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Saturday, June 6, 2026

"I'm Not Your Brah" ("Bro", "Bruh"): Videos & Comments About The Origins & Uses Of The Words "Brah", Bro" Or "Bruh" For Females As Well As Males

@ThatTallFamily, May 12, 2023

Why do teenagers call everyone bruh?

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part IV of a four part pancocojams series about the use of the words "Bro, "Br'er", "Bruh", "Bruhz" and "Brah" as referents (particularly in the United States).

This post showcases three YouTube videos, information, and comments about the origins and uses of "brah", "bro", and "brah" as referents for females as well as for males. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/amplifying-african-american-influences.html for Part I of this pancocojams series. That post presents excerpts of various internet articles and AI Overview write-ups about the use of those words. These excerpts are presented as a timeline. 

That timeline and most of the other posts in this pancocojams series (except for Part IV) strive to amplify the historical and cultural record as a way of helping to correct what I perceive to be the scarcity of details and/or the minimization of the tremendous role that African American culture has had and continues to have on the use of the words "bro" and "bruh" in American English and in the use of the English language throughout the world. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/omega-dear-bscut-feb-20-2008-founders.html for Part II of this pancocojams series.
That post showcases three YouTube videos of the historically Black Greek letter fraternity Omega Psi Phi, Inc.. These videos exemplify the singing that Omega Psi Phi Fraternity is known for.

That post also includes selected comments from these videos' discussion threads which document examples of the use of the words "brother", "bruhs", and "bruhz" by members of Omega Psi Phi fraternity and by other commenters. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/uyleesboutique-april-2-2025-remember.html_ for Part III of this pancocojams series. That post showcases two YouTube videos of the character "Bruh-man from the 5th floor", a recurring character in the 1990s television series Martin.

Information about the television series Martin and information about Reginald Ballard, the actor who portrayed the character "Bruh-Man from the 5th floor" are included in this post along with information about that character.

That post also presents comments about that character from the discussion thread for Showcase video #2.

The content of this post is presented for historical, linguistic, and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners

Thanks to
all those who are quoted in this post and thanks to all the publishers of these showcased YouTube videos. 

****
PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR'S NOTE
This pancocojams post differs from the other posts in this series because of its lack of emphasis on African American cultural origins or influences for the custom of using "bro", "brah", and "bruh" as referents for females as well as for males.

Read Part I of this pancocojams series for mentions about the historical use of these words as non-gender terms. More specifically, I believe that the non-gender use of "bro", "brah", and "bruh" can be traced to people updating the non-gender word "dude" and to the commercial (Astepro allergy spray) and probably other spin-offs of the 2001 American movie Zoolander.

Although some African Americans, and particularly some young African Americans use the word "bro" and "bruh" as referents for females-including mothers, it seems to me that proportionally more non-African Americans than African Americans use those words as non-gender referents. However, I don't have any data to prove or disprove this.  

* I don't think that African Americans in the 2020s use the word "brah" because that word  appears to have been stereotyped as "sounding White" while "bruh" is considered to "sound Black".

****
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THE DISCUSSION THREAD FOR SHOWCASE VIDEO #1

These comments are given in no particular order except for replies and are numbered for referencing purposes only.

All of these comments are from 2023.

https://youtube.com/shorts/-9EDx15G-Ig?si=VFnIZkk91WMq1RlK

1.@رقيةرضارفيف
"Brah!"   -   Mom:"I'm Not ur brah."🤣 Like In The Film ,"Excuse Me Brah."    -"Excuse You" (i think) "And I'm Not ur brah."

**
Reply
2. @sabrinawilliams8717
"Zoolander."

**
3. 
@arianesalas5620
"😅lol I say the same thing as your mom I tell my son that 😂😂. Bro drives me nuts"

**
4. @Giaaaa28
"Bro my mom says all the time I’m not your bRuH"

**
5. @BTSArmyUrsh
"I say dude"

**
6. @ErenYeager-gp7um
"And wtf is "burh" 😂🤣🤣🤣 calling  your dad and mom burh is most uncommon  and non sensible  thing i can say 😂"

**
7.@amelieacevedo7865
"Ok we get it yall are tall like bro stop in every one of your shorts its just saying that your tall WE GET ITTTT like omg stop"

****
SHOWCASE VIDEO #2 - "You're excused... and I'm not your brah" #Zoolander [movie]



@paramountmovies, June 12, 2024 
-snip-
Here's an excerpt from an AI Overview write-up about this video clip: 

The phrase "I'm not your brah" is a famous quote from the 2001 comedy movie Zoolander. It is used to reject familiarity, put someone in their place, or indicate that you are not friends with the person addressing you.

The Movie Origin
In the film, the fiercely competitive male models Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller) and Hansel (Owen Wilson) run into each other at a nightclub.

Hansel: "Excuse me, brah."

Derek: "You're excused... And I'm not your brah." 

Derek Zoolander’s delivery of the line is iconic because it is overly dramatic, petty, and delivered with absolute, serious confidence.

Cultural Meaning
In everyday life, calling someone "brah" or "bro" (slang for brother) implies a friendly, casual, and relaxed relationship. When someone snaps back with "I'm not your brah," they are doing the exact opposite.It serves a few distinct purposes:

-Setting Boundaries: You are intentionally establishing emotional or professional distance.

-Expressing Annoyance: You are letting the other person know you do not appreciate their casual or overly familiar tone.

-Humorous Comeback: Because of its pop-culture status, people frequently use it playfully or sarcastically when lightly ribbing a friend, or as a lip-sync soundbite on social media platforms like TikTok."...

****
COMMENTS FROM THE DISCUSSION THREAD FOR SHOWCASE VIDEO #2

These comments are given in no particular order except for replies and are numbered for referencing purposes only.

1. @Amzodt, 2025
"little did they know this interaction would become one of the greatest memes ever"

**
Reply
2. @doubleaa4969, 2026
"I'm pretty sure they know, it was too dramatic to be ignored by the population."

**
Reply
3. @Amzodt, 2026
"@doubleaa4969  bro back then they wouldn’t be able to tell it would be one of the most epic scene in cinema history"

 ****
SHOWCASE VIDEO #3 - 
Astepro Allergy Medicine: It’s Faster Bro TV Commercial #tvcommercials #astepro #fasterbro #allergy

Tv Commercials, May 25, 2024  DETROIT

Experience rapid relief with Astepro Allergy Medicine! In this TV commercial, discover why Astepro starts working in just 30 minutes while Flonase takes hours. Say goodbye to allergy symptoms and hello to quick relief. Astepro and Go! Applies to the first dose only. Use as directed for optimal results.

****
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THE DISCUSSION THREAD FOR SHOWCASE VIDEO #3

These comments are given in no particular order except for replies and are numbered for referencing purposes only.

1. @calvint9356,  2025
"Why does she want her son to call a nasal spray mom?"

**
Reply
2. 
@korzenik81, 2025
"He's saying "it's faster bro"... so she responds it's mom not bro"

**
Reply
3. @coreyrowe4119, 2026
"​ @korzenik81  the kid wasn't really calling her bro tho, he was just having fun singing along with the jingle. Her massive overreaction is just downright cringey to watch. I change the channel immediately anytime this commercial pops up because of this."

****
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM A REDDIT.COM DISCUSSION THREAD ABOUT THE USE OF THE WORD "BRUH" AS A REFERENT FOR FEMALES

These comments are given in no particular order except for replies and are numbered for referencing purposes only.

All of these comments are from 2025.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Life/comments/1j6q43i/when_did_girls_and_young_women_start_saying_bro/

1. Asleep-Fan8328, 2025 [r/Life]
"When did girls and young women start saying "bro"?

General Discussion

In the United States, in Canada, in certain countries that is. When did girls start saying bro?

 It's new to me.”

**
2. [deleted]
"Bro everyone say bro is you 50 years old or sum"

**
3. panamaspace
"Bro, I am 55, bro."

**
4.  
[deleted]
"Bruh"

**
5. TotallyTrash3d
"Over 40.

 Have always heard women and men say "bro" as a gender neutral.

 Stop being such a boomer."

**
6. Asleep-Fan8328 [OP]
"No way. I'm below 40 and never heard this until very recently"

**
7. TheHacienda1
"I cringe when I hear "bro" "

**
8. [deleted]
"Bro why do you care dude, how you under 40 complaining over something so irrelevant dawg chill tf out yo you wanna be addressed as knave? Cuz I can see that being very fitting for you brother.."

**
9. MagicSpoon102
"As long as she’s cool and not tryna prove something. I think most guys don’t mind as they can connect or break the ice a little easier."

**
10. Asleep-Fan8328 [OP]
"That's a good point, if they say it to a guy to try to connect as a friend or something.. still.. but they seem to use it a lot amongst each other too and it's weird. Honestly never heard it a few years ago from girls. Not a good trend"

**
11. [deleted]
"It makes intentions known if used the right way.

 We friends, nothing more bro."

**
12. AnalyticalNerd-801
"Well before the aster pro commercial. “Aster Pro! It’s faster, Bro.” That will probably live rent free in my head longer than I’m willing to admit."
-snip
That Astepro commercial is given as Showcase Video #3 in this pancocojams post.

**
13. 
[deleted]
"my kids started calling me bro about five years ago, so i now call everyone bro"

**
14. Peskypoints
"Dude was my pop-cultural non-gendered term

 Bruh, is non-gendered but has a bit of irritation in it"
**
15. [deleted]
"I was hearing it back in like 2013"

**
16. [deleted]
"I don’t know but I absolutely hate it. There’s something so masculine about girls saying “bro” or “bruh.” Leave that to the little boys."

**
17. Junior-Towel-202
"What does this have to do with masculinity?"

**
18. bbyxmadi
"Becoming masculine? If saying “bro” to your guy or girl friends makes you masculine, then I must be a man."

****
This concludes Part IV of this four part pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.
 

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Remembering "Bruh-Man From The 5th Floor", The Iconic Character From The 1990s American Television Series "Martin"


@UyleesBoutique, April 2, 2025 "Remember “Bruh Man” from the 5th flo’? 😂😂 #Martin #90stvshow

Bruh Man from the 5th flo’—played by Reginald Ballard—always brought the laughs on the classic 90s sitcom Martin! 😂 Who can forget those iconic moments when he’d sneak in unannounced? 🍔

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part III of a four part pancocojams series 
about the use of the words "Bro, "Br'er", "Bruh", "Bruhz" and "Bra" as referents (particularly in the United States).

This post showcases two YouTube videos of the character "Bruh-man from the 5th floor", a recurring character in the 1990s television series Martin.

Information about the television series Martin and information about Reginald Ballard, the actor who portrayed the character "Bruh-Man from the 5th floor" are included in this post along with information about that character.

This post also presents comments about that character from the discussion thread for Showcase video #2.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/amplifying-african-american-influences.html
for Part I of this pancocojams series. That post presents excerpts of various internet articles and AI Overview write-ups about the use of those words. These excerpts are presented as a timeline. 

That timeline and the other posts in this pancocojams series strive to amplify the historical and cultural record as a way of helping to correct what I perceive to be the scarcity of details and/or the minimization of the tremendous role that African American culture has had and continues to have on the use of the words "bro" and "bruh" in American English and in the use of the English language throughout the world. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/omega-dear-bscut-feb-20-2008-founders.html for Part II of this pancocojams series. 
That post showcases three YouTube videos of the historically Black Greek letter fraternity Omega Psi Phi, Inc.. These videos exemplify the singing that Omega Psi Phi Fraternity is known for.

That post also includes selected comments from these videos' discussion threads which document examples of the use of the words "brother", "bruhs", and "bruhz" by members of Omega Psi Phi fraternity and by other commenters. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/im-not-your-brah-bro-bruh-videos.html for Part IV of this pancocojams series. That post showcases YouTube videos, information, and comments about the use of "bro" as a referent for females as well as males.  

The content of this post is presented for historical, linguistic, socio-cultural, and aesthetic  purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners

Thanks to 
Reginald Ballard, the actor who played the character "Bruh-Man from the fifth floor. Thanks also to actor Martin Lawrence and all others who were associated with that 1990s American television series for their contributions to American culture. Thanks to all those who are quoted in this post and thanks to all the publishers of these showcased YouTube videos. 

****as referents
PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR'S NOTE
"Bru-Man from the 5th floor" from the Martin television series is an iconic character in African American culture who-among other things- increased awareness about and the use of the vernacular word "bruh" in the United States. However, I haven't come across any mention of that character in internet articles and discussions about the word "bruh". 

This pancocojams post helps to rectify this omission.  

****
INFORMATION ABOUT THE TELEVISION SERIES MARTIN
From 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_(TV_series)
"Martin is an American television sitcom that aired for five seasons on Fox from August 27, 1992, to May 1, 1997. The show stars comedian Martin Lawrence as the titular character. Lawrence also played several other characters. Martin was one of Fox's highest-rated shows during the sitcom's run. In 2024, the cast reunited at the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards.[1]

Premise

Martin Lawrence played the role of Martin Payne, originally a disc jockey who lived with his girlfriend Gina Waters (Tisha Campbell) in the city of Detroit, Michigan. Martin worked for the fictional radio station WZUP; in later seasons, he became the host of the talk show Word on the Street.[2]

[…]

Supporting characters

Reginald Ballard as Bruh-Man (Brother Man) (seasons 2–4)’…

****
INFORMATION ABOUT REGINALD BALLAD, THE ACTOR WHO PORTRAYED "BRUH-MAN FROM THE FIFTH FLOOR" IN THE TELEVISION SERIES "MARTIN"
From 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginald_Ballard
"Reginald Ballard (born October 13, 1965) is an [African American] character actor and comedian from Galveston, Texas, who is best known for his recurring roles as Brother Man in the sitcom Martin and W.B. on The Bernie Mac Show, which both aired on Fox. …
-snip-
Reginald Ballard confirms in online interviews that he patterned the character "Bruh-Man from the fifth floor" drawling speech pattern and the way that he pronounced certain words on the way that some people in Galveston, Texas and Houston, Texas talk[ed]. Some commenters in various YouTube discussion threads confirm this point.   

**
From https://www.facebook.com/sistercircletv/videos/reginald-bruh-man-ballard-talks-martin-comedy-and-more/1752489324885490/  "Sister Circle Live", January 13, 2020
"Reginald Bruh Man Ballard came into our homes weekly— coming through the window from the “fifth flo” on Martin TV. Now he’s tearing up the mic on comedy stages across the country.

Check it out!"

****
INFORMATION ABOUT THE CHARACTER "BRUH-MAN FROM THE FIFTH FLOOR"
From 
https://martintv.fandom.com/wiki/Bruh-Man
"Bruh-Man

…Vital information

Gender- Male

Character description

Upstairs neighbor of Martin and Gina who always arrives unannounced and "borrows" things from them

Character information

Appeared on Martin (TV series)

Episodes appeared in 13 in Seasons 3 & 4

Bruh-Man, Martin's upstairs neighbor, is a recurring who debuts in Season 3 of Martin. The part of Bruh-Man is played on the series by Reginald Ballard.

About "Bruh-Man"

Bruh-Man lives on the fifth "flo" (yet he always puts 4 fingers up when relating this fact), directly upstairs from Martin. Whenever Martin asks what he is doing, Bruh-Man replies, "Nuttin'…just chillin'." He often climbs down the "f-a-a-a-ah 'scape" (fire escape), to enter Martin's apartment, taking food, borrowing assorted items, and generally lounging around as if he lives there. At first, this greatly annoyed Martin but he eventually got used to it. In fact, fire escapes seem to be his only means of movement throughout buildings—he is seldom seen entering or exiting the apartment through the front door. When he attended Martin and Gina's engagement party at Gina's apartment, he went as far as climbing the building since there was no fire escape."...

****
From AI Overview
"
Bruh-Man always wears badly fitting clothing a size or two too small (frequently, items he's "borrowed" from Martin), and has a characteristic gait consisting of a slow and lazy, rather limping, plodding walk, with his head cocked to one side. Martin, as Bruh-Man was heading toward the window to make his exit, once referred to it as his "slow bop". Bruh-Man speaks in a deep voice and with a long drawl, like that of Shaquille O'Neal.

Despite being a popular character, Bruh-Man was quietly phased out of the series after Season 3. His last appearances were in the Season 4, and he explains his absence by stating that he only comes around when Martin and Gina are away out of respect for their marriage. This is proven true as he is absent throughout the fifth and final season of the series, however he is mentioned once albeit briefly. In episode 13, "Ain't That About a Ditch", when Gina's mother locks Martin out of his apartment, he pauses to think, then whispers "Bruh-Man" to himself as he walks off to climb in through the fire escape, then Martin shows up in his apartment.

Trivia

Bruh man becomes a recurring character in Season 3

He does not make an appearance after Season 4

He made his official debut in Season 2 Episode 4 Beat it"...

****
SHOWCASE VIDEO #2 - 
Martin - Best of Bruh Man



Throwback Nation, 
Feb 12, 2018

****
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM THE DISCUSSION THREAD OF SHOWCASE VIDEO #2

These comments are given in chronological order, except for replies. Numbers are added for referencing purposes only.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bDJgIv6O2U

2019

1. @jacobbranch9862
"
From Galveston Tx, but he got that 5th Ward swag to him!!!"

**
2. Reply
@sugarbaby547, 2020
"
In Galveston they have their own way of life..."

**
Reply
3.@woezacardoza5659, 2020
"H
e's got that silver back swag lol"

**
4. 
@Bobmob25
"
He be in that small ass jacket 🤣🤣🤣"

**
Reply
5. @sostdm617, 2024
"we got a muscled up bruh man what are you doing here" "i was going to ask y'all the same question ain't y'all supposed to be at work "😂😂😂😂😂😂😂"

**
6. 
@EvilSinReaper
"
That look on Martin face brah 0:36🤣🤣🤣"

**
7. 
@vegetasolo1221
"
Why doesn't he just call the cops on this fool lol" 

**
Reply
8,
@andrewsohene5283
"
He didn't cause any harm lool"

**
Reply
9.
@marcusmagice
"
You clearly never grew up in the hood . Guys like this pop up all the time ."

**
Reply
10. 
@donnyrob3642
"
@marcusmagice  that's not tru mabe where you from speak for yourself"

**
11.
@cheechsantiago5832, 2020
"
@marcusmagice  😂😂😂 That's how you get shot"

**
Reply
12, 
@951octm 2020
"
Maybe Martin knows he's special so he let's him slide."

**
13. 
jacobbranch9862
"
Bruh Man is from Galveston Tx, I guess that is why I call him Bruh-Man from the 5th Ward. He reminds me so much of an ld school 5th Ward gangsta!!!"

**
14, 
@TestubeBB
"
That guy was a genius whatever happened to him"

**
Reply
15, 
@hi-xf7cj, 2022
"P
layed Bernie Mac's friend on the Bernie Mac show."

****
2020

16. @therealdannyfenton
"
Ayyeee... Bruhmann from the ✌🏾floor."

**
17. @koreysylver9276
"
The best character on the Martin show not played by Martin"

**
18. @rayyana.8538
"
Bruh Man was the sweetest and funniest neighbour....lol....always at Martin's place uninvited...lol"

**
19. 
@theedumone8890
"Bruhman a whole mood😂"

**
20. 
@NikoBellic555
"
The walk😂😂😂"

**
Reply
21. 
@albundy6008, 2024
"
He was working the slow bop."

**
22. @mccown2690
"
Why doesn’t Martin just keep his windows locked?

😂😂😂"

**
23. 
@deynna45
"Y'all notice how he drags the last word of every sentence"

**
Reply
24. @princeekeson12
"Dat southern drawl. 😂"

**
25. 
@johnw5403
"
Bruh man talk like he from TX, frfr"

**
26. @kingpinsmith22
"
Honestly, the only way you can understand bruh man, is being from the hood in the USA, greatest country ever."

**
Reply
27. 
@ChaseK004
"Im white from the Burbs and i understand v

Everyry word.. grew up watching Martin"

**
Reply
28. 
@troylee76, 2021
"
I’m from Texas! I understood every word!"

**
Reply
29. 
@anonimato1987,2021
"
@troylee76  there are hoods in TX"

**
Reply
30. @SaveYourSelfBlackMan, 2021
"
You don’t have to be in the hood to understand where’s he from lol 😂"

**
31. @keithbridges2144
"
The fella didn't mean any harm.  Just didn't know his boundaries that well.  That's why Martin tolerated and even befriended him.  However, folks be careful who you let into your home - especially the ladies."

**
32. 
@TheBreezyBabes
"
The head nod kills me every time 😂 we all know a ni-ga* like this"
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled in this comment.

**
33. 
@msufan590
"I
m mad they dont show my favorite part after he ate their Thanksgiving food and invited them to his moms house is that they followed him right out to the fire escape lmaoo"

**
34. 
@micmaliss
"
I had a Bruh Man in my life. This dude named Poppa who used the fire escape and everything."

**
35. 
@chopsavant
"
bruh man deserves all the emmys"

**
36. 
@kao380
"
2:38 yo the way he's bopping while he walks off has me crying 🤣🤣🤣🤣"

**
Reply
37. 
@thomasgooden
"
😂"

 **
38. 
@terranceforeman5116
"
I wish he acted like this in Bernie Mac"

 **
Reply
39. 
@hi-xf7cj, 2022
"
He probably didn't want to be typecasted. But he will always be known as Bruh Man on the 5th flo..🙂"

****
2021

40. @shunpreek
"Bruh Man From the fif flo  😂😂😂"

**
41. @edwardwatson7218
"Bruh man was 1 of the funniest & most underrated supporting charecters in tv history! How he wasnt a permanent cast member was beyond me!!"

**
Reply
42. @paulevans6066, 2024
"The way how he just randomly popped up out of nowhere made his character even funnier. It was an event when Bruh Man came through that window"

**
43.@40h66
"
In all reality...bruh man was part of the family💯"

**
44. 
@Studio-eu2bz
"
YOU. Would you allow a "bruh man" in your apartment?...I would. If he was exactly like him, I would."

**
45. 
@asahnwyatt6947
"
He has a strong resemblance to Radio Raheem from do the right thing.  Martin was in it"

**
46. 
@brboy8307
"
Bruhman just crack me up 😂😂😂"

**
47. 
@darkmatter5940
"
Bruh man means no harm"

**
48. 
@oloruntoadebenjudahdawotol7531
"
Bruh man and them tight ass shirts lol"

**
Reply
49. 
@xcaluhbration, 2023
"I didn't even realize until now that Bruh Man was always wearing them tight shirts cuz everything he had on was someone else's 🤣"

**
50. 
@septimusheap925
"
"Dis ni-ga * embodies the word bruh on so many levels I don't know where to start😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👌👌"
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in this comment.

**
51. 
@somethingcool1143
"
Bruh man really the only dude I know that can nonchalantly walk to your house and make a sammich and say "nothin, just chillen"

**
52. 
@juancaminante8078
"
Player of the Year. Straight Gangster."

**
53. 
@lucy661000
"
Bruh man was radio Raheem without the radio"

**
54. 
@Touchit1958
"
That head nod when he leaves always kills me!! ☠️"

**
55. 
@datboyphil
"Bruh man was probably the funniest   cast member that wasnt a main cast member 😭😭🤣🤣🤣 he made some of the episodes memerable 🤣🤣🤣"

**
56. @litoknows268
"
Bruh man man is the most savage chill and coolest person all in one lol and he get away with it lmao 😂"

**
57. @marilynmalcolm9920
"You know things are bad when Bruh Man exits out of the front door. 💔"

****
2022

58. @RoyalCam9
"One of the many best Characters on Martin😂❗️ That’s why this show will always be the best. Everyone was funny & had they own moments, I be watching this like a mf on HBO Max 💯"

**
59. 
@michaelscott181
"nutin, just chillen"  ever since I head bruh man say it, been using it since.  Iconic"

 **
60. 
@jobytamrat7297
"5th floor and 5th street with fo fingers....iconic sh-t"*
-snip-
*This word is fully spelled out in that comment. 

**
61. @tobyrichardson5317
"
One of the best characters in tv show history"

**
Reply
62. 
@Bongo_Fury, 2024
"Met him at Central Middle School in Galveston TX. His moms was a teacher there."

**
63. 
@Chicken_Wing91
"
I love how even though everyone knows he’s there he still leaves through the window 😂"

**
Reply
64. 
@hi-xf7cj
"I've always wore house shoes and shorts.  Loved me some Bruh Man...😍"

**
65. 
@nathan2497
"B
ruh Man was a cool character 😂😂

**
66. @hi-xf7cj
"The Bruh Man head nod is a classic."

**
67. @FalconsFanForever
"
bruh man was funny give this brotha his props while hes still living. Lol"

**
Reply
68. 
@joelshalom7100
"
Definitely the most underrated"

**
69. 
@koolbreez9865
"
Bruh man speech is so  H-TOWN! 😂😂"

**
Reply
70. @7South1Park3, 2024

"I knew he was from Texas soon as I heard how he said House at 4:38😂"

 **
Reply
71. 
@dunkirk9319
"
That head nod from bruh man was a killer…😂😂😂😂😂… still watching in 2021….😂😂😂😂😂😂"

**
Reply
72. @
pitt8274,2023
"
This will never get old 😅"

****
2023

73.
@lamontpeanutmillerjr
"LMMFAO Bruh Man was a straight up G"

**
74 
 @TooSkinnyKenny
"that is one country brother"

**
75. 
@Luisgar1234
"Bruh man the funnies character bruh😂"

**
76. @lesliespringer9816
"
A Texas natural.👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽😂😂😂

Damn sho wish i had sum milk duds 😭🤣🤣🤣"

**
77. 
@philiptucker7590
"One of the greatest sitcoms of all time! Love how they had these crazy recurring characters like Bruh man lmao 🤣"

**
78.  @charltonlee20
"The addition of the character was brilliant"

**
79. @Shockwave117yt
"Bruh man was ahead of our time"

**
80. 
@flakito163
"Absolutely love bruh man and his sammiches 🤣🤣"

**
81. 
@hazemcdanill
"Bruh man: I thought we was tight man

Martin: yeah we tight about as tight as this sweater was on your ass

😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂"

**
82. 
@Deadpool_64
"I love how Martin is mad at first but comes to accept that Bruh Man is gonna roll in his house and eat his food and chill."

**
Reply
83. @TheTehrancarroll, 2025
"It’s inevitable really!😂"

**
84. @matthewporras3815
"
My favorite part was when they all rolled to bruh mans moms crib for thanksgiving lmaoo"

**
85. @bulletspenetrate503
"Bruh man the first ni-ga* to say “Yoooooo” @5:17 😂😂"
-snip-
* This word is fully spelled out in this comment.

**
86. @haimavraham23
"
The way bruh man talk is  hilarious "Full'o ssammiches" ll, "Fraud and nem" (zigmond fraud) he say that like he grew up with dem 🤣🤣🤣 funny character."

**
87. 
@jaylenlenear7850,
"I like how Martin never calls the cops. First he was shocked then just got use to it lmao"

**
88. 
@rah7866
"You gotta love Bruh Man even Martin just came to realize. Bruh Man didn't mean no harm he just didn't know no damn better!

 Then like a good friend the one time they needed some food they got invited to his mom's house lmao"

**
89. 
@LarrytheKing16
"In his first appearance, at least Bruh Man used the door and not the “fffaaaarrr escape”.

**
90.  @Under_Sky_Third_Gaia
"
The best bruh"

**
91. @donniebrasco1364
"It's amazing how humble bruh man is about his physique.  He acts like an average Joe despite being as big and muscle bound as a marvel character.  I'm surprised with his skill he didn't act in action movies.  Goes to show that image is fake."

**
92. 
@tinycoco520
"So it's December 1st 2023 until this day I did not know Brah man Wes from Galveston Texas so close to me😂😅😂❤ .. and now that I think of it he did give off Texas vibes that Texas slang and everythang LOL"

****
2024

93. @josephpollard2725
"
Bru man, one of the Best of Martin's comedy series. Bru just trynna survive.😅"

**
94. @therealSouljaMan
"
This character was a gem, national treasure  🤣"

**
95. 
@sleepnomore6065
"Bruhman was the OG of squatters  & freeloaders😂"

**
Reply
96. @islandlife3371, 2025
"
He was one of the funniest characters on the show"

**
97. @thefearofg0ds758
"I like how Martin eventually just caved in and accepted Bruhman as a roomate and they started to become cool lol"

**
98. @hhl316delta
"Who leaves their window open in Detroit in the winter?"

**
99. @ZJIGGA
"Bruh Man should of had his own spin off show"

**
100. 
@Rockymarciono731
"Bru man is the black Kramer “Michal Richard’s from Seinfeld” or Kramer can be the white Bru man lol"

**
101. @fuzzybutkus8970
"Reginald Ballard. Dude was this character. Loved it."

**
102. @HampETX903
"
4:40 that Texas came out 😂"

 **
103. 
@Karateka888
"
We had a Bruh-Woman named Dottie. Constantly popping up uninvited. RIP Dottie with your crazy self.

****
2025

104. @kendallrivers1119
"
Bruh Man: one of the greatest characters in tv history!"

**
105. @ballack1884
"Bruh Man timelessly legendary"

**
106. @boredstudent
"Martin is on Netflix and I've been watching it. Bruh man doesn't appear very much but when he does, it's awesome."

**
107. @JamesAngler
"W
hen he quoted Sigmun Freud I lost it 😂😂😂😂"

**
108. 
@staxmantim
"Before there was Kramer"

**
109. @youtuber234ps5
"Bruhman was the black Kramer 😂"

**
Reply
110. @Zcam-y8i
"Um no"

**
111. 
@cappy2282
"Bruh man a good guy 👍"

**
112. @Silkyjohnsonjr
" "Sorry a brotha couldn’t come through the window, Martin. There’s a few snow flurries out there” 😂😂😂😂 8:55"

**
113. @orlandokincaide7344
"
Bruh man was the only guy we know that will come in home take your stuff and still get away with it time and time again"

**
114. @neekyboo77"
"
This character was freaking HILARIOUS! LOVE SOME BRUH MAN!"

**
115. @EdWedgie
"
Him coming out the bathroom with the air freshener killed me 😂😂"

****
2026

116. sheldonsanders9214
"Bruh-Man reminded me of home everytime... Texas stand up"

**
117. @ALLOFYAHSPEOPLE
"
🎉😂 I came here today because I was in the mood for some old school Bruh Man.😂😂. Martin is one of the best shows EVER!!!❤"

**
118. 
@SexyplexiGT
"Man bruh man was my favorite character. Man those were the days. Family getting together to watch shows like Martin. We white as hell from the country but damn we loved some Martin.  Sitting here watching bruh man from the 5th flo missing my uncle who used to watch it with me. Bout to make me a saaaaaamich"

****
This concludes Part III of this pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Examples Of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.'s Use Of The Words "Brother", "Bruhs" And "Bruhz" (Videos & Comments)

 

Omega Dear

bscut, Feb 20, 2008

Founder's Day 2007

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part II of a four part pancocojams series
about the use of the words "Bro, "Br'er", "Bruh", "Bruhz" and "Bra" as referents (particularly in the United States).

This post showcases three YouTube videos of the historically Black Greek letter fraternity Omega Psi Phi, Inc.. These videos exemplify the singing that Omega Psi Phi Fraternity is known for.

This post also includes selected comments from these videos' discussion threads. These comments document examples of the 
use of the words "brother", "bruhs", and "bruhz" by members of Omega Psi Phi fraternity and by other commenters. 
Brief explanations of some of the terms that are found in these comments are given in the comment section of this pancocojams post. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/amplifying-african-american-influences.html for Part I of this pancocojams series. That post presents excerpts of various internet articles and AI Overview write-ups about the use of those words. These excerpts are presented as a timeline. 

That timeline and the other posts in this pancocojams series strives to amplify the historical and cultural record as a way of helping to correct what I perceive to be the scarcity of details and/or the minimization of the tremendous role that African American culture has had and continues to have on the use of the words "bro" and "bruh" in American English and in the use of the English language throughout the world. 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/uyleesboutique-april-2-2025-remember_0196860863.html for Part III of this pancocojams series. That post showcases two YouTube videos of the character Bruh-man from the 1990s television series Martin. Selected comments from the discussion thread for one of those videos of Bruh-Man are included in that post.

Click  https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/im-not-your-brah-bro-bruh-videos.html for Part IV of this pancocojams series. That post showcases YouTube videos, information, and comments about the use of "bro" as a referent for females as well as males.


The content of this post is presented for historical, linguistic, socio-cultural, and aesthetic  purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners

Thanks to all past and present members of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. Thanks to all those who are featured in these showcase videos. Thanks also to all those who are quoted in this post.
-snip-
Click the "Omega Psi Phi Fraternity" tag below for additional pancocojams post about that fraternity which showcase hopping (stepping), strolling, and/or other aspects of that fraternity.

Also, click https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omega_Psi_Phi for Omega Psi Phi Fraternity's tWikipedia page.
 
****
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM SHOWCASE VIDEO #1 [embedded at the top of this post]

These comments are given in chronological order with the oldest dated comment presented first, except for replies. Numbers are given to these comments for referencing purposes only. 

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91Phx9S-suA


1. @fall98, 2010
"Sounds wonderful, my Greek brothers.   ZPhi"

**
2. @BlaQOwtXII, 2013
"RQQ to the bruhz!!

 Blackk

Quelumbia

XII Mighty 6D

**
3. @sampounds2031, 2013
"This is good brethren! I get chills every time I hear this song!"

**
r. @TheThrillCker, 2013
"RQQ to #DaBruhz -C.D. Harvey Tr3' Dawg Virtuoso Q Spr.12 Lambda 'Hard' Phi  #7thD "

**
5 . @jamesreece2152, 2017
"Love my brothers!  F'86 Mighty Beta Theta"

**
6. @mlt9910, 2022
"Bruhs proudly serving in every facet of our society...4 barks"

**
7. @leonhill9068, 2025
"Hello to my Omega Brothers"

****
SHOWCASE VIDEO #2 - This Is Alpha Chapter, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity

JonyMatt, Feb 13, 2012

A 100 year retrospective of the annual picture of Alpha Chapter, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, The Mother Pearl, as she celebrates her 100th year.
-snip-
Here are a few comments from the discussion thread for this video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uR59aMVw6g

1. @mbest001, 2014
"Beautiful!!!! Good to see the good Bruhs represented in such a manner!!! oo-oop!!"

**
2. @louiswilliams4686, 2016
"I'm not a que. but y'all bruhs cool r cool  with me. Lou l.o.e. 45"

**
3. @leoncraig6519, 2019
"Love it RQQ to the good Bruhz"

**
4. @Trackguy, 2020
"RQQ to all my frat brothers! No regrets! Just had the pleasure of visiting the Mother Pearl today."

**
5. @caldwelljackson9482, 2020
"This was a wonderful video showing pictures of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity brothers of the "Mother Pearl," Alpha Chapter, Howard University from the years 1911-2011. Much thanks and gratitude to the Brother and/or Brothers who posted this video

Brother Caldwell Jackson, #17, Spring 1963, Alpha Chapter, Howard University"

**
6. @HookEmUp2012, 2021
"RQQ to da bruhz!"

**
7. @SonofGod98407, 2022
"Man me and my Lbs used to listen to this every day on repeat before we became the Bruhz RQQ"

****

SHOWCASE VIDEO #3 -Centennial set OWT "Down to River Omega



LambdaPhi Ques (Middle Georgia Ques), Aug 1, 2013

Jedi Q 4-Spr10-Lambda Phi 7thD  .... "I been down to the river Omega" .... The bruh is blind but when he sings you can literally feel the spirit of Omega coursing through his veins!!:

 HARD Phi Middle GA Ques 
-snip-
Here are a few comments from the discussion thread for this video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRkqWtOsLiA

1. @sghicks7, 2015
"That is Owt! Happy Founders day to the GOOD! Roo to the Jedi Que for the Massive Singing, I remember we were getting ready to set owt the centennial show and bruhs passed the word you sang this...RQQ

- Hicks 7-09 Nu Psi"

**
2. @martyhogan3178, 2017
"I came look at this over and over. Thank you for this my brother. You have placed a piece in me that keeps me going. How beautiful it is to see brother's dwelling together in unity. Marty Hogan "Spr" 14 Tau Alpha Chapter. The Quad

 **
3. 
@jerrett747, 2019
"Been listening to this Bruh for 2 years. Can't wait until I get that chance. Long live Omega-Long live Da Good Bruhz."

**
4. @HipNoticQ, 2018
"Us 4 Dawgs are ALWAYS OWT!!!! RQQ Bruh!!!! Got chills watching this, Bruhz!!!!"

**
5. @tyronethornton7870, 2019
"Was watching this before  I crossed (4-18-BP)... I'm a 4 and 7th D.... and I am blessed to share the frat with this brother...RQQ"

**
6. @jamesrodgers5790, 2019
"RQQ to Da BRUHZ"

**
7. @RIKKYREIGNMUSIC, 2021
"RQQ to the bruhz!!!!"

****
This concludes Part II of this pancocojams series.


Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Amplifying African American Influences On The Use Of The English language Words "Bro", "Br'er", "Bruh", "Bruhz", And/Or "Brah"

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I of a four part pancocojams series 
about the use of the words "Bro, "Br'er", "Bruh", "Bruhz" and "Bra" as referents (particularly in the United States).

This post presents excerpts of various internet articles and AI Overview write-ups about the use of those words. These excerpts are presented as a timeline. 

This timeline and the other posts in this pancocojams series strives to amplify the historical and cultural record as a way of helping to correct what I perceive to be the scarcity of details and/or the minimization of the tremendous role that African American culture has had and continues to have on the use of the words "bro" and "bruh" in American English and in the use of the English language throughout the world. 

Additions and corrections are very welcome.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/examples-of-omega-psi-phi-fraternity.html for Part II of this pancocojams series. That post showcases three YouTube videos of the historically Black Greek letter fraternity Omega Psi Phi, Inc. That post also includes selected comments from those video's discussion threads. Those comments document examples of the
 use of the words "brother", "bruhs",and "bruhz" by members of that fraternity and by other commenters..

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/uyleesboutique-april-2-2025-remember_0196860863.html for Part III of this pancocojams series. That post showcases two YouTube videos of the character Bruh-man from the 1990s television series Martin. Selected comments from the discussion thread for one of those videos of Bruh-Man are included in that post.

Click 
 https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/06/im-not-your-brah-bro-bruh-videos.html for Part IV of this pancocojams series.  That post showcases YouTube videos, information, and comments about the use of "bro" as a referent for females as well as males.


The content of this post is presented for historical, linguistic, and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all the sources that are quoted in this pancocojams post. Read the titles and links for some of those resources within this time line list.


****
TIMELINE OF THE USE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE WORDS "BRO:, "BR'ER", "BRUH", AND "BRA"- 17TH THROUGH THE 2020s    

the late 17th century - late 18th century
"Though usage of bro as an abbreviation of “brother” can be traced back to at least 1660, conversational uses more similar to what we hear today begin cropping up in the mid- to late 18th century, according to lexicographer and Indiana University English professor Michael Adams. He points to the text of a 1762 burlesque play titled Homer Travestie, which includes the word bro several times. “That suggests maybe it’s low or underworld speech—a type of slang of the period,” Adams says. “Brother would often be shortened to bro in this period, in the same way that many names were radically shortened, so that William would be shortened to Wm. You just skip all the letters you didn’t really need to identify the person. So in casual correspondence, that was the way people referred to each other, and it may have migrated into speech.” [From https://slate.com/human-interest/2014/08/bro-slang-origins-history-and-overuse-suggests-the-term-may-not-last.html "The End of Bro: The term’s ubiquity may signal its demise." by Matthew J. X. Malady, August 13, 2014

**
1877
"The first documented use of "br'er" in print is in the 1870s, specifically popularized by  (White American Joel Chandler Harris starting around 1877. He incorporated the term—a Southern African-American vernacular spelling of "brother"—into written folktales in the Atlanta Constitution, later publishing them in the 1881 book Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings". [from AI overview #1]

**
the early 20th century
"
Bro’s use as a simple abbreviation appears to have remained fairly consistent during subsequent centuries. But its slang usage really took off during the past 100 years or so as it gained popularity in the black community as a replacement for brother in conversation. (Use of the term brother in the black church, Adams says, can be definitively dated back to at least the early 20th century, though “that’s partly just the emergence of African-American culture into print, so it’s quite likely that brother associated with the church has a longer history. It just ends up not being recorded anywhere.”)" [From https://slate.com/human-interest/2014/08/bro-slang-origins-history-and-overuse-suggests-the-term-may-not-last.html "The End of Bro: The term’s ubiquity may signal its demise." by Matthew J. X. Malady, August 13, 2014]

**
the mid to late 20th century
"While the heavy use of brother by those participating in social movements during the 1960s helped propel bro into the realm of casual conversation among activists, its more broad ascendance into the pop cultural pantheon after that was mostly due to lots of white kids trying to seem cool by emulating black slang. As the 20th century advanced, first brother and then bro became progressively more common in black speech says Geoffrey Nunberg, a linguistics expert who teaches at Berkeley’s School of Information. “Then,” he adds, “like everything else in black English, it’s appropriated and reinterpreted both deliberately and unwittingly by other speakers.” [From https://slate.com/human-interest/2014/08/bro-slang-origins-history-and-overuse-suggests-the-term-may-not-last.html "The End of Bro: The term’s ubiquity may signal its demise." by Matthew J. X. Malady, August 13, 2014]

**
the late 1980s -the 1990s
"the Bruhs" used as a referent for members of the historically Black Greek letter fraternity Omega Psi Phi, Inc.
" There is no specific, universally agreed-upon calendar date or single archival document that historians cite as the absolute first time an Omega Psi Phi member uttered or wrote the colloquial term "Bruhs" (or "Bruhz").

Because the term is an informal, vernacular evolution of the formal title "Brother," its tracking requires understanding how it transformed from official records into the fraternity's distinct subculture:

The Formal Baseline: 1911
"From the very inception of the fraternity on November 17, 1911, at Howard University, the official and documented referent for a member has always been "Brother" (e.g., Brother Edgar A. Love, Brother Oscar J. Cooper). Every official document, from the original minutes of the Alpha Chapter to national conclave records, strictly mandates this formal title.

African American Vernacular English (AAVE) & Slang Evolution
The shift from the formal "Brother" to the colloquial "Bruh" or "Bruhz" is tied to broader developments in 20th-century Black linguistics rather than a top-down administrative decree:

Late 20th-Century Shift:

While "brother" has been standard since 1911, the phonetic spelling and specific stylized pronunciation of "Bruh" became widely recognized inside the fraternity’s campus subculture during the mid-to-late 20th century. This directly mirrors the timeframe when other distinct, informal cultural traditions (such as "hopping" and barking) became commonplace alongside the widely known external nickname "Ques".

Intra-Fraternity vs. Extra-Fraternity:

Informally, members refer to one another internally as The Bruhs (signifying an unbreakable, organic familial bond) while external peers frequently use "Ques" or "Que Dogs". 

Official Stance on Vernacular

Because "Bruhs" is considered an informal colloquialism, it does not appear in official esoteric rituals or constitutional mandates, which prioritize the formal, historic title established by the founders. However, the phrase is completely embraced in modern times, utilized heavily in chapter-level communications, step show chants, and official fraternity media channels." [from AI Overview #2-
retrieved June 2, 2026 ]


**
"There is no recorded historical evidence or official citation that pinpoint a specific issue, page, or date where "Bruhs" or "Bruhz" made its absolute first print appearance in The Oracle.

 Because The Oracle (first published in Spring 1919) serves as the official, scholarly, and administrative journal for the "aristocracy of the Omega Psi Phi intellect", its formal publication standards have strictly guarded how language is printed. The trajectory of how these vernacular terms transitioned into the magazine reveals why a definitive "first date" remains elusive.

1.  The Strict Formal Standard of The Oracle
For the first several decades of The Oracle's existence (from the 1920s through the 1970s), editors maintained rigorous guidelines regarding fraternal nomenclature. Authors, chapter reporters, and grand officers were explicitly expected to use the formal title "Brother" (e.g., Brother Walter H. Mazyck or Brother Edgar A. Love).Slang variations were widely considered unpolished campus vernacular and were intentionally excluded from national, public-facing print. If a chapter reporter submitted a notes section using street or campus slang, it was typically scrubbed by the editorial board before publication.

2.     The Shift to Chapter Reports (Late 20th Century) When colloquialisms like "Bruhs" or "Bruhz" did eventually breach the pages of The Oracle, it did not happen via a formal cover story or a grand officer's message. Instead, it surfaced incrementally during the late 1980s and 1990s.

This inclusion happened via Undergraduate Chapter Reports. As the editorial tone shifted to accommodate authentic campus life, regional and local undergraduate chapters began incorporating their localized chants, step show lyrics, and casual greetings into their submitted updates (e.g., "The Bruhz of [X] Chapter have been working hard..."). Because these sections feature thousands of small text blurbs from across the country over many decades, historians have not isolated the single earliest printed typo or stylized submission.

Modern Official Legal Adoption
While its exact editorial debut remains an uncatalogued part of the fraternity's oral-to-written history, the modern era has seen total institutional acceptance:

Trademark Status
"Bruhz" is no longer just unwritten slang; it is an officially legally protected asset. Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. holds registered trademarks for the term "BRUHZ" for apparel and organizational branding.

Modern Print & Digital Media
Today, the term is freely used across official fraternity digital campaigns, health initiatives (such as the Omega Training Camp tailored for "Bruhz"), and current digital issues of The Oracle. [from AI Overview #3-
retrieved June 2, 2026]

**
1993-1995
"Bruh-Man" (played by comedian Reginald Ballard) is Martin Payne's eccentric, freeloading upstairs neighbor from the hit 90s sitcom Martin. Famous for his slow drawl, signature walk, and badly fitting clothes, he constantly sneaks into Martin's apartment via the fire escape to mooch food and lounge around

Key Characteristics & Lore
The "F-a-a-a-ah 'Scape": Despite living directly upstairs on the fifth floor, Bruh-Man almost never uses the front door. He uniquely enters and exits through Martin's apartment window via the fire escape.The Catchphrases: His most famous taglines include "Bruh-Man from the fifth flo'" and "Nuttin'... just chillin'".

The Math: He frequently declares he lives on the fifth "flo'" while holding up exactly four fingers...

Famous Mannerisms -Bruh-Man is beloved for his distinct Texas-inspired country dialect. He had unique pronunciations that became fan favorites, [such as] commonly referring to:Sandwiches as "sammiches"...[AI Overview #4-
retrieved June 2, 2026 ]

**
the late 19th century to the 1990s
[This is the AI results for my query "Did Wh
ite surfers and white fraternities'  use of the word "bro" come after black fraternities' use of the word “bruh?”]

"Yes. The slang use of both words is rooted in African American English (AAVE) and predates their widespread adoption by white surfers and collegiate fraternity members by decades.A breakdown of the historical timeline illustrates this evolution:Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries: The term "bruh" (and its earlier variant "brer") traces back to Black Southern dialects and folklore in the 1890s. By the early 1900s, "bro" was adopted in Black communities as a familiar title to address male friends and peers.

 A breakdown of the historical timeline illustrates this evolution:

Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries: The term "bruh" (and its earlier variant "brer") traces back to Black Southern dialects and folklore in the 1890s. By the early 1900s, "bro" was adopted in Black communities as a familiar title to address male friends and peers.

 Mid-20th Century: During the Civil Rights Movement, the usage expanded further within Black communities as a term of solidarity.

1960s – 1970s: White counterculture and youth subcultures (including Southern California surfers) adopted "bro" from Black slang. Surfers popularized the word and its variant "brah," embedding it into their culture.

 1990s: The stereotypical white "frat bro" or "surfer bro" archetype became cemented in mainstream pop culture (as seen in films like Encino Man), solidifying an association that had originated in Black culture decades prior." [AI Overview #5- retrieved June 3, 2026]

**
the mid 20th century
"
In an earlier time, the term "bro" was actually used to refer to African-American men. Today, it's a term that refers to beer-chugging frat boys in Abercrombie cargo shorts. The good folks at Oxford explain how this happened.

[...]

What they [the Oxford blog] found was that the term "bro" used to refer to African-American men, a derivation of "brother." They write:

Bro’s meaning had begun to expand by the mid-20th century. It came to refer simply to a man (a synonym of ‘fellow’ or ‘guy’), or sometimes more specifically a black man. The rock critic Lester Bangs wrote in 1976, "if we the (presumably) white jass-buffs couldn’t get with it maybe it was only meant for the bros.

That usage of the word shifted in the ensuing decades, partly through the general appropriation of African-American culture. There were other reasons, too: One of the turning points they unearth is the cultural touchstone known as Encino Man:

By the 1970s, though, bro began to break new ground, untethered from brother. It came to mean not merely a guy, but a male friend. For instance, in the film script for the 1992 comedy Encino Man, the stage directions state: “Stoney and Hank have been bros since grammar school.”

It's been over 20 years since Encino Man was released in theaters. Today, as NPR pointed out, bros are predominantly white. Oxford explains that "by being the sort of person who says 'bro,' a person becomes a bro. In the immortal utterance 'don’t tase me, bro' it is not the person doing the tasing who is the bro, but the person being tased."…[https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/2013/10/how-encino-man-changed-race-bros/310146/ "How the Bro Became White" By Alexander Abad-Santos, October 9, 2013
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That excerpt is the end of the free portion of this article [for those who aren’t subscribed to the Atlantic.com.

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from the 16th century to the 2020s
"Over many hundreds of years, a number of words have emerged that abbreviate "brother" including "bro," "bra" and now "bruh." The earliest evidence of an abbreviated use of "brother" is with the word "bro," used as early as the 16th century, said Jesse Sheidlower, former editor-at-large of the Oxford English Dictionary and an adjunct professor at Columbia University.

"Bro" usually came before "a man's name or to a character, especially the name of an animal," Sheidlower said. In African American folklore, we see "bro" being used in this way during the 19th century, especially in the Caribbean and Southern U.S., he said.

The first known use of the word "bruh" appeared much later, in the 1890s, according to Merriam Webster.

Back then it was being spelled "brer" and comes from the "Br'er Rabbit," a series of stories by Joel Chandler Harris, an American journalist and folklorist who wrote these stories from the African American oral tradition, Sheidlower said.

How has internet culture brought us to "bruh"

For a long time, "bruh" was put aside in favor of "bro" or "bra" (as surfers liked to call each other).

The use of "bruh" is a perfect example of how internet culture and especially TikTok, have transformed how people talk to each other, according to Brennan, who used to work at Know Your Meme, a website dedicated to documenting internet phenomena. [https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/bro]

"I think 'bro' and 'bruh' are great examples of how words evolve over time and take their meaning so far away from what it used to be," Brennan explained.

[…]

It really began with the age of the 2010s meme culture, a far simpler time in our internet's history, when the use of "bro" became widespread. While "bro" can be used as a way to refer to a friend, the internet evolved its meaning to refer to a stereotypical frat boy and their style and culture as "bro culture," Brennan said.

Brennan herself wrote the Know Your Meme page dedicated to explaining the use of  "bro."

Phrases and memes like "U Mad Bro?" became a sensation and so did "Come at me, bro" (from Jersey Shore fame). And then you have, "Don't Tase me, bro!" a phrase plucked from a viral video of a University of Florida student begging security officers not to Tase him during a Q&A with then-U.S. Sen. John Kerry. (They Tased him anyway.)

A short-lived app called Vine, where users watched and posted 6 second long videos that played on a loop, brought us to "bruh," according to Cohen, the media studies professor.

Twelve years ago high school basketball player Tony Farmer collapsed after hearing his sentence in criminal court for kidnapping, assaulting and robbing a former girlfriend. A creator on Vine used this clip and put the sound effect of someone saying "bruh" as Farmer collapsed. As far as we know, that is the origin of "bruh" on the Internet, Cohen said.

[…]

"You could probably have a complete conversation with one word just based on how you use it. It can be despair or it could be excitement or it could be just a reference," he said.

Brennan added, "But the meaning is defined by everything happening in the moment around it, and it is a temporal word where I could say it five times a day, and each time could be like a different meaning of a sentence and it's just one sound."

Brennan had some advice for parents grappling with this new turn of phrase.

 "Don't be afraid of the slang. Just zoom out and think about how words are all made up by people, even the ones that aren't slang, and read your context clues." [https://www.npr.org/2025/06/25/nx-s1-5443929/bruh-meaning-explained-word "Brother to Bruh: How Gen Alpha slang has its origins in the 16th century", June 25, 2025 "Heard on All Things Considered" by Jaclyn Diaz

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the 1990s to date (2026)
"
The use of "bro" as a universal, gender-neutral form of address for females began to gain mainstream traction in the 1990s and 2000s, largely popularized by skate and surf culture. By the 2010s, it evolved into an everyday slang staple embraced by Gen Z and Millennials

The shift in language can be broken down into a few distinct phases:

1990s (Skate and Surf Origins): Terms like "bro," "dude," and "brah" started losing their strictly masculine definitions on the West Coast. Surfers and skaters began using these terms as casual, non-offensive greetings for anyone in their social circle, regardless of gender.

2010s (Internet and Meme Culture): With the explosion of 2010s internet meme culture, "bro" and its variant "bruh" went viral. During this era, it shifted from being a mere synonym for "fellow" to a versatile pronoun replacement used in place of an individual's name.

Present Day (Mainstream Normalization): Today, "bro" functions similarly to "guys." Rather than meaning "brother," it acts as a casual, friendly exclamation to capture someone's attention ("Bro, listen..."). It is widely used by women towards both male and female friends.

Why did this happen? Linguists note that the phenomenon is similar to how "guys" evolved to refer to mixed-gender groups or women. When a society lacks a casual, gender-neutral equivalent to address an individual, masculine-coded words are often adopted as a neutral default." [AI Overview #6-retrieved June 3, 2026]

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