If your kid has called something “Ohio” or said “only in Ohio,” they’re using Gen Z/Gen Alpha slang that means weird, cringe, or chaotic. The state of Ohio somehow became internet shorthand for anything bizarre or unsettling. It’s not mean-spirited toward actual Ohioans—it’s just the latest example of how internet culture turns random things into viral inside jokes. No action needed, but understanding it helps you decode what your kid is actually saying.
When kids say something is “Ohio” or caption a video “only in Ohio,” they’re calling it strange, surreal, or off-putting. Think of it as this generation’s version of “that’s so random” but with more chaos energy.
Common uses:
The meme has zero to do with the actual state’s politics, sports teams, or real characteristics. Ohio just became the internet’s chosen symbol for weirdness, the same way Skibidi Toilet became a symbol for brain-rot content or how “slay” means something is great.
The Ohio meme emerged around 2016 on Tumblr with the phrase “Ohio will be eliminated,” paired with ominous images suggesting Ohio was a cursed or liminal place. But it really exploded in 2020-2022 on TikTok, where creators started making surreal, slightly unsettling videos with captions like “average day in Ohio” or “only in Ohio.”
The formula: Take a weird video (a glitching NPC, someone doing something bizarre in public, a cursed image), add text saying it’s from Ohio, and boom—viral content. The joke is that Ohio is supposedly so strange that literally anything could happen there.
Why Ohio specifically? Honestly, there’s no deep reason. It’s geographically middle-of-America, it’s been a meme punching bag for being “boring” in other contexts, and the word itself just sounds funny when you say it repeatedly. Internet culture is chaotic like that—sometimes a place or phrase just catches on because it feels right for the vibe.
The meme got reinforced by:
By 2023, “Ohio” had fully entered Gen Alpha vocabulary alongside terms like “rizz,” “gyat,” and “skibidi.”
It’s an instant inside joke. Saying “Ohio” is like speaking a secret language that adults don’t immediately understand. It’s shorthand for “this is weird and I’m acknowledging the weirdness in a funny way.”
It’s absurdist humor. Gen Z and Gen Alpha grew up on surreal internet content—weird YouTube videos, glitchy memes, and chaotic TikToks. “Ohio” fits perfectly into that aesthetic. It’s funny because it’s random and makes no logical sense.
It’s low-stakes. Unlike some slang that can be mean or exclusive, calling something “Ohio” is pretty harmless. It’s not targeting a person (usually), it’s just a way to describe bizarre content. Though actual Ohio residents might roll their eyes at being the internet’s punching bag.
It evolves constantly. The meme has spawned sub-memes like “Ohio Final Boss” (the ultimate weird thing you’d encounter in Ohio) and crossover jokes with other internet trends. Kids love content that’s always shifting and remixing itself.
Nope. This is peak harmless internet slang. Your kid calling something “Ohio” is about as concerning as them saying “that’s random” or “that’s wild.”
A few things to know:
You might hear kids combine memes, like “Skibidi Ohio rizz” or other word salads that sound like they’re speaking in tongues. This is just Gen Alpha’s version of Mad Libs—they’re mashing together trending terms for comedic effect.
Translation guide:
So “Skibidi Ohio rizz” roughly means “chaotic weird flirting energy.” Does it make sense? Not really. Is it funny to kids? Absolutely.
If you want to understand more of this linguistic chaos, check out our guide to Gen Alpha slang or ask our chatbot to decode specific phrases.
If you’re curious or want to connect with your kid over this:
Ask genuinely: “I keep hearing you say ‘Ohio’—what does that mean?” Most kids love explaining their slang to confused adults. It’s a power reversal that feels good.
Don’t try to use it yourself (unless you’re going for ironic dad-joke energy). Nothing kills slang faster than parents adopting it. You can understand it without trying to be cool.
Use it as a gateway conversation: “What other weird internet trends are you seeing?” This can lead to discussions about the content they’re consuming, which creators they follow, and what they find funny. It’s useful intel.
If they’re watching concerning content: “I noticed some of those ‘Ohio’ videos are pretty intense. How do you feel after watching them?” Frame it as curiosity, not judgment. Some kids seek out unsettling content as a way to process anxiety or test boundaries—understanding their motivation helps you respond appropriately.
“Ohio” is just the latest example of internet culture turning something random into a viral inside joke. It’s harmless slang that’ll probably fade in another year or two, replaced by whatever absurdist humor Gen Alpha invents next.
What you need to know:
If you want to stay fluent in what your kids are saying online, Screenwise can help you decode trends, understand platform cultures, and figure out what’s actually worth your attention. Because honestly? Most of it is just kids being kids—but in increasingly bizarre digital spaces.
Want to dig deeper? Learn about other Gen Alpha slang terms, understand TikTok’s algorithm and content culture, or ask our chatbot about specific memes you’ve heard.
