Brendan Abernathys Married In A Year In The Suburbs
Also known as: Married in a Year Song · Married in a Year Toes Guy
Brendan Abernathy's "Married in a Year in the Suburbs" is a viral TikTok moment from May 2025 in which indie-folk singer Brendan Abernathy performs an acoustic snippet of his song "Married in a Year" while barefoot and tiptoeing in the middle of a crowd at the Moroccan Lounge in Los Angeles. The earnest, vulnerable performance split the internet between genuine fans and people who found it painfully cringe, spawning thousands of parodies mocking his tiptoe stance, quivering delivery, and exposed socks. The clip racked up over 13 million views on TikTok and turned Abernathy from a car-dwelling touring musician with 400 followers into a flashpoint for the broader debate around cringe culture online1.
TL;DR
Brendan Abernathy's "Married in a Year in the Suburbs" is a viral TikTok moment from May 2025 in which indie-folk singer Brendan Abernathy performs an acoustic snippet of his song "Married in a Year" while barefoot and tiptoeing in the middle of a crowd at the Moroccan Lounge in Los Angeles.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The "Married in a Year" meme typically follows one of a few formats:
Performance recreation: Film yourself in a crowd (or alone) tiptoeing and quivering while singing or lip-syncing the lyrics. The more dramatic the tiptoe stance, the better. Some creators substitute the guitar for absurd objects like children, pets, or household items.
Tiptoe zoom: Take the original clip and zoom progressively into Abernathy's bare feet and socks, usually set to dramatic music or with exaggerated commentary.
Drawing/animation parody: Illustrate the performance with exaggerated features, often adding visual puns related to the lyrics about suburbs, marriage, or the American Dream.
Industry plant accusation format: Use the clip as a springboard for satirical "evidence" that the performance was manufactured by a music marketing team, often presented in a deadpan conspiracy-theory style.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Abernathy's mom is his number one artist on Spotify six years running. Her second and third most-listened artists are the people he has duets with.
He doesn't use setlists at his concerts. He improvises based on crowd interaction, saying he never knows where he's going but knows "where I want the room to end up".
The 30-second clip that went viral is literally the intro to his debut album *The Kid Who Got It All Wrong*.
Abernathy was at the concert in LA because his mom volunteered to help him drive 34 hours from Atlanta after his sister's wedding so he could make the show.
He described himself as "forged in the fires of self-deprecation" when asked about the parodies.
Derivatives & Variations
Child-as-guitar parody
by @iamtituscody: The creator holds his kid like a guitar while recreating the tiptoe performance. Hit 1.5 million plays in one day[4].
Illustrated performance series
by @krabbeljongen: Dutch artist's drawings exaggerating the tiptoe stance with lyric-based visual gags. Over 630,000 plays[4].
Cicada transformation edits:
Users morphed Abernathy's tiptoe silhouette into a cicada, which Abernathy acknowledged with good humor: "I love cicadas. I kind of look like a cicada"[1].
Industry plant conspiracy threads:
Satirical TikToks presenting "evidence" that the intimate performance was staged by a marketing team[1].
Sock/toe zoom edits:
Close-up crops of the barefoot performance set to dramatic or comedic audio[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
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- 2I Confronted Himarticle
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