The serious insane cycles of 2020

If you feel extra tired this season, blame the relentless news cycle of 2020, as suggested in Axios’ fourth annual Google Trends chart.

Why it matters: From a pandemic to protests in multiple cities to disputed elections, 2020 was one unprecedented crisis after another. “We’ve never seen such a year in Google Trends history,” Simon Rogers, a data editor at Google, told Axios. “It was big stories that changed the way we look.”

  • Due to the overwhelming amount of interest in the search for the broad topics of ‘coronavirus’ and ‘elections’, Axios left these terms off our list.
  • We chose to include more specific, related topics like ‘masks’, ‘Anthony Fauci’, ‘absentee moods’ and ‘Joe Biden’.

Between the lines: The graph again shows how short the attention of Americans can be, with increases in Google searches often lasting just a week for a given topic.

By the numbers: With the exception of ‘coronavirus’ and ” elections, Kobe Bryant’s death has yielded the largest increase in searches for any other single event.

  • But Google’s general interest in ‘coronavirus’ has overshadowed Kobe Bryant more than ten times over the year, according to Google Trends data.
  • You can see the impact of COVID-19 on the lives of Americans in a wide variety of Google search trends. Investigations into unemployment, hunger and food banks were higher than ever before, Rogers said.
  • Nevertheless, the increase in the search for ‘elections’ around 3 November was even higher than any single interest in the coronavirus, although interest in the virus remained longer.

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