This Is A Certified Hood Classic
Also known as: Certified Hood Classic
"This Is a Certified Hood Classic" is a catchphrase and audio meme originating from trap music, where the soundbite acts as a stamp of approval for any song, video, or piece of content. The isolated clip first appeared on YouTube in September 20121, and by 2019 it had become a go-to punchline in remix parodies that paired the audio tag with absurd or unexpected footage1.
TL;DR
"This Is a Certified Hood Classic" is a catchphrase and audio meme originating from trap music, where the soundbite acts as a stamp of approval for any song, video, or piece of content.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme typically follows a simple formula:
Find a video, song, or image that is either genuinely impressive or absurdly unrelated to trap culture.
Add the "Certified Hood Classic" audio tag at the beginning or end of the clip.
Present it without further commentary, letting the contrast between the tag and the content do the work.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The soundbite is most closely associated with Trap-A-Holics, a DJ collective known for tagging mixtapes with signature drops.
Christopher Mintz-Plasse (McLovin from *Superbad*) was humorously credited as the voice in one of the earliest parody videos.
Urban Dictionary users describe the phrase as the ultimate aux cord test: if it's a certified hood classic, nobody questions you playing it.
The 2019 parody wave relied on the same comedic formula as other "seal of approval" memes, where an authoritative-sounding endorsement is applied to something ridiculous.
Derivatives & Variations
SiIvaGunner remixes
— The fake video game soundtrack community frequently uses the soundbite in mashup "rips," including the notable *We Are Number One* remix from September 2016[1].
Christopher Mintz-Plasse parody
— The January 2013 video casting McLovin as the voice behind the tag was one of the earliest comedic reinterpretations of the soundbite[1].
Nonsensical footage edits (2019 wave)
— A large batch of videos pairing random, absurd clips with the audio tag, treating unlikely content as trap-certified material[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2Girls in the Hoodencyclopedia
- 3