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A prima ballerina vs. some very angry birds: this year’s Halloween search trends
October 28, 2011
The pumpkins are carved, the spiderwebs are hanging,
Kids and their pets are door-to-door banging,
Witches on their brooms and owls on their perches,
Let’s take a look at some Halloween searches.
Halloween searches are some of our favorite trends to look at all year. Using
Insights for Search
and some internal data, we took a peek at which costumes and candies are on top in the United States.
This year seems to be about the battle of the birds. Searches for [angry birds costume], based on the game phenomenon that has so many of us addicted, have been steadily rising in 2011, and we’re seeing
10 times more search volume
this year than last. But as of mid-October, the Angry Birds were overtaken in search by [black swan costume]. The Darren Aronofsky ballet drama seems poised to be the most popular costume idea by All Hallows Eve, with related searches for everything from [black tutu] to [black corset]. Some are even looking to be the alter ego [white swan].
Meanwhile, search data doesn’t seem to show that anyone is too anxious to be the object of the Angry Birds’ rage—at least not independently from their sworn enemies. Although [angry birds costume] is one of the top 10 fastest-rising searches related to [pig costume] over the last 90 days, another three are focused on a much sweeter piglet, the
cartoon favorite Olivia
.
Birds aside, this year’s fastest rising costumes in the U.S. overall are inspired by a variety of sources from pop culture over the past year, including TV shows—[pan am], [wilfred]—movies—[smurfette], [tron], [captain america]—pop music—[nicki minaj]—and more [monster high].
In fact, we may have a battle of the pop goddesses on our hands as well as a battle of the birds. During
2009
and
2010
, homegrown Lady Gagas were trick-or-treating throughout the country, but while Lady Gaga still rules the music charts, she’s a far
less popular costume choice
this year than in 2010:
And although overall in 2011 [lady gaga costume] leads [nicki minaj costume] in search volume, right now they’re
neck and neck
:
We’d be lying if we weren’t hoping that at least a few Minaj fans out there choose to pay tribute to her by dressing up as uberfans eight-year-old Sophia Grace and her cousin, the two little girls who blew away YouTube viewers with their
performance
of “Super Bass.”
Speaking of YouTube, Halloween doesn’t fall on a
Friday
this year, but that’s not stopping people from dressing up as
Rebecca Black
:
Even if you don’t want dress up as a YouTube star, YouTube can still help you create your Halloween costume. Head on over to the
YouTube Blog
for video tutorials and other inspiration.
Lest you think Halloween is just for humans, take a look at the huge amount of searches for [
dog costume
]. In terms of get-ups actually intended for canines,
ewoks
and dinosaurs are the fastest-rising related searches. But two of the top five rising searches in 2011 related to [dog costume] are a little quirkier: at least a few people out there may dress up as the eponymous character from FX’s “Wilfred” show, about a dog, and a man who sees the dog as a man dressed in a dog suit. Kinda meta.
Turning from costumes to the other traditions of this holiday, searches for
[haunted house] and [pumpkin patch]
are both spiking right now, but there seems to be greater interest in spooky thrills than in finding that perfect pumpkin to carve. Maybe spiderwebs and
peeled-grape eyeballs
are a less scary proposition than running into the [
great pumpkin
] (from the
classic movie
which, incidentally, celebrates its 45th birthday this Halloween).
Everyone has a sweet tooth this time of year, but [candy corn] is remains the undisputed king of people’s cravings. In the last 30 days, search volume is nearly twice as high for [candy corn] than for other
candy choices
:
Per capita, Alabama is searching the most for [candy corn] this year. Here are the states that searched the most for a few other Halloween sugar staples (and some newcomer treats):
Candy apples - Rhode Island
Gummy worms - Wisconsin
Kosher candy - New York
Sugar free candy - Kentucky
Gluten free candy - Oregon
Candy bars - Utah
Organic candy - Colorado
When trick or treating, there’s always that one house that insists on making Halloween healthy—but luckily for us, those are few and far between. Over the last 30 days, there is almost
two and a half times
more search volume for [candy] than for [apples]. The classic game of bobbing for apples, however, it still going strong,
spiking dependably
every October.
Whether you’re dressing up as an elegant avian ballerina or a brightly-colored roly-poly bird in a slingshot, we hope you have a spootakular Halloween!
Posted by Rachel Durfee, Google Blog Team
(Cross-posted on the
Inside Search Blog
)
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