Trending & Top Moments of 2022
TV & Film
On TV, the long-awaited premiere of HBO's "Euphoria" Season 2 had fans visiting its stars' music videos. Lead actress Zendaya saw almost 5x the average views for her 2013 track replay. New cast member Dominic Fike saw a 247% lift in views of his catalog. Lead composer Labrinth saw a 241% lift for "All For Us" and almost triple the views for "Still Don't Know My Name."
Looking at film premieres this year, the debut of “Top Gun” Maverick” drew in a 370% lift in views for Kenny Loggins’ "Danger Zone". The following month, during the opening weekend of “Elvis”, videos for "If I Can Dream", "Can't Help Falling In Love", and "Jailhouse Rock" saw 200% to 400% lift in views. Additionally, Nirvana’s 1991 deep cut “Something in the Way” exploded in views 33x thanks to its feature in the Robert Pattinson-led “The Batman” film.
Sporting Events
Super Bowl headliners, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Mary J. Blige, 50 Cent and Kendrick Lamar, each saw large viewership lifts following their halftime show, a major pop culture moment, as fans revisited their iconic hits from the 1990s and 2000s. Most notably, Dr. Dre’s music video for “Still D.R.E. ft. Snoop Dogg” saw 9x its average viewership the day after the big game.
During this year’s World Cup, fans couldn’t help but revisit their past faves, like Shakira’s “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)”, which saw a 284% lift in U.S. views, and Pitbull’s “We Are One (Ole Ola)”, which saw 428% lift in U.S. views.
Big Artist Returns
From the likes of Taylor Swift to Rihanna, 2022 was a year of big artist comebacks. When Beyoncé dropped her “Renaissance” album in July, already one of the year’s biggest releases, collaborator Big Freedia’s catalog saw a 189% lift in views.
In early October, Blink-182 reunited, released brand new music, and announced a massive world tour. Emo fans rejoiced, nearly tripling the band’s catalog views in the U.S. And of course, “All The Small Things” subsequently saw 9x the average U.S. views.
In Memoriam
In 2022, we said goodbye to a number of beloved artists, and fans celebrated their legacies through watching their music videos. On January 20th, fans mourned the passing of Meat Loaf, and the singer’s catalog saw a tenfold jump in views, with "I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That)" seeing 38x its usual U.S. views.
As fans paid homage to legendary drummer Taylor Hawkins, who passed away in April, the Foo Fighters saw a 769% lift in catalog views, including greatest hits like “Everlong” (+413%) and “The Pretender” (+424%).
In August, upon the passing of Olivia Newton-John, the artist’s catalog saw a 37x lift in views across Grease, Physical, Xanadu, and more.
In September, hip hop fans across the globe took a trip back to “Gangsta’s Paradise” (416% lift in views) in remembrance of rapper Coolio.
Upon the news of rapper Takeoff's death, Migos' catalog saw an 8x jump in views, and Quavo & Takeoff's catalog saw 13x its usual views.
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About Vevo
Vevo is the world's leading music video network, connecting an ever-growing global audience to high quality music video content for more than a decade. Founded by Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment in 2009, Vevo offers fans worldwide a vast array of premium content to choose from, showcasing official music videos alongside a constantly developing lineup of live performances and innovative original programming. From top superstars to rising new talents, Vevo brings incomparable cross-promotional support to artists across the musical spectrum, at every stage of their careers.
Vevo has consistently evolved over the past decade to lead within today's ever-changing media landscape, embracing partnerships with a number of leading distribution platforms to deliver extraordinary content within ad-supported environments. With more than 25B views across television, desktop and mobile devices each month, Vevo brings music videos to the world – when, where, and how fans want them.
Vevo is available on YouTube, Samsung, Samsung TV Plus, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Echo Show, PlutoTV, Apple TV, Roku, Comcast (Xfinity X1 and Xfinity Flex), VIZIO, Sky (NowTV and SkyQ), Foxxum, XITE, NetRange, Redbox, T-Mobile Play, Virgin Media, Xumo, Telstra, Foxtel, Fetch, Rogers, Shaw, Local Now, Google TV, Android TV, Cox, ViX, Plex, Hulu and Vewd.
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Press Contacts:
For Big Hassle Media:
Jim Merlis
jim@bighassle.com
For Vevo:
Molly Boekenheide
Molly.Boekenheide@vevo.com
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