My Happy Song Happy Happy Happy
Also known as: Happy Happy Happy · My Happy Song
My Happy Song, also known as the "Happy Happy Happy" song, is a TikTok sound trend from late 2022 built around a high-pitched children's song paired with darkly ironic text overlays. The audio comes from "My Happy Song" by Super Simple Songs, a kids' YouTube channel, and first went viral alongside a moldy video of Peter Griffin dancing in the mobile game Warped Kart Racers3. The trend took off when TikTokers started using the aggressively cheerful sound as a backdrop for confessions about bad habits, sleep deprivation, and general life chaos.
TL;DR
My Happy Song, also known as the "Happy Happy Happy" song, is a TikTok sound trend from late 2022 built around a high-pitched children's song paired with darkly ironic text overlays.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format is simple. Pick the "My Happy Song" audio on TikTok and pair it with a text overlay confessing something unhealthy, embarrassing, or chaotic about your life. The high-pitched "Happy, happy, happy" singing should contrast sharply with whatever you're describing. Common examples include sleep deprivation, poor study habits, emotional breakdowns, or terrible coping mechanisms. Early versions typically included the Peter Griffin dancing clip as the visual, but the trend quickly moved to creators filming themselves or using other footage. The key ingredient is the gap between the manic joy of the audio and the reality of the text.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Super Simple Songs' original "My Happy Song" video has over 110 million views on YouTube, almost entirely from its intended audience of young children.
The Peter Griffin dancing footage came from Warped Kart Racers, an Apple Arcade exclusive that required a subscription to play, making the source material inaccessible to most viewers.
TikToker @me1qn1e's version got 8.7 million plays in six days despite using a joke borrowed from @willwheel3r's earlier post, which itself had 5.2 million plays.
The Lakim song that originally scored the Peter Griffin clip samples dialogue from The Boondocks character A Pimp Named Slickback.
Derivatives & Variations
Peter Griffin Dancing (standalone):
The Warped Kart Racers celebration dance clip became its own micro-meme, used with various audio tracks beyond My Happy Song[3].
Calculator confession format:
The specific joke about needing a calculator for simple math, popularized by @willwheel3r and @me1qn1e, became a widely copied sub-template within the trend[3].
Text-only variants:
Creators dropped the Peter Griffin visual entirely and used the audio over static text screens or face-to-camera videos describing personal chaos[3].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4Barbapapa: One Big Happy Family!encyclopedia