Edited by Azizi Powell
Latest revision - May 21, 2026
This is Part II of a three part pancocojams series on the American vernacular (slang) phrase "clock It" and similar phrases.
This post presents some online examples in 2025-2026.of the vernacular (slang) phrase "clock it" and similar "clock" slang words/phrases.
Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/2025-article-excerpt-clock-it-how.html for Part I of this pancocojams series. That pancocojams post presents an excerpt from a 2025 online article written by Quispe L贸pez about the history and meanings of the vernacular (slang) phrase "clock it" and related words/phrases such as 'clock that tea" and "clocking". Please read that entire article.
Click ___ for Part III of this pancocojams series. That post presents information about the meanings of "clock/ed", "clock it" and other related words & phrases from some discussion threads for YouTube videos of stomp & shake cheerleading.
The content of this post is presented for linguistic, historical, and socio-cultural purposes.
All copyrights remain with their owners.
Thanks to all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post and thanks to the publishers of these embedded videos.
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SOME ONLINE SOURCES FOR EXAMPLES OF THE VERNACULAR PHRASE "CLOCK IT" AND SIMILAR WORDS/PHRASES
These online sources examples are given in no particular order and are numbered for referencing purposes only.
SOURCE #1
AI Overview [This write-up is the result of my query on May 21, 2026: What is the history of the vernacular phrase "clock it"?]
"The viral "clock it" trend and its accompanying hand gesture
(tapping the thumb and middle finger together) originate from Black and Latinx
ballroom culture in 1960s and 1970s New York City.
The history of the trend and its evolution:
Original Ballroom Meaning:
In the ballroom scene, "to clock someone" meant to
notice or spot something they were trying to hide. It was heavily tied to
"reading" and "shading" someone by making a sharp,
sometimes playful observation about their look or behavior.
Evolution of the Slang: Over the decades, the term
filtered into mainstream pop culture through drag. Today, it has evolved to
mean recognizing the truth, agreeing with a sharp observation, or pointing out
that someone "nailed" a point.
The Hand Gesture: The accompanying pinched-finger tap
functions as a "silent applause" of approval. It was brought to
mainstream social platforms (like TikTok and Instagram) by Gen Z and Gen Alpha
creators."
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SOURCE #2:
AI Overview [This write-up is the result of my statement/query on May 21, 2026: " "Clock It" origin]
"The slang phrase "clock it" (often paired with a
pinched-finger hand gesture) traces its true origins back to the 1960s Black
and Latinx LGBTQ+ ballroom scene in New York City.
Here is how the term
originated and evolved:
1.The Ballroom & Drag Roots
In ballroom culture, to
"clock" someone meant to notice, observe, or aggressively point out
something about a person, particularly something they were trying to hide (such
as a flaw in their drag, an inconsistent story, or an unconvincing appearance).
It was often used in a "read," which is a playful but cutting
remark.
2. The Pop Culture Boom
For decades, this term remained highly localized
within the queer community until it was popularized for the mainstream by
reality shows like RuPaul's Drag Race. On the show, judges and contestants
would use the term to "call out" specific fashion choices, behaviors,
or tea (gossip).3. The Internet & Gen Z Era
By 2025, the phrase migrated to TikTok, Instagram, and other social media platforms. It evolved from a slightly shady or confrontational term into something much broader. Today, Gen Z and Gen Alpha use it to mean:Noticing a detail: To recognize, observe, or point out something clever.Validating a statement: Expressing strong agreement, or acknowledging a truth (e.g., "Truth, you nailed it")
While internet writers and content creators sometimes misattribute the term's sudden popularity entirely to modern teens or TikTok memes, its soul and etymology belong to ballroom culture."
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SOURCE #3
Pancocojams Editor's Note: As ofMay 21, 2026 urbandictionary.com has three pages of viewer submitted definitions for the English language phrase "clock it!".
"Clock it!" has several different slang definitions. Here are three definitions that I believe fit the past or current (2026) African American vernacular use of "clock it":
These comments are presented in this pancocojams post in chronological order and are numbered for referencing purposes only
These numbers don't coincide with the rankings that are given to definitions on urbandictionary.com by its viewers.
1."Clock It
Another way of saying “spill” or otherwise agreeing with someone else’s statement.
Typically used on Stan Twitter.
Person 1: Cardi B is washed and needs to retire!
Person 2: Clock it! I’ve been saying the same thing!
Clock It by GVTT3D January 8, 2024, https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Clock+it
**
2. Clock it
Another way of praising someone, similar to 'slay' or 'good
job' but cooler.
Kid: "I just won a fight"
Friend: "Clock it!"
OR
Boy: "Ur built like a bus driver"
Girl: "You're built like the bus"
Friend: "Ooh she clocked your tea!!"
Clock it by darealcece September 13, 2025, https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Clock%20it&page=2
-snip-
This is the definition that is used by commenters in discussion threads of stomp & shake videos. Click Part III for some examples of those comments.
**
3.
1. to notice, observe, or call out a hidden truth, motive, or something significant, often playfully
Body tea, body matter.
Clock it馃
Clock it by PonasJonas October 26, 2025, https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Clock%20it&page=2
-snip-
This definition is close to the Gay Ballroom definition, except its use in that culture wasn't playful.
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SOURCE #4- - MS NOW PRESENTS: "Clock It,: "Clock It," a
new podcast posted at the intersection of culture and politics from Symone
Sanders Townsend and Eugene Daniels.
@msnow Feb 5, 2026
Their new show is an invitation to their groupchat, the liveliest—and most informative—out there. Whether it’s ICE getting dispatched to the Super Bowl, or Nicol谩s Maduro’s Nike Tech fit, or Michael B. Jordan’s sole Oscar nomination despite playing three roles in Sinners, there is no collision between culture and politics that this show won’t document and decipher.
Symone and Eugene see exactly what’s going on—and they want
you to clock it, too."
-snip-
Here are a few comments from that YouTube video short's discussion thread (with numbers added for referencing purposes only:
1.@SharenCarter, March 2026
"Keep clocking it real talk❤"
**
2. @chrismurray-ez4bt, March 2026
"Great Team! Speaking Truth to POWER! Love it! 馃グ"
**
3. @TimMcConnell-k3r, April 2026
"Love to see you both clocking it! Hey
guys check Maxwell Chickumbutso front africa. His car that uses no fuel or need
to plug in. I'll wait to see you talk about it."
**
4. @euclidespardo9987, May 2026
"Y'all be telling it"
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SOURCE #5- AI OVERVIEW WRITE UP
(This write-up is the result of my May 21, 2026 query "Why is MS NOW podcast called "Clock It"? and is that podcast successful?"]
"AI Overview
The podcast by MS NOW (formerly MSNBC) is called "Clock
It with Symone & Eugene," which was highly anticipated as an extension
of the network's broader rebrand.
Why they chose the name:
The title refers to the slang phrase "clock it,"
meaning to take notice, observe closely, or call out what is happening. Hosts
Symone Sanders Townsend and Eugene Daniels chose the name because the show
focuses on the intersection of politics and pop culture, inviting listeners
into an insider group chat to decode how culture shapes political figures and
movements.
Its success:
Debuting with strong backing from the newly independent MS NOW, the show has
quickly built a dedicated following across platforms like Apple Podcasts and
Spotify. It is widely viewed as a successful, engaging strategy for decoding
the "war of ideas and memes," capturing a younger, culturally
tuned-in demographic that follows the hosts' signature off-the-cuff style. You
can check out all episodes on the official MS NOW Podcasts page."
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SOURCE #6 - "Clock it" - The New Gen Z Gesture Taking Over! What Does It Really Mean?
@clautienews, Feb 25, 2026
Gen Z is shaking things up with a mysterious new gesture
called "clock it" that's meant to show support. But here's the twist
- even the people using it can't agree on its exact meaning! Some say it's a
vibe you just have to feel. The gesture involves snapping your fingers using
either your index + thumb or middle + thumb. No official standard yet! Would
you "clock it" to show support? Let us know in the comments! #GenZ
#NewTrends #SocialMedia #YouthCulture #Gestures #Support #Vibes #TrendingNow
-snip-
Here are the only two comments from that video's discussion thread as of May 21, 2026 at 9:21 AM EDT (Numbers added for referencing purposes only.)
1. @datguy7360, April 2026
"Clock it comes from Queer ballroom culture, Gen Z didn't
invent NOTHING! ...."
**
Reply
2. @Pl8kcx, April 2026
"And they copied from black women like usually 馃檮"
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SOURCE #7- Redditt.com Discussion Thread
[Pancocojams Editor's Note: These selected comments are presented in chronological order with numbers added for referencing purposes only.]
From https://www.reddit.com/r/LostRedditor/comments/1h7oizm/what_does_clock_it_mean_in_slang/ Lost Redditor: "What does clock it mean?"
[Pancocojams Editor's Note: These selected comments are presented in chronological order with numbers added for referencing purposes only. The numbers for these comments don't necessarily correspond to their numbers in that discussion thread.]
1. Vanillabean322, 2025
"what does clock it! mean in slang
i've been seeing it but idk what it means and all the pages
i've gone to sound like they were written by gen x."
**
Reply
2.
"It’s a response to someone saying something that is very
true. Per google search of gen z slang clock it."
**
Reply
3. Enne105_7, 2005
"Its actually AAVE not gen z slang."
**
Reply
4. Mindless_Sea_1485, 2025
"It’s not AAVE, it’s ballroom culture"
**
Reply
5. EngineeringNo5714, 2025
"It’s black ballroom culture. So still within AAVE."
**
Reply
6. Mindless_Sea_1485, 2025
"Ballroom culture wasn’t only black queens tho, other words
like slay and period are AAVE but clock it was started in ballroom culture not
AAVE"
**
Reply
7. ananatawa, 2026
"Stop it. We all know black queens invented this slang. Do
not deny them their history"
**
8. Mission-Gas9996, 2025
"Crazy to find that it’s actually black gay slang from the
90s,"
**
9. Budget_Raspberry_856, 2025
"Most white girl slang comes from black and gay culture"
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This concludes Part II of this pancocojams series.
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