Tris McCall of
The Star-Ledger describes "The Fox" as "a parody of the excesses and absurdities of contemporary club music": the brothers "take turns singing preposterous lyrics about animal noises" over "typically vainglorious
synthpop", with the proposed fox sounds "mimic[king] the car-alarm synthesizers of contemporary
dubstep". He compares it to Ylvis' "Someone Like Me", which mocked the insertion of dubstep breaks into pop songs. Danielle Seamon of
The Lantern acknowledges that while some may be "extremely perplexed by the attention stupidity and bizarreness collects in 2013" displayed by the song, it is in fact "meant to be a funny and almost satirical to pop music", and Ylvis has "pushed everybody's buttons by breaking and manipulating every rule of a Top 40 pop song". Evan Sawdey of
PopMatters, who names "The Fox" one of the best songs of the year, calls it "a concept that's so stupid it's smart" by bending "the very fabric of pop culture in such a memorable, ridiculous way" with simple lines of "utter comic brilliance". Caitlin Carter of online music site
Music Times echoes the comments above, adding that "The Fox" becoming the first song to get serious recognition "makes [the staff at Music Times] wonder", as the duo's other songs and videos prior to the release of "The Fox" "are just about as random and melodramatic", such as "from contemplating the meaning of
Stonehenge" ('Stonehenge'), to scientifically examining the inner-workings of the female reproductive organ ('Work It'), to honoring a
United Nations Human Rights hero ('
Jan Egeland')." Jonathan Ore of
CBC News, although calling "The Fox" a "catchy tune [...] paired with the most absurd lyrics this side of the theme song to
DuckTales", also gives the comedy duo credit for "the arguably better" "Stonehenge". Both brothers have commented on the "absurdity" of "The Fox". Bård called the song "a stupid thing" and that "even though people find it interesting, it's still a stupid fox song, and when people start to get over this, it gets even worse, because it is so stupid".
Popular culture Like many viral music videos, "The Fox" has become an
Internet meme and has been extensively covered and adapted by others, with some of the most prominent being a cover by
The Ohio University Marching 110 who had previously covered "
Gangnam Style" and LMFAO's "
Party Rock Anthem"; a cover by
Tay Zonday of "
Chocolate Rain" fame; an acoustic guitar cover of the first verse by
Tyler Ward; an adaptation based on the popular video game
League of Legends entitled "What Does Teemo Say?"; and an adaptation by
Annoying Orange entitled "The Sock". The video was also featured twice by the
Fine Brothers on their popular series
Elders React and
Teens React, which show reactions of elderly people and teens to YouTube videos, respectively. A video showing actor
Morgan Freeman reading the lyrics of "The Fox" aloud when being interviewed by online TV/movies review site
Screen Junkies has also garnered media attention and millions of YouTube views. During an interview with
4Music, in response to the many parodies inspired by their song, the Ylvisåker brothers themselves have reviewed some of the more popular ones. The song has also been featured substantially in "YouTube Rewind: What Does 2013 Say?", a homage paid by YouTube to the year's top videos. The song has been featured multiple times on television. It was used in an advertisement for the
Fox Network featuring clips of FOX programs and actors singing the song. On 28 October, four contestants on the
seventeenth season of
Dancing with the Stars performed the song for the "Team Dance" week under the team name "Foxing Awesome", scoring a perfect 30.
NBC's
Saturday Night Live cast member
Jay Pharoah and host
Kerry Washington appeared in a parody video of the song titled "My Girl" on 2 November 2013, featuring a boyfriend who got caught by his girlfriend for
sexting with other girls. The song has also been performed by the
Glee cast in the episode "
Puppet Master", aired on
Thanksgiving Day (28 November 2013). Due to the popularity of the song,
TMZ reported on 18 October 2013 that two weeks before
Halloween, the sales of fox costumes had already risen by almost 40% at one costume outlet from 2012, according to the data from
Spirit Halloween,
BuyCostumes and Amazon. The song has also been synchronized with a "singing Halloween house" by the neighborhood in Edwards Landing,
Leesburg, Virginia, who every Halloween creates an
LED light show with a hit song. The song appears in
Just Dance 2015. The song appears in Disney's 2025 animated film
Zootopia 2. The song was also parodied by
442oons to celebrate
Leicester City's title win in a song "What do the Foxes Say?" on
YouTube, as well as parodied by Bob Rivers with Twisted Tunes, with lyrics for the
Seattle Seahawks. The song was covered by comedian
Brian Posehn with
Corey Taylor from
Slipknot and
Stone Sour, and
Michael Starr from
Steel Panther on his 2020 album
Grandpa Metal. The song is currently used as a between-innings dance for the
Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters Japanese baseball team, which, according to
The Japan Times, "has the internet asking again, 'What does the fox say? One video on their official YouTube channel featuring mascot and Fighters infielder
Kenshi Sugiya is currently their third-most-viewed video, with over 3.1 million views. It became so popular that it inspired a
TikTok trend, and also made NPB streaming service
Pacific League TV upload videos of opposing team's players, mascots, and managers dancing along to the song.
Hinatazaka46 and the Fighters cheerleaders performed the song for the
Kohaku Uta Gassen New Year's Eve concert on 31 December 2022. == Track listing ==