When you buy a viral 67 shirt from us, you’re getting more than a trending design — you’re supporting the official brand behind the 67 movement. Low Key Ballers is the only youth basketball apparel brand working directly with Taylen “TK” Kinney, the player who helped make 67 a global trend across TikTok, Instagram, and the entire basketball community.
Our 67 shirts feature the most popular and recognizable 67 designs online — including TK’s signature 67 graphics, premium quality prints, fast shipping, and pricing that stays accessible for every hooper, parent, and fan. If you’re searching for 67 merch, 67 tees, 67 basketball shirts, or the original TK 67 collection, this is where it all started.
While other sites copy the meme, we’re building the culture. Every design is authentic, original, and created through our official collaboration with TK himself. When you wear one of our 67 shirts, you’re not just wearing a number — you’re repping the true origin of the 67 trend, supporting the athlete who made it viral, and joining the movement built around the next generation of hoopers.
Authentic partners. Original 67 designs. Premium quality. Fast shipping.
If it’s a 67 shirt worth wearing — it came from us.
The Story of “67” — What It Means & Why It Became a Worldwide Trend
If you’re new to the world of 67 shirts, you’re not alone. Over the past year, the term “67” has taken over basketball culture, social media, and youth fashion — but its meaning isn’t tied to a single definition. That’s exactly why it became a phenomenon.
So… what is 67?
“67” is a viral internet slang term that began circulating in late 2024 and exploded across TikTok, Instagram, and youth sports in 2025. What makes it unique is that it doesn’t have one official meaning. Instead, it became popular because of its mystery, energy, and the way fans attached their own hype to it.
It’s less about numbers — and more about a vibe, a moment, a reaction, a celebration.
How 67 Entered Basketball Culture
⭐ Taylen Kinney — “Mr. 67”
High-school basketball standout Taylen “TK” Kinney helped launch the trend into the mainstream. Through his appearances in Overtime Elite (OTE) content, TK used the phrase so often and so naturally that fans began calling him “Mr. 67.”
As TK’s highlights went viral, so did the term — and the 67 hand gestures, celebrations, and captions that followed.
🔥 Mainstream Explosion
By early 2025, “67” wasn’t just a basketball meme — it was everywhere: Athletes used 6-7 hand signs in game celebrations
Fans made edits, memes, and reactions using the term
The phrase showed up across TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts
Media outlets covered the rise of the slang, including discussions around it becoming a “top trending expression” of 2025
The more people used it, the bigger it became.