There was one thing on Discuss Sectioneverybody's mind in 2021: Money.
On Wednesday, Google released 2021's top trending searches in the United States. Top trending searches are the most popular searches unique to the past year, not generally popular topics that show up in search charts year after year.
From the overall most popular searches of the year, to more specific queries like "how to pronounce" something, people had a lot of questions about topics related to money. That included searches about cryptocurrencies, meme stocks, stimulus checks, the lottery, and, of course, Squid Game — the blockbuster Netflix series about wealth inequality and debt.
NBA
DMX
Gabby Petito
Kyle Rittenhouse
Brian Laundrie
Mega Millions
AMC Stock
Stimulus Check
Georgia Senate Race
Squid Game
People turned to Google for information about stimulus checks, with that term appearing in the top ten lists for general searches, news searches, and updates. In the "How to be" category, "How to be eligible for stimulus checks" was the most popular query. "How to be happy with yourself" came in at number eight.
That there would be a high interest in free money makes a lot of sense. But less straightforward ways of getting paid also dominated our Google searches.
Multiple top searches in different categories had to do with viral cryptocurrencies and meme stocks. For example, "AMC Stock" came in as the sixth most popular search of 2021. It was also the number two most popular News search, coming in behind searches for Mega Millions. GME (the stock ticker for GameStop) got number four in that category.
Mega Millions
AMC Stock
Stimulus Check
Georgia Senate Race
GME
Dogecoin
Hurricane Ida
Kyle Rittenhouse verdict
Afghanistan
Ethereum price
Those stats mean people turned to Google to understand why seemingly random stocks were going through the roof. They may have discovered the stunning influence of the subreddit r/wallstreetbetson the global stock market. Remember back in January 2021 when Robinhood traders decided to take on hedge funds? Good times!
Cryptocurrency queries accounted for half of the top ten "Where to buy" searches.
Cryptocurrency queries accounted for half of the top ten "Where to buy" searches. "Dogecoin"was the most popular search in that category, as well as the "How to pronounce" category. You can probably thank Elon Muskfor the popularity of the cryptocurrency that started as a joke, since the billionaire boosted it on Twitter throughout the year. "Where to buy NFTs" placed high up there, too.
Dogecoin
*Shiba coin
*PS5
safemoon
*N95 mask
XRP
*NFT
Baby Doge
*Xbox Series X
Squishmallows
(*Indicates a cryptocurrency-related topic).
The prevalence of these digital-financial topics jumping from the headlines to the public's search bars did not surprise Nate Bengali, a financial adviser at the finance services company Personal Capital. Bengali said it mirrors the questions his clients asked throughout the year: Questions about whether people should be buying GameStop, or having cryptocurrency assets in their portfolios.
"There was a lot of confusion on why there were all these huge gains, with people just making so much money on it," Bengali said. "Fear of missing out kind of took over people's mindset."
The search data also represents a shift in the prevalence and accessibility of personal finance, and the stock market in particular. Thanks to services like Robinhood, so-called "retail investors" were more active and powerfulthan ever. Information resources like Google became go-tos for financial topics, when more traditional human advisers might have played that role before.
"It's just become more mainstream to talk about really anything in terms of investing," Bengali said.
In the background of these searches is the precarious and shifting state of American wealth. While the wealth of billionaires like dogecoin-loving Elon Musk blew up, so did headlines about DIY investors making millions overnight. While unemployment peaked in mid-2020, 2021 saw the Great Resignation, where many people decided that going back to unsatisfying, low-paying jobs just wasn't worth it.
How to be eligible for stimulus check
How to be more attractive
How to be happy alone
How to be a baddie
How to be a good boyfriend
How to be a good kisser
How to be a flight attendant
How to be happy with yourself
How to be mindful
How to be romantic
Trending financial searches may reflect curiosity about how people could get in on the latest boom when traditional work started to seem like more and more of a raw deal, especially compared to the ballooning wealth of billionaires.
Unfortunately, where there's a boom, there's usually also a bust. So maybe do more than a few Googles before betting it all on Dogecoin, people.
Topics Google Cryptocurrency
At least 1,000 more buses ask to park for Women's March than Trump's inaugurationCool kid pranks store by putting his face on every deviceAt least 1,000 more buses ask to park for Women's March than Trump's inaugurationNetflix's 'The Family' can't pin down its slippery subject: ReviewGoogle's efforts to fight scams may make phone repairs more expensive‘Games of Thrones’ and ‘Harlots’ actor Alfie Allen wants James Bond to kill him nextElizabeth Warren proposes 'public option for broadband''I'm the first space pirate!' How tardigrades were secretly smuggled to the moonDon's Johns: PortTurns out your office printer is a huge cybersecurity riskTeenager finds educational software exposed millions of student recordsTrump didn't drain the swamp, he created these swamp monstersHey, parents: You don't owe strangers candy for sitting next to your babiesGoing without headphones showed me you can't silence the world, or yourself, foreverThe Russian takeover has begun and it's starting with CApple might update iPad Pros with three rear camerasDarth Vader hot air balloon finally flies over its hometown in BristolSamsung reveals $999 Galaxy Book S laptop with 23Why Samsung's Galaxy Note 10 and 10+ don't have headphone jacksNewspaper's tweet about climate change and Bubba Gump is too relatable The Dress by Cynthia Zarin On Liberated Women Looking for Love by The Paris Review Ye’s Two Words by The Paris Review Redux: Be My Camera by The Paris Review Redux: Literary Gossip by The Paris Review Redux: You Don’t Know You’ve Remembered by The Paris Review Announcing Our Spring Issue by Emily Stokes Against Any Intrusion: Writing to Gwen John by Celia Paul Notes on Nevada: Trans Literature and the Early Internet by Imogen Binnie You Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory by The Paris Review Diary, 2008 by Annie Redux: Conceptual Baggage by The Paris Review Cooking with Dorothy Sayers by Valerie Stivers Redux: Another Drink by The Paris Review Redux: Of Continuous Change by The Paris Review David Wojnarowicz’s Home in the City by Hannah Gold Redux: Furry Faces by The Paris Review A Formal Feeling: A Conversation with Claudia Durastanti by Mia Colleran Parables and Diaries by The Paris Review Diary, 2010 by Adam Levin
1.9934s , 10132.453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Discuss Section】,Exquisite Information Network