- Twitter released its annual review report where it recapped the trends, moments, and memes that dominated Twitter through the year.
- This year,
Donald Trump , Joe Biden andGeorge Floyd were the most tweeted about people in the year.Narendra Modi occupied the 7th spot in the list. - This year also brought on a renewed sense of gratitude and support for our communities. Tweets expressing being grateful or thankful increased by 20% globally.
The findings were a part of Twitter's annual review report, recapping the trends, moments, and memes that dominated Twitter through the year.
While every year Twitter recaps some of the highlights from the year, this year, it did things slightly differently. Considering how unprecedented the year was and how much loss it brought upon the world, Twitter turned its attention to how the world got through it together: the ways we kept ourselves entertained, the changes we made, and the messages of support that we shared with each other.
The most Retweeted and top Liked Tweets of the year encapsulate the full spectrum of life in 2020: loss, contemplation, distraction, entertainment, and a dash of humor. The world mourned the death of actor
Unsurprisingly, the
Globally, there were the equivalent of more than 7,000 Tweets per minute about TV and movies this year. Tweets about cooking nearly tripled this year.
Even though many sports went on pause and looked a bit different when they returned, there were still two billion Tweets about sports.
Following #COVID19, the second most-Tweeted hashtag of the year was #BlackLivesMatter. The world mobilized and amplified the need for equality and social justice following the death of George Floyd, who was the third most-Tweeted-about person globally.
This year also brought on a renewed sense of gratitude and support for our communities. Tweets expressing being grateful or thankful increased by 20% globally, with a particular recognition of doctors (+135%), teachers (+30%), and essential/frontline workers (that phrase was Tweeted more than 17 million times this year).