TikTok users are jumping on the now-viral #whitegirldancechallenge and we can't help but crack up at the shenanigans.
The challenge features the 2015 hit "How Deep Is Your Love" by Calvin Harris & The Disciples.
Since White Claws are a popular drink typically consumed by Gen Z and millennials, this user made sure to feature the beverage in her parody video.
@lifeoftanyamarie It’s the white claw in hand for me???????? ##yt
##SipIntoSummer
##whiteclaw
##foryou
##howdeepisyourlove
##howdeepisyourlovechallenge
##why
@fabiobleu i’m just missing the dramatic smiling lol ##fyp
The trend even reached users across the globe, with a French Guiana native joining in on the fun.
@laureline.decocq La thérapie de fin de journée ???? ##foryou
##fyp
##xyzbca
##pourtoi
##trend
##viral
##yt
##whitegirldance
"It is so freeing, you just move, no rhythm or beat, just vibes," a TikToker wrote.
@jimilucid Reply to @d0jabat Yt girls tried to gatekeep this for too long… smh ???? ##ytgirldance
##whitegirldance
##nyc
##MAKEYOURMOVE
##foryoupage
##foryou
@andretaylorjr POV you’re shitting in the club but your song comes on ##whitegirldance
##feelingmyself
##danceitout
##idateawhitewomansoIknow
##fyp
One user even used the trend as a celebratory dance party for being vaccinated.
@eyezcosplay Rate my dancing ???????? ##fyp
##vaccinated
##vaccinecheck
##whitegirldance
##phizervaccine
And another took full advantage of spoofing the "Karen" stereotype, directing the trend at white women who ask to speak to managers.
@micahconteeforever Let me speak to your manager ????????☕️##foryoupage
##fypシ
##xcyzbca
##comedy
##whitegirldance
##comedy
##makethisgoviral
##viral 
Some users also admitted that the #whitegirldancechallenge is actually how they dance, and that it's actually pretty fun.
Another thing that makes the trend so appealing is that it can be done anytime, any place.
@lynniepoo39 ##stitch with @basementgang ##whitegirldance
##whitegirldancechallenge
##whitegirldancemoves
##whitegirldancing
"The funniest thing to me about this trend, is that Black folks keep failing at it because we can't dance off beat," Lyn, a TikTok user said after watching the challenges go viral. "The ancestors gon' make sure you hit the two and the four."
Other notable challenges include the "Hip Hop Harry Challenge" that took off in the summer of 2020 and the "Renegade," created by Jalaiah Harmon, a 15-year-old from Atlanta, Georgia, who persistently requested credit after her dance became a sensation.
“I was excited and frustrated because they weren’t tagging me or giving me credit,” she told Teen Vogue, referring to TikToker's like Charli D'Amelio and Addison Rae who performed without Harmon during the 2020 NBA Slam Dunk Contest.
While the original creator of the #whitegirldancechallenge is unknown, other similar instances of plagiarism within the TikTok community have sparked controversy, most recently after Rae's appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.
At the end of March, Rae performed on Fallon's talk show, dancing to eight popular TikTok dances that were mostly produced by Black creatives who she failed to give credit to.
“I think they were all credited in the original YouTube posting, but it’s kinda hard to credit during the show,” she said to a TMZ reporter following her appearance. “But they all know that I love them so much and I mean, I support all of them so much. And hopefully one day we can all meet up and dance together.”
“They deserve all the credit because they came up with these amazing trends,” she added.