Chipi Chipi Chapa Chapa / "Dubidubidu"
Also known as: Dubidubidu Β· γγγγγγ£γγγ£γ
"Chipi Chipi Chapa Chapa" is the catchy chorus from "Dubidubidu," a 2003 children's song by Chilean singer Christell that went massively viral in late 2023. The meme took off after a Boykisser animation set to the song spread across X and TikTok in October 2023, then exploded when users started pairing the chorus with looped videos of cats bobbing their heads. By January 2024, the two-decade-old track topped Spotify's viral chart in Japan and spread to multiple other countries3.
TL;DR
"Chipi Chipi Chapa Chapa" is the catchy chorus from "Dubidubidu," a 2003 children's song by Chilean singer Christell that went massively viral in late 2023.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The most common format involves filming a cat (or other pet) and syncing the video to the "Chipi chipi chapa chapa" chorus. Some creators move their phone while recording to make the animal appear to sway along. Others loop existing footage of animals moving rhythmically. The animation format is also popular: take a character (original, fandom, or otherwise) and animate them bobbing or dancing to the chorus, usually in a cute, looping style inspired by the original Boykisser animation.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The song was originally written around a specific concept: Christell inviting her friends to her house in a toy car.
"Dubidubidu" went from 372,000 YouTube views in 2018 to 2.8 million by mid-2023, all before the meme even started.
The cat video by @mel0yyyy_02 averaged nearly 4 million views per day during its first four days.
The song hit number one in Japan despite being in Spanish, showing how meme virality can bypass language barriers.
Derivatives & Variations
Boykisser animations:
The original format by @Kuowonn, featuring the Boykisser character bobbing to the chorus, spawned numerous re-animations with other characters[2].
Foxy re-animation:
Fazbears Times created a Five Nights at Freddy's Foxy version, one of the earliest character swaps[2].
Cat dance videos:
The dominant derivative format, where real cats are filmed bobbing or swaying to the song, often with the phone moving to create the illusion of movement[1].
Desktop wallpaper trend:
Users set the Boykisser animation as their desktop wallpaper and filmed the result[2].
Plush toy versions:
Videos of plush animals "dancing" to the track, like the viral plush rat video by @idonotsmoke2938[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4Dubidubiduencyclopedia