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Search trends: a clue to 2011 Oscar winners?
February 15, 2011
Each year, as the Academy Awards bubble to the top of our collective consciousness, we see a major spike in search traffic related to the event. This year, on the day the nominees were announced, four of the top 10 trending search terms in the U.S. were Oscar-related.
After last year’s awards ceremony, we provided an
in-depth summary
of search trends that played out during the broadcast. But could search trends have
predicted
the winners? To make it easy to explore how the actors, directors and cinematographers are trending in search—and maybe see if that data correlates with the eventual winners—you can explore search data across all award categories on our new
Oscar Search Trends
website.
John Batelle
once described search trends as “a massive database of desires, needs, wants and likes.” Looking at
Insights for Search
data, we were intrigued to find that this “database of intentions” shows consistent search patterns among Best Picture winners for the last three years. Each year, the winning film has shown an upward trend in search volume for at least four weeks, as well as highest regional interest from New York (
The Hurt Locker
,
Slumdog Millionaire
and
No Country for Old Men
).
Will that pattern repeat this year? If you apply the same test, this year’s most likely candidates for best picture—by search pattern—are
The Social Network
(trending upward for five weeks) followed by
Black Swan
and
The King’s Speech
(each trending upward for four weeks).
The Fighter
, another 2011 Best Picture nominee, saw an upward trend in search volume for five weeks after its release, but highest regional interest was from Massachusetts instead of New York; no film with highest regional interest in Massachusetts has won best picture since
The Departed
in 2007. Perhaps Boston will take it back in 2011?
We can’t say for sure what will happen this year, since searches can only reflect what people are interested in, but it’s fun to look for patterns that persist year after year. So before you make any Academy Awards-related bets with your friends this year, be sure to explore the
Oscar Search Trends
. Choose any award category to see how the nominees were searched over time.
Posted by Niv Efron, Insights for Search team, Google Israel R&D Center
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