Jenna Ortega’s Wednesday 2 Scene Revives BLACKPINK’s ‘Boombayah’, Breaks Record After Nine Years
Nine years after its debut, BLACKPINK’s first single “Boombayah” has smashed records and reclaimed the spotlight thanks to Netflix’s hit show Wednesday Season 2. The song surged in popularity following a scene featuring Jenna Ortega, whose portrayal of Wednesday Addams takes an unexpected turn in Episode Six. This resurgence is about nostalgia, clever writing, and a surprising display of character dynamism.

Wednesday 2’s Bold Moment: Color, Dance, and Shock Value
In Episode Six of Wednesday Season 2, a plot twist forces Wednesday Addams and Enid Sinclair (played by Emma Myers) to swap bodies. That twist alone promises drama, but what followed became memorable across the internet. In the swapped identity, Wednesday, known for her gothic style, stoic manner, and monochrome wardrobe, begins to act in brightly colored clothes—with heavy makeup—and bursts into dance to “Boombayah” as she moves from the dorm room across the lawn at Nevermore Academy.
That nearly two‑minute scene didn’t just provide comic relief. It visually declared transformation. The shift from dark to bright, from stillness to motion, felt revelatory—and Jenna Ortega sold every moment. The audience saw a side of Wednesday they had rarely witnessed: spontaneous, uninhibited, and joyful.
The Resurgence of “Boombayah”: Breaking Records
Following the airing of the episode, “Boombayah” rocketed up the charts. It claimed the No. 1 spot on Shazam’s Global Viral chart. The song also rose to No. 5 on Shazam’s Global Top 200, making it the highest‑ranked song ever by a K‑pop girl group in Shazam history—surpassing BLACKPINK’s previous high, “Jump”. On streaming platforms like Spotify, the track saw millions of new listens in the week after the episode dropped. On iTunes USA, “Boombayah” reentered the Top K‑Pop Songs chart, landing in the Top 15.
Music supervisors Jen Malone and Nicole Weisberg revealed that “Boombayah” was included in the script from the start. They praised the song’s significance, noting how it resonated with audiences and how strongly BLACKPINK’s legacy played a role in what that scene would feel like.
Jenna Ortega: More Than the Goth Girl
Since making her name as Wednesday Addams, Jenna Ortega has been known for her deadpan delivery, dark humor, and signature style: brooding clothes, sharp lines, and shadows. She embodied the character’s iconic stoicism. In Wednesday Season 2, especially in that body swap scene, she stretches that core persona outward.
When Wednesday Addams dances to “Boombayah”, it’s not just a music moment. It’s a character moment. Viewers see Wednesday experiencing lightness—a side rarely permitted by her own narrative or by the expectations of the show. Jenna Ortega balances the absurdity of the swap with sincerity. The happiness, the movement, the color—Ortega never breaks character, but she allows Wednesday a glimpse of vulnerability. That moment becomes meaningful.
Fans responded fast. Clips of the scene flooded social media. Memes, reactions, dance challenges inspired by that specific portion of Wednesday 2 spread quickly. For many, this feels like one of Jenna Ortega’s definitive scenes—not because she does something wildly different, but because she holds two extremes at once: dark and bright, rigid and free.

Why This Sync Placement Works So Well
Syncing a song like “Boombayah” with a television show isn’t new, but seldom has it been done with such thematic clarity. The contrast between Wednesday Addams’ typical aesthetic and the song’s neon energy makes the scene pop. The body swap device allows a clean narrative reason for the transformation. Writing the script to include “Boombayah” from the beginning shows intentional design, not a last‑minute add.
The sequence is visually striking: the makeup, costume, movement, and of course the music all align. It’s not just background music—it’s central to the emotional arc. The audience feels the clash and then begins to accept the change. That helps explain why the song’s revival isn’t just chart driven but story driven.
Blackpink, Jenna Ortega, and Cross‑Cultural Power
This moment is also evidence of how K‑Pop and Western streaming content continue to intertwine. BLACKPINK, originally formed under YG Entertainment, has long had global impact. Their fans are dedicated; their music is viral. For a track from their early days, “Boombayah”, to return in such force due to a Western show underscores how boundary‑crossing pop culture has become.
For Jenna Ortega, being part of that moment strengthens her status as a bridge between genre‑driven, niche audiences and mainstream pop culture moments. When viewers of Wednesday see a K‑Pop track not just as a backdrop, but as transformative in character and plot, it amplifies both the song’s and the show’s cultural reach.
What This Means for Jenna Ortega’s Trajectory
This “Boombayah”‑scene moment may mark a turning point in Jenna Ortega’s career. She’s proven able to stay in character while navigating tonal whiplash—from dark satire to gleeful abandon. Actors thrive when given range, and this episode grants her that in spades. This could open doors to more dynamic roles where she is not confined to a single style or archetype.
Critical praise and fan attention often follow moments like this. Beyond chart metrics, being part of scenes that become conversation points tends to boost recognition, future casting power, and awards conversation. For Ortega, this could become a signature moment in her resume.
The Legacy of “Boombayah” and What’s Ahead
For BLACKPINK, this resurgence shows that great music never really ages. The song’s energy, hook, and power remain intact. The fact that it became record‑setting again in Shazam, in streaming, and on international charts demonstrates enduring appeal.
Meanwhile, Wednesday 2 benefits too. The scene gives the show a moment people talk about: visually distinct, emotionally striking, meme‑able. It reminds viewers that even a supernatural comedy‑drama can harness pop power in surprising ways.
As streaming platforms continue to compete for jaw‑dropping moments, producers may think more carefully about music integration. Audiences now expect that when music shows up, it matters—not just in note‑for‑note enjoyment, but in character and story shaping.

Final Thoughts
Jenna Ortega took a character defined by darkness and quiet control and turned one specific moment into a burst of color, joy, and narrative transformation. “Boombayah” doesn’t just play—it lands. It propels the scene and sends BLACKPINK’s legacy spiraling back into global charts.
This isn’t nostalgia alone; it’s proof that pop culture can reawaken with the right alignment. For fans of the show, rewatching that Episode Six moment becomes essential. For BLACKPINK fans, the chart success proves their influence remains strong. For Jenna Ortega, the dance and the music give her a moment of unexpected freedom—a signature character beat that may define how audiences remember Wednesday 2.
Pop culture moments like this don’t come often. But when they do, they echo. “Boombayah”, BLACKPINK, Jenna Ortega, Wednesday Season 2—they’re all part of one right now.


