The Arabic APT Went Viral: How Rosé x Bruno Mars Got Reimagined by the World
Key Takeaways
- •"APT." accumulated 2.06 billion global chart units, the first time a non-Western artist topped the IFPI annual chart
- •The Arabic version by 3way Asiska rearranged the song with traditional instruments, breaking 20 million views in two weeks
- •A "template model" replaces the "uniform model": the original provides a framework, and each culture fills in the content its own way
In October 2024, BLACKPINK's Rose and Bruno Mars released a song called APT. Three letters, a melody borrowed from a Korean drinking game, plus a chorus that anyone on the planet could sing along to.
Months later, IFPI (the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry) announced that APT. was the best-selling global single of 2025. A cumulative 2.06 billion global chart units. This was the first time in IFPI history that a song led by a non-North American or European artist topped the chart. It was also the first annual number-one to contain non-English lyrics.
But what truly made APT. a cultural phenomenon wasn't the original version itself. It was the global adaptations.
From Drinking Game to Global Number One
'APT' is short for the Korean word 'apateu' (Apartment). It's an extremely popular drinking game in Korea: players stack their hands together to form an 'apartment building,' then someone calls out a floor number, and whoever's hand is below that floor has to drink.
Rose revealed in an interview that the song was inspired by her and Bruno Mars playing this game in the studio. The rhythmic chanting of 'apateu' was written directly into the chorus, becoming one of the catchiest melodic hooks of 2025.
Billboard reported that APT.'s success wasn't just about the melody. Its structure was designed to be 'globally friendly': the lyrics are primarily in English, but the three letters 'A-P-T' in the chorus require zero language ability to sing along. This allowed it to spread instantly in every market from Seoul to Sao Paulo to Cairo.
The Arabic Version: When the Middle East Meets K-pop
Among all the adaptations, the Arabic version had the most astonishing viral power. Created by parody group 3way Asiska, they rearranged the entire song with traditional Arabic melodies and instruments, paired with improvised Arabic lyrics. The video surpassed 20 million views within a week of going live.
The Arabic version went viral not just because of the music itself, but because of its 'attitude.' 3way Asiska had previously adapted the Aladdin theme song and other Western pop songs in Arabic style. Their approach isn't 'serious cover' but the humor of 'I know this is absurd but I'm doing it anyway.'
This kind of 'humorous localization' spreads faster than 'serious covers.' The reason is simple: serious covers can be criticized as 'not good enough' or 'disrespectful to the original.' But an absurd adaptation delivered with a smile gets not judgment but 'hahaha, this is amazing.' Humor is the safest passport across cultures.
Indian, Filipino, and Latin Versions
The Arabic version isn't an isolated case. APT. has been reinterpreted in completely different styles across the globe.
The Indian version repackaged it with Bollywood-style arrangements and Hindi lyrics; side-by-side comparisons with the original went viral on TikTok. Filipino creators covered the full version in Tagalog. The Latin American version added reggaeton beats.
Every version kept the 'A-P-T' chorus and basic melodic structure but refilled the content with its own culture's musical language. The result: the same song sounds different in every culture, yet listeners in every culture can recognize 'this is APT.'
What You Didn't Know: This Is a New Model for Globalized Music
Traditional globalized music followed a 'uniform model': the whole world listened to the same version of the same song. Beatles songs sounded the same in Tokyo and London. Michael Jackson's music videos were the same in Cairo and New York.
APT. represents a new model: the 'template model.' The original provides a framework (melody, structure, chorus), and then each culture fills it in its own way. You don't need to 'accept' a foreign song. You can 'remake' it into your own.
This shift is driven by social media. Before TikTok, an Arab musician would have had a hard time getting their K-pop adaptation heard globally. But on TikTok, the algorithm doesn't care which country you're from. It only cares whether people watch your content. And 'wrapping an already viral song in a new cultural outfit' happens to be the perfect case of 'novel but recognizable,' exactly what the algorithm favors most.
A Song's Cultural Contradiction
APT. has a cultural contradiction that's rarely discussed. Its name comes from a Korean drinking game. But in Arabic culture, alcohol is forbidden. A song rooted in drinking culture was reinterpreted by creators in Muslim countries, and it went viral.
This contradiction illustrates the truth about globalized music: when a song spreads far enough, its original context completely disappears. Listeners of the Arabic version don't know (or don't care) that 'APT' is related to drinking. All they hear is a catchy melody and a chorus they can sing along to.
Meaning gets diluted. But music survives. Perhaps this is globalization in its purest form: a melody doesn't belong to any single culture. It belongs to everyone willing to sing it.
The 2.06 Billion Revelation
APT.'s 2.06 billion global chart units prove one thing: in 2025, a song's success no longer depends on its language, nationality, or cultural background. It depends on one question: can your chorus make someone who doesn't understand the lyrics sing along within three seconds?
A-P-T. Three letters. Pronounceable in any language. Adaptable by any culture. This isn't a song. It's a globally universal music template. And the whole world is filling it in their own way.
FAQ
▶Why did 'APT.' become the best-selling single globally?
The three letters 'A-P-T' require zero language ability to sing along, letting every culture reinterpret it in their own way, accumulating 2.06 billion chart units.
▶How did the Arabic parody version of APT perform?
The adaptation by Arab comedy group 3way Asiska surpassed 20 million views within two weeks, proving the song's cross-cultural remix potential.
▶What is the secret to this song's cross-cultural success?
Its minimalist chorus structure makes it a perfect cultural vessel—people of any language and cultural background can participate and remix it without barriers.
參考資料
IFPI — APT Crowned Global Single of 2025
Billboard — Rose and Bruno Mars APT
Korea Times — Rose's APT Tops IFPI 2025
留言 (0)
登入後可以留言。
延伸閱讀
Why Hard Truths Beat Chicken Soup: Gen Z Rejects Motivational Content
A video of a fitness influencer directly asking "You said you'd lose weight this year — so what happened?" got 5 to 10 times the views of similar moti
Why Hard Truths Beat Chicken Soup: Gen Z Rejects Motivational Content
A video of a fitness influencer directly asking "You said you'd lose weight this year — so what happened?" got 5 to 10 times the views of similar moti
Bad Days Don't Stop Me: Why Adversity Quotes Outperform Motivational Platitudes
"Bad Days Don't Stop Me" gets shared several times more than "Stay Positive" and "You Can Do It" on social media. Psychology research shows that quote
Bad Days Don't Stop Me: Why Adversity Quotes Outperform Motivational Platitudes
"Bad Days Don't Stop Me" gets shared several times more than "Stay Positive" and "You Can Do It" on social media. Psychology research shows that quote
The BGM Your Brain Auto-Plays After Work: How a One-Word Song Represents an Entire Generation
A self-performed video featuring a song with just one word on repeat went viral on TikTok with millions of views, crowned by Gen Z as the ultimate "af
The BGM Your Brain Auto-Plays After Work: How a One-Word Song Represents an Entire Generation
A self-performed video featuring a song with just one word on repeat went viral on TikTok with millions of views, crowned by Gen Z as the ultimate "af
"I Don't Give a F*ck": This Generation's Collective Manifesto
"I Don't Give a F*ck Anymore" evolved from an English profanity into Gen Z's collective manifesto, with related TikTok content amassing billions of vi
"I Don't Give a F*ck": This Generation's Collective Manifesto
"I Don't Give a F*ck Anymore" evolved from an English profanity into Gen Z's collective manifesto, with related TikTok content amassing billions of vi
What If Jesus Joined the Demon Slayer Corps: Religion x Anime Fan Art Always Sparks the Biggest Debates
Fan art depicting Jesus as a Demon Slayer Corps member wielding a cross as his Nichirin blade sparked polarized reactions on social media. But mixing
What If Jesus Joined the Demon Slayer Corps: Religion x Anime Fan Art Always Sparks the Biggest Debates
Fan art depicting Jesus as a Demon Slayer Corps member wielding a cross as his Nichirin blade sparked polarized reactions on social media. But mixing
Cat Boxing Goes Viral: Why Pet Videos Always Get Millions of Views
A cat named Mei from Japan's Shinshu mountains went viral on TikTok with rapid-fire paw punches, racking up millions of views when paired with fightin
Cat Boxing Goes Viral: Why Pet Videos Always Get Millions of Views
A cat named Mei from Japan's Shinshu mountains went viral on TikTok with rapid-fire paw punches, racking up millions of views when paired with fightin