ENTERTAIN THIS

Let Seth Meyers school you on 'Teen Slang' inspired by Easter and the Trumps

Erin Jensen
USA TODAY

Get ready to feel hip again. What's that? No one says hip? Well, hopefully, the Late Night segment "Seth Explains Teen Slang" will make everyone grool cool again.

(Warning: This clip is NSFW due to Seth Meyers' explanation of " Dadbury Creme Egg," which has to  do with a very unfortunate wardrobe malfunction.)

Write down that "Whodini" means "to escape a conversation before the person you're talking to realizes you don't know their name." You might've been a masterful magician this whole time without even knowing it.

Also, note that there's a term for "the creepy guy who lurks under the bleachers during sporting events." It's "Fan-tom of the Opera."

While Meyers explained a couple of Easter-related terms — like "Jesus Dad," a father "who leaves on a Friday and doesn't come back until Sunday" — a yuge portion of the teen jargon had to do with the first family.

"Melania" is a word to describe "a girlfriend who lives in another city," and to "Trump Tower" means to proclaim "you tapped that but really didn't."

A photo of Donald Trump Jr. perched on the remnants of a tree featured in a profile by The New York Times inspired the last Trump term, "Forrest Stump," which is used to describe "the weird kid who opts to take his senior pictures on a stump in the middle of the woods."