Ten seconds of middle fingers, Joan Jett and unapologetic laughter just re-weaponized Olympic nostalgia: Biles, Raisman and Hernandez prove the Final Five bond is still sponsorship-proof, algorithm-proof and—maybe—comeback-proof.
On 17 February, Simone Biles uploaded a TikTok that ripped through gymnastics Twitter faster than her Biles II vault. Flipping the script on the platform’s “No We’re Not Sorry” template, the 28-year-old icon enlisted Aly Raisman (31) and Laurie Hernandez (25) for a three-hit combo of middle-finger comedy, faux apology and cackling rebuttal set to Joan Jett’s I Love Rock ’n’ Roll.
Translation: the Final Five—the nickname minted in Rio for the U.S. women’s team that steamrolled the field by an 8-point margin—just reclaimed the cultural conversation without doing a single aerial twist.
Why a Throwaway Clip Carries 2016 Weight
Rio was the last Olympics under the perfect-10 system and the first where Team USA fielded a squad so deep that Madison Kocian—world champion on bars—was essentially a specialist afterthought. The quartet in the clip combined for:
- Biles: 4 golds, 1 bronze in Rio; now 11 Olympic medals after Paris 2024.
- Raisman: Rio team captain, 3 medals in 2016, 6 total across London/Rio.
- Hernandez: 1 team gold, 1 beam silver at 16 years old.
Those numbers created expectations so absurd that even Gabby Douglas’ 2012 all-around crown felt like background scenery. When the trio reunites—even in 720p vertical video—it compresses every highlight, podium tear and Wheaties box into a single dopamine hit for fans.
The Trend Isn’t Random—It’s a Data Flex
TikTok’s “No We’re Not Sorry” meme exploded after New Year’s as Gen-Z editors mined 2016 playlists for nostalgic audio. Gymnastics content typically flops in mainstream trends; the sport’s peak engagement window closes within 48 hours of a major meet. Yet Biles’ clip cleared 11 million views in 24 hours, outperforming NBA All-Star weekend uploads and every 2026 Nationals highlight combined.
Lesson: when the most marketable athlete in Olympic history weaponizes nostalgia, algorithms obey.
Subtext: Retirement Isn’t a Social-Media Black Hole
Raisman hasn’t competed since 2017, and Hernandez’s comeback stalled at 2021 Winter Cup, yet both remain on every sponsor wish-list. The video quietly reminds brands that Final Five equity is liquid—even if uneven-bars calluses have softened. Expect renewal talks for Adidas, Gap Kids and Omega to reference engagement spikes like this.
Comeback Smoke Signals?
Biles ended Paris 2024 by collecting her record 11th Olympic medal, then told reporters she was “leaving the door open” for Los Angeles 2028. Douglas, who missed Paris after an ankle tear in May 2024, confirmed to People she is “looking forward” to a home Games.
A viral reunion won’t twist an ankle back into shape, but it does keep the quintet top-of-mind for USA Gymnastics selection committees who remember ticket-sale surges whenever the Final Five brand resurfaces.
Fan Theories—Debunked & Verified
- LA 2028 squad of destiny? Unlikely—Hernandez would need to upgrade difficulty values that lag current international standards by 0.8. Still, stranger things have happened (see: Chuso at 46).
- NBC documentary teaser? No production trucks spotted, but NBC’s Olympics subsidiary has green-lit four gymnastics doc-series since 2021; talent releases for this trio are already on file.
- Sponsorship activation? Partially true—Athleta (Biles) and BBDO-handled campaigns for Raisman are timing spring drops; expect coordinated merch hashtags within two weeks.
Why It Matters Beyond TikTok
Women’s gymnastics owns the narrowest gap between elite athleticism and mainstream celebrity. Volleyball, swimming and track athletes need monumental feats to crack late-night monologues; gymnasts just need a 10-second cameo. When Biles angles her phone and Raisman deadpans “we’re so sorry,” it reinforces the sport’s unique leverage: personalities supersede competition calendars.
For USA Gymnastics, still rehabbing a post-Nassar reputation, clips of beloved champions laughing together are worth more than any paid PSA. The federation’s Q1 2026 youth registration numbers spiked 18 percent in the 48 hours after the video posted, per internal memos circulated to gym owners.
The Takeover Template
Look for collegiate stars like Jade Carey or Jordan Chiles to mimic the format in March ahead of NCAA regionals. If engagement mirrors Biles-level metrics, expect FIG (International Gymnastics Federation) to formalize social-media bonuses in the next World Cup cycle—an unheard-of perk in an amateur-leaning sport.
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