer at Lifehacker covering pop culture and technology, including the columns “The Out-of-Touch Adults’ Guide to Kid Culture” and “What People Are Getting Wrong This Week.”

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June 15, 2026

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Dah Bih Gah

Credit: @hepatitusba4, @datbihgahkid, @kohr36 - TikTok / Lifehacker

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A weekly deep dive into the current trends, slang, and viral videos of youth culture in terms that even the squarest can understand.

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The meme of the summer of 2026 has appeared: "Dah bih gah" has taken over the online world over the past couple of weeks and is being repeated with the kind of enthusiasm we haven't seen since the glory days of 6-7. This week's Out-of-Touch guide is fully devoted to explaining the meaning, origin, and fallout of the phenomenon.

What does "Dah Bih Gah" and "Dah Bih Tah" mean?

If you've encountered anyone under the age of 20 lately, I'm sure they've said "dah bih gah" or "dah bih tah" about 100 times every minute. If you wonder what it means, there's a simple explanation and a more complex one. The first, easy, answer: "dah bih gah" and "dah bih tah" are both slang for "that is good" or "that tastes good."

The more complex answer unfolds like an origami crane, illuminating different aspects of youth culture as each delicate paper petal is unfurled. I've broken down the explanation of these phrases in three sections: The viral video that started it, the trend that inspired the video, and the origin of each of the three syllables in "dah bih gah" and "dah bih tah."

Viral video of the week: Dah Bih Gah

The popularity of saying "dah bih gah" stems from a video posted on a now-deleted Instagram account belonging to Brayden "Bubba" Harrelson, a member of Generation Alpha. Here's a re-post of the video, from what seems to be Bubba's new, official account.

Those 12 seconds swung the whole internet. Braden's generational swagger—the hair, the clothes, the phrase—caught people's imaginations, and the video was shared widely, racking up tens of millions of views.

People reenacted it. They AI'd it. They made brainrot remixes galore:

But what about the kid behind the memes? Braden is a generational icon, like a living embodiment of the "Mason 6-7 kid" mentioned here before. Since the video went viral, Bubba and his family have visited Los Angeles, presumably to meet with potential agents and managers. And that's where things stand. How much money the family can get out of the meme is up in the air, but the answer is probably "more than you'd expect." (Bubba is really young, and the whole thing is really weird.)

As for the video itself: As you can see, Braden opens a jar and says "dah bih tah" then takes a bite of something red and drippy and declares, "dah bih gah," i.e.: "that tastes good," to an unseen person offscreen. But what culinary concoction inspired Braden's poetic response? A Kool-Aid pineapple.

What are "Kool-Aid pineapples"?

Kool-Aid pineapples are a snack trending across TikTok and the rest of the young-people Internet. Like the name suggests, they're made by getting a jar of sliced pineapple spears, emptying the pineapple juice into a different container, adding powdered Kool-Aid (and often more sugar or candy for some reason) to the juice, pouring the mixture back into the pineapple jar, letting it sit in the fridge for a couple hours or a couple days, then eating it. Yeah, for real. Here's an instructional video:

What do you think so far?

The trend started in Florida, where some food truck owners added the dish to their offerings. It then spread to online entrepreneurs selling their own versions to anyone who wants to buy. I'm not sure if he was the person who invented them, but an Instagrammer named Silly Willy is among the earlier and most popular online purveyors of the treat. He apparently sells Kool-Aid pineapples from the trunk of his car. Don't worry if you don't live in Florida though; check your local Facebook marketplace. I'm sure you can find some entrepreneur selling them in your area.

There's a potential problem here: There's a lot of sugar in this snack. Medical professionals are generally against the sugary treat, pointing out there are as many as 300 grams of sugar in the concoction. There's also the potential for food poisoning. Bacteria love sugar, and whether the person you're buying from has taken steps to guard against cross-contamination in their trunk-pineapples can't be determined in any way other than eating them and hoping for the best. Still, I can't find any evidence of anyone having been hospitalized with food poisoning from the pineapples, and as for the sugar—what are ya gonna do? Kids like candy. It sounds disgusting to me, but younger me would have been into it, I'm sure.

What does "gas" mean in slang?

Getting back to the original meme: Bubba says "dah bih gah" and each syllable is a shortened or changed word. Translated, Braden's "dah bih gah" and "dah bih tah" mean, respectively, "that bitch gas," and "that bitch tough." Gas, in slang, means good. Tough also means good.

(For more youth slang, check out Lifehacker's glossary of Gen Z and Gen A slang.)

Where does dah bih gah go from here?

There's no way of predicting the resonance of slang words, but it seems to me that dah bih gah won't last as long as 6-7. It's specific, where 6-7 is enigmatic. There's no mystery to it, and once parents and businesses start using it (which is already happening), it will cool down and disappear. As for Bubba, I hope whatever cash he gets is put into a college fund.

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