Sassy Man Apocalypse

2022Catchphrase / video trendactive

Also known as: Sassy Men · Sassy Man Era

Sassy Man Apocalypse is a 2022 TikTok and Twitter/X trend featuring girlfriends posting videos of boyfriends displaying exaggerated feminine mannerisms and dramatic behavior, popularized by creator Prayag Mishra.

The Sassy Man Apocalypse is a TikTok and Twitter/X catchphrase describing the perceived rise of men who openly display "sassy," expressive, or traditionally feminine behaviors. Coined on August 22, 2022, by X user @yattadondada, the phrase went viral in mid-2023 as girlfriends posted videos of their boyfriends' dramatic mannerisms, calling themselves "victims" of the trend4. The movement sparked broader conversations about masculinity, with TikToker Prayag Mishra becoming its most visible figure after growing from 29,000 to millions of followers2.

TL;DR

The Sassy Man Apocalypse is a TikTok and Twitter/X catchphrase describing the perceived rise of men who openly display "sassy," expressive, or traditionally feminine behaviors.

Overview

The Sassy Man Apocalypse is a tongue-in-cheek label for a wave of online videos showing men acting with exaggerated confidence, attitude, and expressiveness. The typical format involves a woman filming her boyfriend doing something dramatic: placing hands on hips, doing little stomps, audibly sighing, or delivering witty one-liners1. These clips are usually captioned "victim of the sassy man apocalypse" and framed as if the woman has helplessly discovered her partner's inner diva.

The behaviors flagged as "sassy" range from petty texting tactics to unfiltered emotional reactions to getting pedicures and visiting Starbucks6. While the framing is humorous, the trend taps into shifting attitudes about how men express themselves, with some viewers celebrating it as an antidote to rigid masculine norms and others finding it jarring2.

On August 22, 2022, X user @yattadondada posted "We in a sassy man apocalypse," coining the phrase that would later take over TikTok4. The post picked up over 35,000 likes within a year4. Though the tweet landed, the concept didn't immediately catch fire. It sat in relative obscurity for months before TikTokers started running with it.

Some of the earliest TikTok adopters included @ponpontoes, who used the phrase on October 18, 2022, and @andie_perez, whose June 15, 2023 video pulled in over 2 million views and 450,000 likes4. A June 25, 2023 TikTok from @trshmag discussing the topic of "sassy men" also crossed 1 million views4.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter / X (coined), TikTok (viral spread)
Key People
@yattadondada, Prayag Mishra, Iyosias Wondwossen
Date
2022
Year
2022

On August 22, 2022, X user @yattadondada posted "We in a sassy man apocalypse," coining the phrase that would later take over TikTok. The post picked up over 35,000 likes within a year. Though the tweet landed, the concept didn't immediately catch fire. It sat in relative obscurity for months before TikTokers started running with it.

Some of the earliest TikTok adopters included @ponpontoes, who used the phrase on October 18, 2022, and @andie_perez, whose June 15, 2023 video pulled in over 2 million views and 450,000 likes. A June 25, 2023 TikTok from @trshmag discussing the topic of "sassy men" also crossed 1 million views.

How It Spread

The trend hit critical mass in late July and early August 2023. On July 30, 2023, TikToker @111.raquel posted what appears to be the first "victim of the sassy man apocalypse" video, racking up over 2 million views within a month. On August 5, 2023, @selena.kun posted a follow-up that exploded to 9.1 million views.

The format was simple and infinitely repeatable: film your boyfriend doing something expressive, slap a "sassy man apocalypse" caption on it, post. Women started identifying themselves as "victims" en masse, sharing the exact moment they realized their partner had more sass than they did. As one Distractify writer put it, "Here, you thought that you were the sass master and now your man is telling you to talk to the hand".

By fall 2023, TikToker Prayag Mishra became the movement's unofficial face. Based in Toronto, the 25-year-old charmed audiences with expressive mannerisms, playful car-recorded rants, and a signature hand-gesture dance that went viral. In roughly three weeks, his following jumped from 29,000 to 2.5 million, with fans adopting the pet name "pookie bears". His video addressing the "sassy" label head-on pulled over 30.7 million views, with Mishra declaring: "Guilty! Guilty! Guilty!" before adding, "If it was up to me, I would have chosen to be nonchalant and sexy. God wanted me to be loud and sassy".

NBC News covered the trend in October 2023, interviewing Mishra alongside Iyosias Wondwossen, a 24-year-old creator described as one of the "OG sassy men" whose followers had been calling him sassy for almost a year. The article framed the movement as a potential counter to toxic masculinity, though experts cautioned against putting too much weight on any single TikTok trend. Brandon Harris, an assistant professor at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, noted that while Mishra was "branding himself as someone who is challenging masculinity," real change would "require more than a TikTok video from your vehicle".

The trend also crossed into the gay community, where it pushed back against "masc for masc" culture on dating apps. EDGE Media Network reported that the sassy man movement was "ushering in more feminine and over-the-top expression in the gay male community".

In early 2025, the trend resurfaced with new vocabulary. The slang term "deriod," a portmanteau suggesting men can experience their own version of mood swings, gained traction after TikToker @abdoulupnext posted a video in March 2025 joking about guys "having periods during certain times of the month". TikTokers quickly folded "deriod" into the existing Sassy Man Apocalypse framework, using it as a punchline for videos of men being moody or dramatic.

How to Use This Meme

The most common format involves a woman recording her boyfriend or male friend mid-sass. Typical approaches:

1

The "Victim" clip: Film your partner doing something expressive (hand on hip, dramatic sigh, petty text move) and caption it "victim of the sassy man apocalypse" or "the moment I realized I am a victim of the sassy man apocalypse".

2

The POV: Open with "POV: your man definitely started the sassy man apocalypse" and show footage of the behavior in question.

3

The self-identification: Men film themselves owning the label, often with playful dancing or exaggerated mannerisms.

4

The "deriod" variant: Caption a video of a moody or dramatic man with references to being on his "deriod," playing on the idea of male mood cycles.

Cultural Impact

The Sassy Man Apocalypse hit mainstream news outlets including NBC News, which ran a feature exploring its connection to conversations about toxic masculinity. The piece interviewed academic experts alongside creators, situating the trend within broader gender discourse.

TikTok creator Ferlynn Petit-Bell argued that shaming men for being expressive undermined feminist goals: "If you're trying to combat toxic masculinity, that's not going to happen if you're shaming men for having anything else besides stoicism". She pointed to the rise of figures like Andrew Tate as evidence of why celebrating expressiveness in men mattered.

The trend also filtered down to everyday life. A student newspaper at Fluvanna County High School ran a feature in November 2023, interviewing students about whether they saw sassiness in their own social circles. One student admitted, "So what if I'm a sassy man? No harm in it," while another noted a double standard: "I don't like the girls making fun of it because I feel like they do the same things".

Wondwossen, one of the early sassy men, offered a more grounded take on the trend's limits: "The fact that men have built a world where we have to be super masculine isn't really going to change all too much just because of this minor sassy movement".

Fun Facts

Mishra's following grew from 29,000 to 5.1 million followers in the months following his viral breakout, with much of that growth happening in just three weeks.

The word "sassy" was originally used as an insult or in a homophobic manner toward expressive men on TikTok before the trend reclaimed it.

Urban Dictionary defines the Sassy Man Apocalypse as "an outbreak of men that want to live a soft life and be treated like a princess".

The trend reached school hallways. At Fluvanna County High School, boys openly discussed whether they qualified as "sassy," with one student saying, "I don't think I'm sassy, but my girl always says I am".

Mishra said he was raised by strong women, which shaped the humor and personality that made him famous.

Derivatives & Variations

Deriod/Dihriod:

A 2025 spinoff slang term combining male anatomy slang with "period," used to describe men experiencing mood swings. Popularized by TikToker @abdoulupnext in March 2025[3].

Prayag Mishra's "Pookie Bears" fandom:

Mishra's audience built a distinct community identity around the "pookie bear" pet name, with its own language of affection[2].

Saucy Santana recreations:

In the 2025 deriod wave, TikTokers began recreating clips and gestures from rapper Saucy Santana's "Material Gworl" as part of the sassy man framework[3].

Frequently Asked Questions

Sassy Man Apocalypse

2022Catchphrase / video trendactive

Also known as: Sassy Men · Sassy Man Era

Sassy Man Apocalypse is a 2022 TikTok and Twitter/X trend featuring girlfriends posting videos of boyfriends displaying exaggerated feminine mannerisms and dramatic behavior, popularized by creator Prayag Mishra.

The Sassy Man Apocalypse is a TikTok and Twitter/X catchphrase describing the perceived rise of men who openly display "sassy," expressive, or traditionally feminine behaviors. Coined on August 22, 2022, by X user @yattadondada, the phrase went viral in mid-2023 as girlfriends posted videos of their boyfriends' dramatic mannerisms, calling themselves "victims" of the trend. The movement sparked broader conversations about masculinity, with TikToker Prayag Mishra becoming its most visible figure after growing from 29,000 to millions of followers.

TL;DR

The Sassy Man Apocalypse is a TikTok and Twitter/X catchphrase describing the perceived rise of men who openly display "sassy," expressive, or traditionally feminine behaviors.

Overview

The Sassy Man Apocalypse is a tongue-in-cheek label for a wave of online videos showing men acting with exaggerated confidence, attitude, and expressiveness. The typical format involves a woman filming her boyfriend doing something dramatic: placing hands on hips, doing little stomps, audibly sighing, or delivering witty one-liners. These clips are usually captioned "victim of the sassy man apocalypse" and framed as if the woman has helplessly discovered her partner's inner diva.

The behaviors flagged as "sassy" range from petty texting tactics to unfiltered emotional reactions to getting pedicures and visiting Starbucks. While the framing is humorous, the trend taps into shifting attitudes about how men express themselves, with some viewers celebrating it as an antidote to rigid masculine norms and others finding it jarring.

On August 22, 2022, X user @yattadondada posted "We in a sassy man apocalypse," coining the phrase that would later take over TikTok. The post picked up over 35,000 likes within a year. Though the tweet landed, the concept didn't immediately catch fire. It sat in relative obscurity for months before TikTokers started running with it.

Some of the earliest TikTok adopters included @ponpontoes, who used the phrase on October 18, 2022, and @andie_perez, whose June 15, 2023 video pulled in over 2 million views and 450,000 likes. A June 25, 2023 TikTok from @trshmag discussing the topic of "sassy men" also crossed 1 million views.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter / X (coined), TikTok (viral spread)
Key People
@yattadondada, Prayag Mishra, Iyosias Wondwossen
Date
2022
Year
2022

On August 22, 2022, X user @yattadondada posted "We in a sassy man apocalypse," coining the phrase that would later take over TikTok. The post picked up over 35,000 likes within a year. Though the tweet landed, the concept didn't immediately catch fire. It sat in relative obscurity for months before TikTokers started running with it.

Some of the earliest TikTok adopters included @ponpontoes, who used the phrase on October 18, 2022, and @andie_perez, whose June 15, 2023 video pulled in over 2 million views and 450,000 likes. A June 25, 2023 TikTok from @trshmag discussing the topic of "sassy men" also crossed 1 million views.

How It Spread

The trend hit critical mass in late July and early August 2023. On July 30, 2023, TikToker @111.raquel posted what appears to be the first "victim of the sassy man apocalypse" video, racking up over 2 million views within a month. On August 5, 2023, @selena.kun posted a follow-up that exploded to 9.1 million views.

The format was simple and infinitely repeatable: film your boyfriend doing something expressive, slap a "sassy man apocalypse" caption on it, post. Women started identifying themselves as "victims" en masse, sharing the exact moment they realized their partner had more sass than they did. As one Distractify writer put it, "Here, you thought that you were the sass master and now your man is telling you to talk to the hand".

By fall 2023, TikToker Prayag Mishra became the movement's unofficial face. Based in Toronto, the 25-year-old charmed audiences with expressive mannerisms, playful car-recorded rants, and a signature hand-gesture dance that went viral. In roughly three weeks, his following jumped from 29,000 to 2.5 million, with fans adopting the pet name "pookie bears". His video addressing the "sassy" label head-on pulled over 30.7 million views, with Mishra declaring: "Guilty! Guilty! Guilty!" before adding, "If it was up to me, I would have chosen to be nonchalant and sexy. God wanted me to be loud and sassy".

NBC News covered the trend in October 2023, interviewing Mishra alongside Iyosias Wondwossen, a 24-year-old creator described as one of the "OG sassy men" whose followers had been calling him sassy for almost a year. The article framed the movement as a potential counter to toxic masculinity, though experts cautioned against putting too much weight on any single TikTok trend. Brandon Harris, an assistant professor at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, noted that while Mishra was "branding himself as someone who is challenging masculinity," real change would "require more than a TikTok video from your vehicle".

The trend also crossed into the gay community, where it pushed back against "masc for masc" culture on dating apps. EDGE Media Network reported that the sassy man movement was "ushering in more feminine and over-the-top expression in the gay male community".

In early 2025, the trend resurfaced with new vocabulary. The slang term "deriod," a portmanteau suggesting men can experience their own version of mood swings, gained traction after TikToker @abdoulupnext posted a video in March 2025 joking about guys "having periods during certain times of the month". TikTokers quickly folded "deriod" into the existing Sassy Man Apocalypse framework, using it as a punchline for videos of men being moody or dramatic.

How to Use This Meme

The most common format involves a woman recording her boyfriend or male friend mid-sass. Typical approaches:

1

The "Victim" clip: Film your partner doing something expressive (hand on hip, dramatic sigh, petty text move) and caption it "victim of the sassy man apocalypse" or "the moment I realized I am a victim of the sassy man apocalypse".

2

The POV: Open with "POV: your man definitely started the sassy man apocalypse" and show footage of the behavior in question.

3

The self-identification: Men film themselves owning the label, often with playful dancing or exaggerated mannerisms.

4

The "deriod" variant: Caption a video of a moody or dramatic man with references to being on his "deriod," playing on the idea of male mood cycles.

Cultural Impact

The Sassy Man Apocalypse hit mainstream news outlets including NBC News, which ran a feature exploring its connection to conversations about toxic masculinity. The piece interviewed academic experts alongside creators, situating the trend within broader gender discourse.

TikTok creator Ferlynn Petit-Bell argued that shaming men for being expressive undermined feminist goals: "If you're trying to combat toxic masculinity, that's not going to happen if you're shaming men for having anything else besides stoicism". She pointed to the rise of figures like Andrew Tate as evidence of why celebrating expressiveness in men mattered.

The trend also filtered down to everyday life. A student newspaper at Fluvanna County High School ran a feature in November 2023, interviewing students about whether they saw sassiness in their own social circles. One student admitted, "So what if I'm a sassy man? No harm in it," while another noted a double standard: "I don't like the girls making fun of it because I feel like they do the same things".

Wondwossen, one of the early sassy men, offered a more grounded take on the trend's limits: "The fact that men have built a world where we have to be super masculine isn't really going to change all too much just because of this minor sassy movement".

Fun Facts

Mishra's following grew from 29,000 to 5.1 million followers in the months following his viral breakout, with much of that growth happening in just three weeks.

The word "sassy" was originally used as an insult or in a homophobic manner toward expressive men on TikTok before the trend reclaimed it.

Urban Dictionary defines the Sassy Man Apocalypse as "an outbreak of men that want to live a soft life and be treated like a princess".

The trend reached school hallways. At Fluvanna County High School, boys openly discussed whether they qualified as "sassy," with one student saying, "I don't think I'm sassy, but my girl always says I am".

Mishra said he was raised by strong women, which shaped the humor and personality that made him famous.

Derivatives & Variations

Deriod/Dihriod:

A 2025 spinoff slang term combining male anatomy slang with "period," used to describe men experiencing mood swings. Popularized by TikToker @abdoulupnext in March 2025[3].

Prayag Mishra's "Pookie Bears" fandom:

Mishra's audience built a distinct community identity around the "pookie bear" pet name, with its own language of affection[2].

Saucy Santana recreations:

In the 2025 deriod wave, TikTokers began recreating clips and gestures from rapper Saucy Santana's "Material Gworl" as part of the sassy man framework[3].

Frequently Asked Questions