If you’ve opened TikTok, Instagram or Reels in recent weeks, there’s a good chance that your head has been spinning for hours: “Grandma sat in a balloon, so she’s driving to London…” And no, you’re not the only one. The internet has collectively decided that one old children’s counter is better than half the songs coming out on streaming platforms right now.
From meme videos and dance challenges to completely random footage of cats, travel and everyday situations – “Grandma sat in a balloon” has become the soundtrack of the Internet. Many admit that they came to watch one video, and ended up humming lines about a grandmother traveling the world in a hot air balloon for days.
A song older than most TikTok users
What makes the whole story even more interesting is the fact that “Sjela baba u balon” is not a new song at all. It is about an old children’s counter that generations of children throughout Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and other countries of the former Yugoslavia used during the game.
Like many folk counters, there is no known author. It was passed down by word of mouth, from generation to generation, long before there were TikTok trends, algorithms and viral sounds. Research into children’s folklore shows that it was known as early as the seventies of the last century, and probably even earlier.
How did grandma end up at the rave?
A new generation discovered the song thanks to numerous electronic covers that flooded social networks. Among the most popular is the techno version by producer Eva Illusions, who turned the old counter into a real club hit.
And hands down, the lyrics are unusual enough to seem like something an artificial intelligence would come up with today:
Grandma sat in a balloon,
so he drives to London.
Buy semolina in London,
so he drives to Paris…
And so on, all the way to the gramophone playing “din-dan-don”.
Why exactly did this go viral?
For years now, the internet has loved content that’s slightly nonsensical, unexpected, and weird enough that you can’t forget it. This is precisely where the secret of this song’s success lies.
The melody is simple, the rhythm is infectious, and the story is completely absurd. Grandma flies around Europe in a hot air balloon, buys random things and visits her boyfriend. It doesn’t make sense, but that’s exactly why it works.
An additional tailwind was provided by TikTok, where users began to use the song as a background for recordings that often have nothing to do with the lyrics. The more random the video, the better the song does the job.
From child’s play to global meme
It is interesting that behind this phenomenon is not a big music star or a marketing campaign. Everything happened completely spontaneously – thanks to remixes, algorithms and nostalgia.
Since the counter does not have an official original version, today there are techno, house, rap and even English variants. In some versions, the grandmother buys a rattle, in others a rose, and somewhere she goes to her husband instead of her boyfriend.
The Internet has its own theory
Reddit users tried to explain why this song took the internet by storm. The most common answer is: because it is at the same time famous, funny and bizarre enough to stick in your head forever.
And indeed, in a time when trends last less than the average TikTok video, few expected the decades-old children’s counter to become one of the biggest viral hits of the year.
The only question that remains is: how many times have you already sung “Sjela baba u balon” today?













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