*By Carlo Versano* What do Stan Lee, Logan Paul, and the royal wedding have in common? They were among the most Googled terms of 2018. Justin Burr, the search trends expert at Google, gave Cheddar some insight into the top Google trends of the year. Google searches can provide one of the more unvarnished looks into our own psyches ーand the annual compendium of what we searched for often does a better job of capturing a moment in time, or particular mood, than any poll or survey. As is often the case, celebrity deaths made up the bulk of the top Google searches of 2018, Burr said. Of the top 10 searches this year, seven were for celebrities who had died: Avicii, Mac Miller, Stan Lee, Anthony Bourdain, XXXTentacion, Kate Spade, and Stephen Hawking. The other three: "Black Panther," Meghan Markle, and the World Cup. (The World Cup won the distinction of being the top search in both the U.S. and around the world.) "People always go to Google when there are deaths," Burr said, "to understand who they were and what they did." In news searches, the Cup once again reigned supreme, followed by Hurricane Florence, the Mega Millions jackpot, the royal wedding, and election results. Burr said Google saw a huge spike in queries for "how to vote" leading up to the midterm election, which would jibe with the results ー which showed turnout was at a 50-year high. In terms of individuals, the most-searched names: Meghan Markle (again), Demi Lovato, Sylvester Stallone, Logan Paul, and Khloé Kardashian. Tristan Thompson was the most-searched athlete, and the Cleveland Cavaliers was the most-searched sports team. "There's always tangential relations between the different search results," Burr noted. See more of the top trends of the year at [google.com/2018](google.com/2018).

Share:
More In Business
Peloton Recalling 2.2 Million Exercise Bikes
Peloton is recalling more than 2 million exercise bikes over a safety concern with its bike seat post, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission said it's received some injury reports.
Why Some Mothers Are Becoming Full-Time Content Creators
Cheddar News reporter Ashley Mastronardi tracks the rise of the "mom-fluencer" or working mothers who have left their jobs to become full-time content creators. While not a new phenomenon, experts say the trend has gained momentum since the start of the pandemic.
Topless Protester Briefly Disrupts VW Annual Meeting
Volkswagen's annual shareholder meeting was briefly disrupted Wednesday by protests over the company's factory in China's Xinjiang province, with a shouting, topless activist interrupting the speech by CEO Oliver Blume before she was hustled away by security personnel.
Load More