Gangnam Style

2011video/musicdead

Also known as: Gangnam Style Meme · GS · Gangnam Style · GANGNAM STYLE

Gangnam Style is a 2012 K-pop single by South Korean rapper PSY, featuring an absurd horse-riding dance, that became the first YouTube video to reach one billion views.

"Gangnam Style" is a 2012 K-pop single by South Korean rapper PSY (Park Jae-sang) that broke every existing record for viral video content when its music video became the first in YouTube history to reach one billion views on December 21, 201212. Built around an absurd "horse-riding dance" and a satirical take on the materialism of Seoul's wealthiest neighborhood, the song topped charts in over 30 countries and introduced millions of Western listeners to Korean pop music3.

TL;DR

Gangnam Style a dead viral dance trend from 2012 featuring the hit song 'Gangnam Style' by South Korean artist PSY.

Overview

"Gangnam Style" is a dance-pop track set in B minor at 132 BPM6 that pairs an aggressively catchy electronic beat with lyrics about a self-proclaimed hotshot searching for "the perfect girlfriend who knows when to be refined and when to get wild"3. The song's title references the Gangnam district of Seoul, a 15-square-mile area that held roughly $84 billion in wealth as of 2010, about seven percent of South Korea's entire GDP1. In Korean slang, "Gangnam Style" described the flashy nouveau riche lifestyle associated with the district's trendsetters4.

The music video's signature element is the "horse-riding dance," where PSY pretends to ride an invisible horse while alternately holding reins and spinning a lasso, then breaking into a legs-shuffling side gallop3. The video drops PSY into absurd locations: a children's playground, a public bath, a stable, a bus, and a tennis court, all while he insists he's living the high life18. The disconnect between the glamorous claim and the ridiculous reality was the joke, and it translated across every language barrier.

PSY wrote and produced "Gangnam Style" as the lead single for his sixth studio album, *Psy 6 (Six Rules), Part 1*3. By 2012, the 34-year-old rapper had spent over a decade as a well-known entertainer in South Korea, famous for his comedy, blunt lyrics, and wild stage performances5. His first album had gotten him fined for "inappropriate content," his second was banned outright, and he'd been busted for marijuana and for dodging mandatory military service1. He was not the kind of artist the K-pop industry would have picked to crack the Western market9.

PSY told *The New York Times* that South Korean fans had such high expectations for his dance moves that he stayed up late for about 30 nights testing "cheesy" animal-inspired choreography with his choreographer Lee Ju-sun, trying panda and kangaroo moves before landing on the horse trot3. The music video was shot in just 48 hours and packed with well-known South Korean TV personalities to guarantee domestic buzz9. Seven-year-old dance prodigy Hwang Min-woo, comedian Yoo Jae-suk (in a bright yellow suit), TV personality Noh Hong-chul (the "elevator guy"), and K-pop star Hyuna all made appearances13.

The video was uploaded to PSY's official YouTube channel on July 15, 2012, and pulled roughly 500,000 views on its first day9. It immediately topped South Korea's Gaon Chart3.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube/Music
Creator
PSY
Date
2012
Year
2011

PSY wrote and produced "Gangnam Style" as the lead single for his sixth studio album, *Psy 6 (Six Rules), Part 1*. By 2012, the 34-year-old rapper had spent over a decade as a well-known entertainer in South Korea, famous for his comedy, blunt lyrics, and wild stage performances. His first album had gotten him fined for "inappropriate content," his second was banned outright, and he'd been busted for marijuana and for dodging mandatory military service. He was not the kind of artist the K-pop industry would have picked to crack the Western market.

PSY told *The New York Times* that South Korean fans had such high expectations for his dance moves that he stayed up late for about 30 nights testing "cheesy" animal-inspired choreography with his choreographer Lee Ju-sun, trying panda and kangaroo moves before landing on the horse trot. The music video was shot in just 48 hours and packed with well-known South Korean TV personalities to guarantee domestic buzz. Seven-year-old dance prodigy Hwang Min-woo, comedian Yoo Jae-suk (in a bright yellow suit), TV personality Noh Hong-chul (the "elevator guy"), and K-pop star Hyuna all made appearances.

The video was uploaded to PSY's official YouTube channel on July 15, 2012, and pulled roughly 500,000 views on its first day. It immediately topped South Korea's Gaon Chart.

How It Spread

The video's international breakout started in late July 2012 when American rapper T-Pain tweeted about it, writing "Words cannot ever describe how amazing this video is". Singer Josh Groban posted: "It's a gangnam style world, we are just living in it". Within days, Britney Spears, Katy Perry, Tom Cruise, and Robbie Williams had all drawn their followers' attention to the clip.

By the first week of August, CNN, ABC News, and *The Wall Street Journal* had all covered the video as a viral sensation. The YouTube community's response spawned reaction videos that themselves pulled tens of thousands of views, which Korean news outlets then covered, creating a feedback loop of attention.

English-speaking audiences latched onto the chorus "Oppan Gangnam Style" through misheard lyrics, turning the refrain into "Open Condom Style" and "Open Gundam Style," which spawned image macros and dominated the YouTube comments section.

By the end of August 2012, the video was pulling over 3 million views per day. On September 3, daily views passed the 5 million mark. That same week, PSY's Seoul-based label YG Entertainment announced he had signed with Schoolboy Records after being approached by American talent manager Scooter Braun, who had asked on Twitter, "How did I not sign this guy?". Braun, the man who discovered Justin Bieber on YouTube, had now signed the first Korean artist to achieve mainstream Western representation.

On September 20, 2012, Guinness World Records officially recognized "Gangnam Style" as the most liked video in YouTube history with 2,141,758 likes, overtaking LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem," Justin Bieber's "Baby," and Adele's "Rolling in the Deep".

In the United States, the song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100, blocked from the top spot by Maroon 5's "One More Night". It topped the charts of more than 30 countries including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom, where it became the first K-pop single to reach number one.

Platforms

YouTubeFacebookTwitterInstagram

Timeline

2012-07-01

Celebrities including Britney Spears, Katy Perry, Robbie Williams, and Josh Groban shared the "Gangnam Style" video on social media, collectively introducing it to millions of Western followers.

2012-07-15

PSY released "Gangnam Style" through his label YG Entertainment as the lead single of his sixth studio album, *Psy 6 (Six Rules), Part 1*, and the video pulled roughly 500,000 views on its first day.

2012-08-01

The "Gangnam Style" music video was pulling over 3 million views per day on YouTube.

2012-08-14

PSY released a spin-off version titled "Oppa Is Just My Style," featuring K-pop star Hyuna in the lead role and removing the "Gangnam Style" chorus entirely.

2012-09-20

Guinness World Records officially recognized "Gangnam Style" as the most liked video in YouTube history with 2,141,758 likes, overtaking LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem" and Justin Bieber's "Baby."

2012-11-01

Internet users connected "Gangnam Style" to a supposed Nostradamus prophecy reading: "From the calm morning, the end will come when of the dancing horse the number of circles will be 9."

2012-11-24

"Gangnam Style" became the most-viewed video on YouTube after passing Justin Bieber's "Baby," a record it held until July 10, 2017, when it was overtaken by Wiz Khalifa's "See You Again."

2012-12-21

At around 3:50 UTC, "Gangnam Style" became the first video in internet history to reach one billion views on YouTube.

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Gangnam Style memes revolve around the signature horse dance, parody recreations, and the song's cultural ubiquity in the early 2010s.

1

For the horse dance: film yourself performing the invisible horse ride and lasso spin in an unexpected or formal location — the humor comes from the contrast

2

For parody videos: recreate the full music video with a group in a new context (office, school, military), maintaining the original structure with your own setting

3

Use the 'Oppan [X] Style' snowclone by swapping 'Gangnam' for any other word in the song's refrain

4

Post a clip or GIF of the horse dance as a reaction signaling nostalgia for 2012 internet or extreme enthusiasm

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

"Gangnam Style" broke barriers that the K-pop industry had been trying to crack for years. Korean pop acts had found audiences in Southeast Asia and parts of South America, but Western reception was lukewarm before PSY. The song proved that viral internet content could bypass traditional music industry gatekeeping and language barriers entirely.

South Korea saw a measurable tourism boost. Visitors flocked to Gangnam, inspired by the song's lyrics and imagery, and the country's cultural exports in music, fashion, and beauty products experienced sharp growth.

The British sculptor Anish Kapoor produced a short film called *Gangnam for Freedom* to advocate for freedom of expression, which won support from Index on Censorship and Amnesty International.

A fake Nostradamus prophecy meme circulated in November 2012, reading: "From the calm morning, the end will come when of the dancing horse the number of circles will be 9." Fans connected "the calm morning" to Korea ("Land of the Morning Calm"), "the dancing horse" to PSY's dance, and "the number of circles" to the video approaching 900 million views, just as the Mayan calendar end date of December 21 approached.

U.S. Representative John Lewis recorded a video of himself doing the dance. The United Nations' communications division described PSY as "an international sensation".

Full History

PSY (born Park Jae-sang, December 31, 1977) grew up in a wealthy family in the Gangnam district itself. His father ran the semiconductor manufacturing company DI Corporation, and the plan was for PSY to study business administration at Boston University and eventually take over the family business. Instead, he spent his tuition money on musical instruments and entertainment equipment, dropped out of Boston University, briefly attended Berklee College of Music, then returned to South Korea to pursue a music career without a degree from either school.

His time in America mattered. The Atlantic's Max Fisher argued that PSY's exposure to American music's tradition of social commentary, combined with the perspective of living abroad, shaped his willingness to satirize South Korean materialism in a way that was rare in K-pop. "Korea has not had a long history of nuanced satire," noted Korean-American consultant Adrian Hong. "He's really mainstreaming it, and he's doing it in a way that maybe not everybody quite realizes".

The satire in "Gangnam Style" was layered. PSY told ABC News: "Gangnam means, it's like Beverly Hills of Korea. But the guy doesn't look like Beverly Hills. Dance doesn't look like Beverly Hills. And the situation in music video doesn't look like Beverly Hills. But he keeps saying I'm Beverly Hills style. So that's the point. It's sort of a twist". In a separate interview cited by Wikipedia, PSY explained that "people who are actually from Gangnam never proclaim that they are. It's only the posers and wannabes that put on these airs". Hong connected this critique to South Korea's sky-high consumer debt: in 2010, the average household carried credit card debt worth 155 percent of their disposable income, and there were nearly five credit cards for every adult.

The song's viral velocity through late 2012 was staggering. On August 14, PSY released a spin-off version featuring Hyuna titled "Oppa Is Just My Style". By October, *The Atlantic* was tracking whether the video would be the first ever to hit a billion views, predicting it would pass Justin Bieber's "Baby" by Thanksgiving and reach the billion mark in December. That prediction proved exact. On December 21, 2012, at around 3:50 UTC, "Gangnam Style" became the first video in internet history to reach one billion views. YouTube marked the milestone with a cartoon dancing PSY animation next to the video's view counter.

The song had sold over 3 million digital copies in the US alone by the end of 2012. In the UK, it climbed from number 196 on the singles chart to number one in just a few weeks. *Time* magazine named it the second best song of 2012.

The cultural ripple effects were enormous. Flash mobs in Paris, Rome, and Milan drew tens of thousands of participants. The British Army and Thai Navy filmed their own versions. Athletes from football to cricket performed the horse dance in celebrations. UK Prime Minister David Cameron and then-London Mayor Boris Johnson reportedly danced it together at a conference. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called it "a force for world peace". At a 2013 bilateral meeting with South Korean President Park Geun-hye, President Barack Obama cited the song's success as an example of how the Korean Wave was sweeping the world.

The video's impact on the music industry went beyond meme status. Billboard wasn't counting YouTube plays in chart calculations when "Gangnam Style" was at its peak. Billboard's director of charts Silvio Pietroluongo later pointed directly to the song when explaining why they changed the rules: "You saw it with Psy. We didn't have YouTube on the charts when he was on, but everything that was borne out of that play, from sales to streaming, was certainly displayed". This shift opened the door for songs like Baauer's "Harlem Shake" the following year.

By 2014, the video had reached 2,147,483,647 views, the maximum number YouTube's 32-bit integer counter could handle, forcing the platform to upgrade its view counter to a 64-bit integer. As of 2018, the total exceeded 3.2 billion views.

PSY's follow-up single "Gentleman M/V" broke the record for most YouTube views in the first 24 hours but failed to match the cultural impact of "Gangnam Style". PSY later founded his own talent agency, P Nation, and told *Pitchfork*: "It was probably the biggest trophy the world could have given me. It's now something on the shelf I can admire from time to time".

Bernie Cho of DFSB Collective framed the song's broader significance for global music: "He proved that a Korean artist didn't have to be young, pretty, and skinny to become a global K-Pop star. He also proved that a contagious worldwide hit wasn't contingent on singing a song entirely in English". That lesson paved the way for BTS, BLACKPINK, and NewJeans to build massive international followings, and helped open Western charts to non-English-language hits from reggaeton to Latin pop.

Fun Facts

PSY tested panda and kangaroo dance moves before settling on the horse trot, spending about 30 late nights perfecting the choreography with Lee Ju-sun.

The music video was filmed in just 48 hours.

When the view count hit 2,147,483,647, it maxed out YouTube's 32-bit integer counter, forcing Google to upgrade to a 64-bit system.

PSY was born into a wealthy family in Gangnam itself, making his satire of the neighborhood's materialism partly self-deprecating.

The song's success changed Billboard's chart methodology. After seeing how YouTube views drove sales and streaming for "Gangnam Style," Billboard began incorporating YouTube data into its calculations.

Derivatives & Variations

Other K-pop viral events, Global success of Korean music content

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

International dance trends, Non-English language content achieving virality

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Horse-riding dance variations, Different choreography adaptations

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Gangnam Style covers, Music artists performing their own versions

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Nostalgia content, Decades-later Gangnam Style recreations

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (29)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
    Gangnam Styleencyclopedia
  6. 6
  7. 7
    Psy - Wikipediaencyclopedia
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
  20. 20
  21. 21
  22. 22
  23. 23
  24. 24
  25. 25
  26. 26
  27. 27
  28. 28
  29. 29

Gangnam Style

2011video/musicdead

Also known as: Gangnam Style Meme · GS · Gangnam Style · GANGNAM STYLE

Gangnam Style is a 2012 K-pop single by South Korean rapper PSY, featuring an absurd horse-riding dance, that became the first YouTube video to reach one billion views.

"Gangnam Style" is a 2012 K-pop single by South Korean rapper PSY (Park Jae-sang) that broke every existing record for viral video content when its music video became the first in YouTube history to reach one billion views on December 21, 2012. Built around an absurd "horse-riding dance" and a satirical take on the materialism of Seoul's wealthiest neighborhood, the song topped charts in over 30 countries and introduced millions of Western listeners to Korean pop music.

TL;DR

Gangnam Style a dead viral dance trend from 2012 featuring the hit song 'Gangnam Style' by South Korean artist PSY.

Overview

"Gangnam Style" is a dance-pop track set in B minor at 132 BPM that pairs an aggressively catchy electronic beat with lyrics about a self-proclaimed hotshot searching for "the perfect girlfriend who knows when to be refined and when to get wild". The song's title references the Gangnam district of Seoul, a 15-square-mile area that held roughly $84 billion in wealth as of 2010, about seven percent of South Korea's entire GDP. In Korean slang, "Gangnam Style" described the flashy nouveau riche lifestyle associated with the district's trendsetters.

The music video's signature element is the "horse-riding dance," where PSY pretends to ride an invisible horse while alternately holding reins and spinning a lasso, then breaking into a legs-shuffling side gallop. The video drops PSY into absurd locations: a children's playground, a public bath, a stable, a bus, and a tennis court, all while he insists he's living the high life. The disconnect between the glamorous claim and the ridiculous reality was the joke, and it translated across every language barrier.

PSY wrote and produced "Gangnam Style" as the lead single for his sixth studio album, *Psy 6 (Six Rules), Part 1*. By 2012, the 34-year-old rapper had spent over a decade as a well-known entertainer in South Korea, famous for his comedy, blunt lyrics, and wild stage performances. His first album had gotten him fined for "inappropriate content," his second was banned outright, and he'd been busted for marijuana and for dodging mandatory military service. He was not the kind of artist the K-pop industry would have picked to crack the Western market.

PSY told *The New York Times* that South Korean fans had such high expectations for his dance moves that he stayed up late for about 30 nights testing "cheesy" animal-inspired choreography with his choreographer Lee Ju-sun, trying panda and kangaroo moves before landing on the horse trot. The music video was shot in just 48 hours and packed with well-known South Korean TV personalities to guarantee domestic buzz. Seven-year-old dance prodigy Hwang Min-woo, comedian Yoo Jae-suk (in a bright yellow suit), TV personality Noh Hong-chul (the "elevator guy"), and K-pop star Hyuna all made appearances.

The video was uploaded to PSY's official YouTube channel on July 15, 2012, and pulled roughly 500,000 views on its first day. It immediately topped South Korea's Gaon Chart.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube/Music
Creator
PSY
Date
2012
Year
2011

PSY wrote and produced "Gangnam Style" as the lead single for his sixth studio album, *Psy 6 (Six Rules), Part 1*. By 2012, the 34-year-old rapper had spent over a decade as a well-known entertainer in South Korea, famous for his comedy, blunt lyrics, and wild stage performances. His first album had gotten him fined for "inappropriate content," his second was banned outright, and he'd been busted for marijuana and for dodging mandatory military service. He was not the kind of artist the K-pop industry would have picked to crack the Western market.

PSY told *The New York Times* that South Korean fans had such high expectations for his dance moves that he stayed up late for about 30 nights testing "cheesy" animal-inspired choreography with his choreographer Lee Ju-sun, trying panda and kangaroo moves before landing on the horse trot. The music video was shot in just 48 hours and packed with well-known South Korean TV personalities to guarantee domestic buzz. Seven-year-old dance prodigy Hwang Min-woo, comedian Yoo Jae-suk (in a bright yellow suit), TV personality Noh Hong-chul (the "elevator guy"), and K-pop star Hyuna all made appearances.

The video was uploaded to PSY's official YouTube channel on July 15, 2012, and pulled roughly 500,000 views on its first day. It immediately topped South Korea's Gaon Chart.

How It Spread

The video's international breakout started in late July 2012 when American rapper T-Pain tweeted about it, writing "Words cannot ever describe how amazing this video is". Singer Josh Groban posted: "It's a gangnam style world, we are just living in it". Within days, Britney Spears, Katy Perry, Tom Cruise, and Robbie Williams had all drawn their followers' attention to the clip.

By the first week of August, CNN, ABC News, and *The Wall Street Journal* had all covered the video as a viral sensation. The YouTube community's response spawned reaction videos that themselves pulled tens of thousands of views, which Korean news outlets then covered, creating a feedback loop of attention.

English-speaking audiences latched onto the chorus "Oppan Gangnam Style" through misheard lyrics, turning the refrain into "Open Condom Style" and "Open Gundam Style," which spawned image macros and dominated the YouTube comments section.

By the end of August 2012, the video was pulling over 3 million views per day. On September 3, daily views passed the 5 million mark. That same week, PSY's Seoul-based label YG Entertainment announced he had signed with Schoolboy Records after being approached by American talent manager Scooter Braun, who had asked on Twitter, "How did I not sign this guy?". Braun, the man who discovered Justin Bieber on YouTube, had now signed the first Korean artist to achieve mainstream Western representation.

On September 20, 2012, Guinness World Records officially recognized "Gangnam Style" as the most liked video in YouTube history with 2,141,758 likes, overtaking LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem," Justin Bieber's "Baby," and Adele's "Rolling in the Deep".

In the United States, the song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100, blocked from the top spot by Maroon 5's "One More Night". It topped the charts of more than 30 countries including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom, where it became the first K-pop single to reach number one.

Platforms

YouTubeFacebookTwitterInstagram

Timeline

2012-07-01

Celebrities including Britney Spears, Katy Perry, Robbie Williams, and Josh Groban shared the "Gangnam Style" video on social media, collectively introducing it to millions of Western followers.

2012-07-15

PSY released "Gangnam Style" through his label YG Entertainment as the lead single of his sixth studio album, *Psy 6 (Six Rules), Part 1*, and the video pulled roughly 500,000 views on its first day.

2012-08-01

The "Gangnam Style" music video was pulling over 3 million views per day on YouTube.

2012-08-14

PSY released a spin-off version titled "Oppa Is Just My Style," featuring K-pop star Hyuna in the lead role and removing the "Gangnam Style" chorus entirely.

2012-09-20

Guinness World Records officially recognized "Gangnam Style" as the most liked video in YouTube history with 2,141,758 likes, overtaking LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem" and Justin Bieber's "Baby."

2012-11-01

Internet users connected "Gangnam Style" to a supposed Nostradamus prophecy reading: "From the calm morning, the end will come when of the dancing horse the number of circles will be 9."

2012-11-24

"Gangnam Style" became the most-viewed video on YouTube after passing Justin Bieber's "Baby," a record it held until July 10, 2017, when it was overtaken by Wiz Khalifa's "See You Again."

2012-12-21

At around 3:50 UTC, "Gangnam Style" became the first video in internet history to reach one billion views on YouTube.

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Gangnam Style memes revolve around the signature horse dance, parody recreations, and the song's cultural ubiquity in the early 2010s.

1

For the horse dance: film yourself performing the invisible horse ride and lasso spin in an unexpected or formal location — the humor comes from the contrast

2

For parody videos: recreate the full music video with a group in a new context (office, school, military), maintaining the original structure with your own setting

3

Use the 'Oppan [X] Style' snowclone by swapping 'Gangnam' for any other word in the song's refrain

4

Post a clip or GIF of the horse dance as a reaction signaling nostalgia for 2012 internet or extreme enthusiasm

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

"Gangnam Style" broke barriers that the K-pop industry had been trying to crack for years. Korean pop acts had found audiences in Southeast Asia and parts of South America, but Western reception was lukewarm before PSY. The song proved that viral internet content could bypass traditional music industry gatekeeping and language barriers entirely.

South Korea saw a measurable tourism boost. Visitors flocked to Gangnam, inspired by the song's lyrics and imagery, and the country's cultural exports in music, fashion, and beauty products experienced sharp growth.

The British sculptor Anish Kapoor produced a short film called *Gangnam for Freedom* to advocate for freedom of expression, which won support from Index on Censorship and Amnesty International.

A fake Nostradamus prophecy meme circulated in November 2012, reading: "From the calm morning, the end will come when of the dancing horse the number of circles will be 9." Fans connected "the calm morning" to Korea ("Land of the Morning Calm"), "the dancing horse" to PSY's dance, and "the number of circles" to the video approaching 900 million views, just as the Mayan calendar end date of December 21 approached.

U.S. Representative John Lewis recorded a video of himself doing the dance. The United Nations' communications division described PSY as "an international sensation".

Full History

PSY (born Park Jae-sang, December 31, 1977) grew up in a wealthy family in the Gangnam district itself. His father ran the semiconductor manufacturing company DI Corporation, and the plan was for PSY to study business administration at Boston University and eventually take over the family business. Instead, he spent his tuition money on musical instruments and entertainment equipment, dropped out of Boston University, briefly attended Berklee College of Music, then returned to South Korea to pursue a music career without a degree from either school.

His time in America mattered. The Atlantic's Max Fisher argued that PSY's exposure to American music's tradition of social commentary, combined with the perspective of living abroad, shaped his willingness to satirize South Korean materialism in a way that was rare in K-pop. "Korea has not had a long history of nuanced satire," noted Korean-American consultant Adrian Hong. "He's really mainstreaming it, and he's doing it in a way that maybe not everybody quite realizes".

The satire in "Gangnam Style" was layered. PSY told ABC News: "Gangnam means, it's like Beverly Hills of Korea. But the guy doesn't look like Beverly Hills. Dance doesn't look like Beverly Hills. And the situation in music video doesn't look like Beverly Hills. But he keeps saying I'm Beverly Hills style. So that's the point. It's sort of a twist". In a separate interview cited by Wikipedia, PSY explained that "people who are actually from Gangnam never proclaim that they are. It's only the posers and wannabes that put on these airs". Hong connected this critique to South Korea's sky-high consumer debt: in 2010, the average household carried credit card debt worth 155 percent of their disposable income, and there were nearly five credit cards for every adult.

The song's viral velocity through late 2012 was staggering. On August 14, PSY released a spin-off version featuring Hyuna titled "Oppa Is Just My Style". By October, *The Atlantic* was tracking whether the video would be the first ever to hit a billion views, predicting it would pass Justin Bieber's "Baby" by Thanksgiving and reach the billion mark in December. That prediction proved exact. On December 21, 2012, at around 3:50 UTC, "Gangnam Style" became the first video in internet history to reach one billion views. YouTube marked the milestone with a cartoon dancing PSY animation next to the video's view counter.

The song had sold over 3 million digital copies in the US alone by the end of 2012. In the UK, it climbed from number 196 on the singles chart to number one in just a few weeks. *Time* magazine named it the second best song of 2012.

The cultural ripple effects were enormous. Flash mobs in Paris, Rome, and Milan drew tens of thousands of participants. The British Army and Thai Navy filmed their own versions. Athletes from football to cricket performed the horse dance in celebrations. UK Prime Minister David Cameron and then-London Mayor Boris Johnson reportedly danced it together at a conference. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called it "a force for world peace". At a 2013 bilateral meeting with South Korean President Park Geun-hye, President Barack Obama cited the song's success as an example of how the Korean Wave was sweeping the world.

The video's impact on the music industry went beyond meme status. Billboard wasn't counting YouTube plays in chart calculations when "Gangnam Style" was at its peak. Billboard's director of charts Silvio Pietroluongo later pointed directly to the song when explaining why they changed the rules: "You saw it with Psy. We didn't have YouTube on the charts when he was on, but everything that was borne out of that play, from sales to streaming, was certainly displayed". This shift opened the door for songs like Baauer's "Harlem Shake" the following year.

By 2014, the video had reached 2,147,483,647 views, the maximum number YouTube's 32-bit integer counter could handle, forcing the platform to upgrade its view counter to a 64-bit integer. As of 2018, the total exceeded 3.2 billion views.

PSY's follow-up single "Gentleman M/V" broke the record for most YouTube views in the first 24 hours but failed to match the cultural impact of "Gangnam Style". PSY later founded his own talent agency, P Nation, and told *Pitchfork*: "It was probably the biggest trophy the world could have given me. It's now something on the shelf I can admire from time to time".

Bernie Cho of DFSB Collective framed the song's broader significance for global music: "He proved that a Korean artist didn't have to be young, pretty, and skinny to become a global K-Pop star. He also proved that a contagious worldwide hit wasn't contingent on singing a song entirely in English". That lesson paved the way for BTS, BLACKPINK, and NewJeans to build massive international followings, and helped open Western charts to non-English-language hits from reggaeton to Latin pop.

Fun Facts

PSY tested panda and kangaroo dance moves before settling on the horse trot, spending about 30 late nights perfecting the choreography with Lee Ju-sun.

The music video was filmed in just 48 hours.

When the view count hit 2,147,483,647, it maxed out YouTube's 32-bit integer counter, forcing Google to upgrade to a 64-bit system.

PSY was born into a wealthy family in Gangnam itself, making his satire of the neighborhood's materialism partly self-deprecating.

The song's success changed Billboard's chart methodology. After seeing how YouTube views drove sales and streaming for "Gangnam Style," Billboard began incorporating YouTube data into its calculations.

Derivatives & Variations

Other K-pop viral events, Global success of Korean music content

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

International dance trends, Non-English language content achieving virality

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Horse-riding dance variations, Different choreography adaptations

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Gangnam Style covers, Music artists performing their own versions

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Nostalgia content, Decades-later Gangnam Style recreations

A variation of Gangnam Style

(2012)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (29)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
    Gangnam Styleencyclopedia
  6. 6
  7. 7
    Psy - Wikipediaencyclopedia
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
  20. 20
  21. 21
  22. 22
  23. 23
  24. 24
  25. 25
  26. 26
  27. 27
  28. 28
  29. 29