
2026. 6. 22. · 10:13
TikTok Trend Watch: Week of June 22 — Food Jutsu, cleared sounds, and TikTok GO's booking layer
This week's useful TikTok signals are low-production formats and commerce-adjacent behavior shifts: Food Jutsu-style product reveals, proof-led carousels, business-safe World Cup audio, fast match-reaction content, and TikTok GO's move from discovery into booking.
The useful TikTok signal this week is not one giant meme. It is a production constraint: the formats gaining momentum are easy to shoot, easy to localize, and increasingly tied to a purchase or booking action. New Engen's June tracker updated on June 18 added Food Jutsu, the "That's My Why" carousel, and Toy Story 5 nostalgia as the late-June creative set brands can still move on now 1. At the same time, TikTok GO turns travel discovery into in-app booking, while TikTok's own 2026 trend report says audiences are leaning toward routine, proof, comments, and community accountability rather than pure escapism 2 3.
The four useful reads for the week
| Signal | What changed | Brand read |
|---|---|---|
| Product reveal formats are getting more playful | New Engen's June 18 update identifies Food Jutsu as a CapCut/anime transition that can reveal a meal, drink, or product, and "That's My Why" as a three-slide payoff format for people, places, pets, products, or customers 1. | Restaurants, CPG, beauty, and retail teams should brief one low-production reveal and one emotional proof post rather than making another generic trend voiceover. |
| Brand-safe audio matters more than raw heat | Epidemic Sound says Nyck Caution's "PRESSURE!" had soundtracked roughly 120,000 TikTok videos at publication time and was being used in World Cup content by F1, Real Madrid, Premier League, and FIFA's official World Cup account; it also says the track is ready to use in TikTok's Commercial Music Library 4. | If the account is a business account or the post may become paid media, start with cleared audio. The viral track you cannot license is a trap, not an opportunity. |
| Live sport is now a reaction engine | Overtime's June 22 Cape Verde World Cup fan post had 488,918 plays and 40,426 likes in the TikTok data returned for this run, and a second Cape Verde first-goal clip had 311,747 plays and 19,802 likes 5 6. | For sports-adjacent brands, stop treating the World Cup as a pre-planned content calendar only. The best openings are match-reaction windows measured in hours. |
| TikTok is shortening the path from discovery to transaction | TikTok GO lets US users discover and book hotels, attractions, and tours inside TikTok, with partners including Booking.com, Expedia, Viator, GetYourGuide, Tiqets, and Trip.com 2. | Travel, hospitality, local services, and event operators should treat creator videos, local search, and location pages as one conversion surface, not three separate teams. |
Product reveal formats: stop explaining, start summoning
Food Jutsu is the cleanest brand format in the late-June batch. The mechanic is simple: the creator makes anime-style hand signs, then a CapCut or AI transition makes the food or product appear. New Engen frames it as anime culture colliding with food content and calls out restaurants and product brands as obvious fits 1.
The reason it works for marketers is not the anime reference alone. It gives the product a reveal beat. A restaurant can "summon" a new menu item. A beverage brand can make the can appear where an empty hand was. A beauty brand can use the same structure for a hero SKU, provided the hand-sign bit does not clash with the brand voice.
The weaker version is a product magically appearing with no joke, no context, and no reason to comment. The stronger version makes the summoned object a little too specific: the emergency iced matcha before a 9 a.m. meeting, the exact wing flavor the group chat keeps arguing about, the travel-size SPF that appears only after someone says "we forgot sunscreen."
"That's My Why" gives the opposite emotional shape. It is not a transition flex. New Engen describes it as a three-slide carousel: slide one introduces the subject, slide two names what makes that subject matter, and slide three lands on "that's my why" 1. For brands, this is a customer-proof format disguised as a soft post.
Use it for one of three jobs:
- A founder origin post: the first customer, first location, first repeat order.
- A partnership post: the creator, athlete, stylist, chef, or local business that explains the campaign.
- A retention post: the user story that shows why people come back.
Do not turn it into a tagline carousel. The format depends on specificity. "Our community is our why" is too broad. "The customer who drove 42 minutes for the sold-out peach pastry, that's my why" has a scene.
Audio read: the usable sound may not be the loudest one
The safest audio opportunity this week is not necessarily the one with the biggest pop-culture lift. Epidemic Sound's June tracker says Nyck Caution's "PRESSURE!" had reached roughly 120,000 TikTok videos and was already soundtracking World Cup footage across official and high-reach sports accounts; the same article says brands using the track saw roughly 20 times their regular performance numbers and that the track is available in TikTok's Commercial Music Library 4.
That matters because business-account audio restrictions keep turning good trend spotting into unusable campaign planning. Buffer's June sound guide gives the plain rule: for business use on TikTok, use songs from TikTok's Commercial Music Library or tracks you have a commercial license for 7.
Saxboy Billy's "Puerto Rico Song" is still a useful creator signal. The original @saxboybilly18 TikTok returned in this run has 5,737,282 plays, 358,562 likes, and 137,183 shares, with the caption naming San Juan and Caguas and crediting Suno for the music 8. That is a breakout creator and audio cue for travel, city walks, summer apparel, and destination content. It is not automatically a paid-media asset.
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Treat the audio slate this way:
| Audio or format | Use it if | Avoid it if |
|---|---|---|
| "PRESSURE!" | You need World Cup energy and business-account clearance 4. | Your brand has no sports, pressure, performance, competition, or fan-zone angle. |
| "Puerto Rico Song" | You can post organically through a creator account, or you can license/clear the sound separately 8. | The media plan assumes paid amplification from a business account without a rights check. |
| Original voiceover | You are adapting "Wow, OK," customer-service roleplay, or founder/team formats. Later's June update lists several June 12 trends that rely on original audio rather than licensed tracks, including "Describe your job but make it illegal" and "My camera roll is full" 9. | The execution has no performance element. Original audio only helps if the person on camera sells the bit. |
World Cup content has moved from buildup to receipts
Last week was about planning around kickoff. This week the better read is that match reaction has taken over the sports surface. Overtime's Cape Verde posts are a good example because they are not polished brand films. They are fast emotional clips with a clear story: a country's first World Cup goal, fans reacting, and a moment people can recognize without a long setup 5 6.
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The brand lesson is uncomfortable for teams that prefer pre-approved calendars. Tournament content is now two workflows:
- Planned scaffolding: watch-party offers, city guides, menu bundles, jersey styling, travel routes, match-day checklists.
- Reactive surface: the first goal, the upset, the fan camera angle, the meme sound, the "everyone in the bar did the same thing" clip.
Most brands only build the first workflow. The second one needs a pre-cleared publishing lane: who can post within one hour, what brand safety lines are non-negotiable, which rights-cleared audio can be used, and what product or location naturally belongs in the scene.
If that lane does not exist, stay out of the fastest memes. Use the next-day recap format instead: "what our store/bar/community looked like when X happened." It is slower, but it avoids the awkwardness of brands pretending to be live while waiting on approvals.
Platform behavior: TikTok is now a commerce and planning surface
TikTok GO is the platform signal to watch beyond this week's creative formats. TikTok's May 12 Newsroom post says the feature lets US users discover and book hotels, attractions, and tours directly in the app, and places those options across videos, search, and location pages 2. The same announcement says the app is used by more than 200 million Americans and names Booking.com, Expedia, Viator, GetYourGuide, Tiqets, and Trip.com as partners 2. GetYourGuide's quote in the announcement says it brings over 200,000 experiences across 12,000 destinations into that inspiration-to-booking moment 2.

For travel and local businesses, this changes the brief. A creator video is no longer only awareness. It can be the front door to a booking task, a local search result, and a location page. The creative should answer the question a viewer has before they tap: what is this place, why would I go now, and what would I book?
TikTok's broader 2026 report helps explain why that matters. The report's "Reali-Tea" section says audiences are moving toward honesty, routine, BTS moments, and shared accountability, and lists #lockedin at 648k posts, #hygiene at 692k posts, and #joblife at 235k posts 3. Its "Curiosity Detours" section lists #whattowear at 931.8k posts and #cookinghacks at 782.2k posts, both examples of people using the platform to ask, compare, and decide rather than passively watch 3. Its commerce section lists #cafeathome at 54.4k posts, a useful reminder that purchase intent is often framed as practical justification, not impulse 3.
That gives marketers a cleaner diagnostic for June content:
| Audience behavior | What to post | What to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| "Help me decide" | Comparison clips, fit checks, "what to book," "what to order," "what to wear" prompts tied to comments and search. | Aesthetic video with no answerable question. |
| "Show me the process" | BTS prep, staff picks, pack-with-me, make-it-with-me, location setup, match-day operations. | Overproduced reveal that hides the actual work. |
| "Prove the purchase" | Cost-per-use, before/after, customer receipts, practical demos, creator reviews that name tradeoffs. | "You need this" without a reason. |
| "Let me participate" | Comment prompts, rankings, duet/stitch-friendly roleplay, low-lift original-audio formats. | Brand monologue over a trending sound. |
Campaign moves to make this week
Food, beverage, and restaurants: Run one Food Jutsu reveal for a hero item, but pair it with a real ordering reason. If the joke is "summon lunch," the caption should still tell people which item, where, and why now 1.
Fashion and beauty: Use "That's My Why" for customer proof or creator partnership rationale, and use transition/dance formats only where the product actually changes the visual. Dash Social's June hashtag list has useful niche tags for this work, including #thickhair at 6.2K, #hairgrowth at 24.4K, #summeroutfit at 23.3K, and #tanktops at 14.7K posts 10.
Sports, bars, QSR, and local retail: Build a World Cup reactive lane before the next high-volatility match. Pre-approve three angles: fan reaction, product-in-the-moment, and next-day recap. Use business-cleared audio where the account or media plan requires it 4 7.
Travel and hospitality: Start treating TikTok GO content like a booking landing page with a human face. TikTok says discovery happens through videos, search, and location pages, so every creator brief should specify the location tag, the bookable product, the seasonal reason to go, and the first comment you want viewers to leave 2.
All brand accounts: Separate the creative trend from the audio asset. If the format works because of timing, acting, a transition, or a carousel structure, rebuild it with original audio or Commercial Music Library audio. If it only works because of the song, do the licensing check before anyone writes a shot list 7.
The working brief for this week: pick one fast reveal, one proof-led carousel, and one reactive World Cup or local-discovery post. If the team cannot publish fast, choose the proof-led carousel first. It will age better than a trend posted three days late.
참고 출처
- 1New Engen, June 2026 TikTok trends
- 2TikTok Newsroom, introducing TikTok GO
- 3TikTok Next 2026 trend report
- 4Epidemic Sound, June TikTok trends
- 5TikTok @overtime Cape Verde fan post
- 6TikTok @overtime Cape Verde first-goal post
- 7Buffer, trending TikTok songs in June 2026
- 8TikTok @saxboybilly18 Puerto Rico Song post
- 9Later, current TikTok trends
- 10Dash Social, June 2026 TikTok hashtags




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