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Wikipedia:Top 25 Report/January 24 to 30, 2021

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Igordebraga (talk | contribs) at 20:17, 31 January 2021 (→‎Most Popular Wikipedia Articles of the Week (January 24 to 30, 2021)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Most Popular Wikipedia Articles of the Week (January 24 to 30, 2021)

Prepared with commentary by Benmite and Igordebraga

⭠ Last week's report

[summary]

Rank Article Class Views Image Notes/about
1 Cicely Tyson 2,180,339 A groundbreaking African-American actress with an acclaimed seven decade career, receiving many awards along the way, Tyson passed away at the age of 96.
2 Tom Brady 1,246,728 The revered quarterback who definitely does kiss his mother son with that mouth and might have burst a few bubbles footballs throughout his career brought his team to victory at the 2020–21 NFL playoffs, earning them a spot at Super Bowl LV. This time, though, it wasn't for the team that he helped make into football royalty, but for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. This also marks his 10th time on the field at the Super Bowl, and even as someone who couldn't give a rat's ass about football, I can see how that might be impressive.
3 Larry King 1,183,173 An iconic talk show host whose career spanned over six decades, King passed away on Saturday last week, earning him a higher spot this week.
4 Richard Ramirez 1,145,769 Subject of the Netflix docuseries Night Stalker: The Hunt For a Serial Killer, which proves that if you want a Netflix special, get into the murder business.
5 Cloris Leachman 1,105,590 Another veteran actress who died in her 90s and had no dearth of memorable moments in her career, including an Academy Award winning performance in The Last Picture Show and Frau Blucher (*whinny*).
6 WandaVision 1,021,030 After inserting the Scarlet Witch and Vision into pastiches of I Love Lucy, Bewitched and The Brady Bunch, Disney+ finally decided to offer some explanations as for what was happening, while giving a proper introduction to Monica Rambeau and the organization SWORD, and bringing back actors Kat Dennings and Randall Park from the movies.
7 Joe Biden 959,163 Is the President of the United States now.
8 Deaths in 2021 948,126 When I die and they lay me to rest
Gonna go to the place that's the best
When I lay me down to die
Goin' up to the Spirit in the Sky
9 Conor McGregor 905,925 The cocky Fighting Irish-man took a beating to Poirier (#7) at UFC 257 (#9).
10 Bridgerton 879,506 Enter the magical world of Shondaland, where doctors are always either involved in some serious drama or dead, hackers hack faster than their hands can type, and England can be as whimsical and historically inaccurate as you'd like it to be.
11 Fate: The Winx Saga 875,467 Netflix took a page from the Riverdale book this week by adapting a beloved cartoon -- in this case, the Italian Nickelodeon series Winx Club -- into a gritty live-action teen drama. Unfortunately, it didn't pan out very well according to critics or audiences, but then again, neither did Riverdale.
12 Godzilla vs. Kong 839,177 A trailer for the upcoming umpteenth kaiju film/sequel/spin-off/adaptation/whatever featuring the giant monster most commonly associated with Japan and the giant monster most commonly associated with America (sorry, wrong one) came out this week, except this time, it's got both of 'em and they're fighting each other because why wouldn't they be, because Hollywood can't stop making movies where that happens. Specially if it already happened once! Capitalism breeds innovation, though, right?
13 Patrick Mahomes 812,108 He'll be making his second Super Bowl appearance ever next month playing as the quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs.
14 SOPHIE 800,308 SOPHIE, the reclusive electronic producer, passed away on Saturday morning. According to a statement from Transgressive Records, SOPHIE wanted to climb up on the roof to see the moon, but slipped. SOPHIE was influential - not only for shaping the state of pop music, but also as a transgender icon.
15 Donald Trump 799,485 He's gone! And so is his lawyer team! And Melania's been advised to scram too.
16 Dustin Poirier 787,831 After losing to McGregor back in 2014 at UFC 178, the Louisianian lightweight pounded him so hard (not like that) that he fell to the ground at UFC 257, making Poirier the first person to win against The Notorious by knockout.
17 Elon Musk 785,192 Melvin Capital has been short selling GameStop - essentially, betting that the stock price will go down. This would usually be a safe bet, but a Redditor-led short squeeze boosted by Musk spiked the price this week. There were reports that Melvin was teetering on collapse, but it seems to have survived.
18 Melvin Capital 778,197
19 UFC 257 773,084 Took place on January 24 and was headlined by the fight between McGregor (#3) and Poirier (#16).
20 G-Eazy 726,768 Apparently, the reason for this rapper's emergence in views was the fact that his ex, Halsey (who had recorded with him and about him), announced her pregnancy.
21 Marjorie Taylor Greene 713,677 Representative Greene's (R-GA) support for conspiracy theories isn't really news (see a WaPo article from last June) but it's gotten some more attention this week. Some Congress Democrats are calling for her expulsion, but it's unlikely they'd get the required support from the Republicans.
22 Thomas Tuchel 692,108 Became the head coach of the world-renowned Chelsea F.C. this week.
23 Kamala Harris 656,071 #7's Vice-President.
24 Republic Day (India) 613,193 This holiday, celebrating the Constitution of India -- the longest written constitution of any country -- going into effect was celebrated on January 26 this year, as it is every year.
25 QAnon 603,225 Hopefully this stupid conspiracy theory can die off now (not that idiots haven't stopped believing in even dumber things). Even the "QAnon Shaman" is ready to depose against Trump (#15)!

Exclusions

  • This list excludes the Wikipedia main page, non-article pages (such as redlinks), and anomalous entries (such as DDoS attacks or likely automated views). Since mobile view data became available to the Report in October 2014, we exclude articles that have almost no mobile views (5–6% or less) or almost all mobile views (94–95% or more) because they are very likely to be automated views based on our experience and research of the issue. Please feel free to discuss any removal on the talk page if you wish.