Devious Licks Trend
Also known as: Diabolical Lick · Dastardly Lick · Nefarious Lick
Devious Licks was a viral TikTok trend in September 2021 where middle- and high-school students filmed themselves stealing or vandalizing items from their schools, primarily from bathrooms. The trend started with a single video on September 1 and spread so fast that TikTok banned it within two weeks, but not before it triggered student arrests, school bathroom lockdowns, and a national panic among administrators returning to full in-person classes after the pandemic.
TL;DR
Devious Licks was a viral TikTok trend in September 2021 where middle- and high-school students filmed themselves stealing or vandalizing items from their schools, primarily from bathrooms.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The devious licks format is straightforward, though actually participating would mean committing theft or vandalism:
A student steals or damages something from school, typically a bathroom item
They film a reveal video showing the stolen item in their backpack, or the damage left behind
The video is set to a sped-up version of Lil B's "Ski Ski BasedGod"
The caption uses "devious lick" or a synonym like "diabolical lick" or "nefarious lick"
The more absurd or large-scale the theft, the more engagement the video got
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The original devious lick video featured something pretty tame: a box of disposable face masks.
Items stolen during the trend included exit signs, telephones, interactive whiteboards, floor tiles, ceiling tiles, and even turf from sports fields at rival schools.
The "devious" hashtag hit 235 million views on TikTok before it was banned, just 14 days after the trend started.
At least one school in Minnesota had to explain to parents at open house why there was fake blood (Kool-Aid) on the bathroom walls.
The trend was not limited to the U.S. — schools in Canada, Australia, and Germany all reported incidents.
Derivatives & Variations
Angelic Yields
— After the media backlash and TikTok crackdown, some users started a countertrend where they anonymously donated items to their schools, such as bottles of soap, rolls of toilet paper, or small amounts of cash hidden for someone to find[3].
Chromebook Challenge
— A similar school vandalism trend that emerged in May 2025, involving students inserting conductive materials like pencil leads or paper clips into the USB ports of school-issued Chromebooks to cause damage or start small fires[3].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1
- 2
- 3Devious lickencyclopedia
- 4Devious Licks Trend - Urban Dictionarydictionary