YouTube's Lofi Girl Graduates After Studying for 7 Years

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YouTube's Lofi Girl Graduates After Studying for 7 Years

YouTube's Lofi Girl Graduates After Studying for 7 Years
YouTuber Ms. Rachel Reveals Reason for Her Months-Long Absence

This calls for music to celebrate/chill to.

Lofi Girl—the animated star of the popular YouTube channel of the same name, which provides users with a 24/7 livestream of lo-fi hip-hop music—has graduated from her seemingly infinite loop of studying after seven years.

In a video posted to TikTok July 29, the cute character traded in her iconic headphones for a graduation cap while holding up a laptop reading, "THE END."

"Finally, finished with all my homework," an audio track, taken from the Disney Channel show A.N.T. Farm, played in the background. "I don't know what I learned, but I'm done learning."

Needless to say, longtime listeners were thrilled with her big milestone, with YouTube's verified TikTok account writing in the comments section, "girl congratulations and we MEAN THAT."

Meanwhile, a message from Duolingo Brazil—whose owl mascot "died" earlier this year before being resurrected from the dead—read, "End of an era."

Indeed, Lofi Girl has been doing her schoolwork for quite some time. The Studio Ghibli–inspired animation of her perpetually studying popped up on YouTube in March 2018, accompanying a livestream of what's described in the video title as "Lofi hip hop mix - Beats to Relax/Study to."

The stream was briefly halted 2020 and 2022 due to copyright complaints. YouTube later confirmed that the takedown requests were bogus and reinstated the long-running video, with Lofi Girl continuing to study at her desk as her cat stared out the window.

To date, Lofi Girl's YouTube channel (formerly known as ChilledCow) has garnered 15.1 million subscribers, with thousands of users simultaneously listening in the lo-fi hip-hop radio stream.

Her popularity has also sparked the creation of other characters on the channel, including a male counterpart for the "synthwave radio - beats to chill/game to" livestream.

For more revelations about pop culture's most beloved animated characters, keep reading...

WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Many fans were left purrrrrfectly confused after this revelation.

“Hello Kitty is not a cat,” Jill Cook—an executive at Sanrio, the company behind the character—explained to Today in July 2024. “She’s actually a little girl born and raised in the suburbs of London. She has a mom and dad and a twin sister Mimmy who’s also her best friend. She enjoys baking cookies and making new friends.”

While the news may have surprised some, Cook wasn’t the first to share this insight. As a matter of fact, Christine R. Yano—a professor of anthropology who penned the book Pink Globalization: Hello Kitty's Trek Across the Pacific—had also previously confirmed that Hello Kitty isn’t a feline.

“Hello Kitty is not a cat,” she told the Los Angeles Times in 2014. “She’s a cartoon character. She is a little girl. She is a friend. But she is not a cat. She’s never depicted on all fours. She walks and sits like a two-legged creature. She does have a pet cat of her own, however, and it’s called Charmmy Kitty.”

Other fun facts about Hello Kitty? According to Sanrio, she is five apples tall, weighs three apples, was born on November 1 (making her a Scorpio) and dreams of being a pianist or poet.

Gawrsh! Did you know this fact?

Bill Farmer, who's provided the voice of Goofy for decades, explained why the Disney character can talk while Mickey Mouse's pet Pluto can't.

Goofy is "not a dog, but he's a canine," the voice actor said on an August 2024 episode of Popcorn Podcast with Leigh Livingstone and Tim Iffland. "So it's kind of like a wolf is not a dog but it's a canine—same thing. Goofus canis, that's what he is. Or, he's a MOG—he's a man-dog."

However, Pluto, he added, is a "regular dog"—a blood hound as it turns out.

Paramount Animation ©2021 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved

You'll want to get to the (bikini) bottom of this discovery.

SpongeBob SquarePants' creator Stephen Hillenburg once revealed that Squidward Tentacles is actually an octopus—not a squid.

"This is Squidward the Octopus, SpongeBob's grumpy next-door neighboor," he shared in the 2005 Case Of The Sponge 'Bob' video resurfaced by BuzzFeed. "I like the octopus for this character because they have such a large, bulbous head, and Squidward thinks he's an intellectual so, of course, he's going to have a large, bulbous head."

But if you're wondering how Squidward can be an octopus when he has only six legs instead of eight, Hillenburg had an answer for that, too—noting "it was really just easier for animation to draw him" with fewer tentacles.

Break out your handy dandy notebook and jot this one down.

"One of the things that nobody knows is that Blue was originally a cat," the show's co-creator Angela Santomero said in the 2006 special Behind the Clues: 10 Years With Blue resurfaced by Mental Floss. "First his name was Mr. Orange and then we're like, 'Uh, maybe Mr. Blue.'"

But according to the special, Nickelodeon was already working on a series about a cat—leading animators to toss out the original idea and redesign Blue as a dog.

Now this really isn’t funnie, er, funny.

But as it turns out, Doug Funnie from the cartoon series Doug was almost named Brian. As for what led to the change?

"I just thought Brian was too fancy of a name," Doug creator Jim Jinkins told HuffPost TV in 2014, "So, I geared it down, and started calling him Doug. If you think about what that sounds like, it sounds incredibly average, and that’s what I was trying to do: express from that point of view.”

© Walt Disney Pictures/Entertainment Pictures/ZUMAPRESS.com

This fact is so good it’s scary.

In Monsters, Inc.: An Augmented Reality Book, the name of Boo—the little girl who accidentally ends up in Monstropolis and befriends monsters Mike and Sulley—is revealed to be Mary Gibbs, according to BuzzFeed. And if the name sounds familiar, it’s because it’s the real-life moniker of the actress who provided the voice of Boo.

Need more proof? In the movie, there’s actually a scene where Boo is sorting through some of her drawings and fans can spot the name “Mary” scribbled at the top of one of the pieces of paper.

Joseph Prezioso/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Speaking of names, while Mickey Mouse’s girlfriend is often called Minnie Mouse, according to the BBC, it was revealed in 1942 that her full name is actually Minerva.

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