Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2016-02-10/Traffic report

Traffic report

A river of revilement

This week, some of the most hated men on Earth (or at least America, where most of our viewers live) line up to be collectively pelted with virtual rotten vegetables. In fairness, some on this list, such as its leader, Donald Trump and his victorious opponent in the Iowa caucus, Ted Cruz, have almost as many followers as detractors, but you'd be hard-pressed to find anyone who admires Bernie Madoff, the Ponzi schemer who bilked billions before being sent to a well-deserved prison cell, or Martin Shkreli, who jacked the price of a vital AIDS medicine 5000% before being arrested for securities fraud. And then there's O. J. Simpson, a man whom you, if you are over a certain age, will have a very definite personal opinion about whether he brutally murdered his wife.

For the full top-25 list, see WP:TOP25. See this section for an explanation of any exclusions. For a list of the most edited articles of the week, see here.

As prepared by Serendipodous, for the week of 31 January to 6 February 2016, the 10 most popular articles on Wikipedia, as determined from the report of the most viewed pages, were:

Rank Article Class Views Image Notes
1 Donald Trump B-Class 3,083,806
Donald Trump has so far sold his entire campaign on one word: win. He's the winner. Everyone else is a "loser". "We will have so much winning if I'm elected", he told a crowd in September, "that you may get bored with winning." Well, people certainly aren't bored yet because Trump failed to win his first test as a nominee, the Iowa caucus. And that lack of boredom may explain why he's number one on this list.
2 Iowa caucuses B-Class 1,781,879
Since 1972, the Iowa caucuses have marked the traditional beginning of the US Presidential primaries, in which the members of each of America's two main parties vote state by state to elect their nominee for President. This has struck a lot of people as mildly odd, since Iowa, with its 97% white, heavily Christian population, is not especially representative of the US as a whole, and since 2000 (a political generation ago) no Republican who has won there has gone on to win the party's nomination.
3 Zika virus Start-class 1,436,593
This unassuming flavivirus had, since its discovery in in Uganda in 1947, been seen as meek when stood among its more formidable cousins, such as Dengue, Yellow fever and West Nile. Whereas those could often prove fatal, Zika symptoms mostly compared to a nasty case of flu. However, its sudden pandemic spread throughout the Americas has triggered a panic in the US, particularly after a potentially related spate of microcephalic childbirths in Brazil.
4 Bernie Sanders C-class 1,116,291
The self-described democratic socialist has seen his numbers double since last week, and nearly triple those of his rival and ostensible vanquisher in the Iowa caucus, Hillary Clinton, who isn't even on this list. Wikipedia viewers, much like America as a whole it seems, have favoured outsiders like Bernie in this contest, but his hair's-breadth 0.3% loss to Clinton (equivalent to just 750 votes) has shot him to prominence as never before. While even some in his own party view his plans as quixotic at best and confrontational at worst, his idealism has proven catnip to disenchanted young voters.
5 Ted Cruz B-Class 1,051,037
Since 2000, the Iowa caucus's Republican vote has been won by a Christian conservative, and it was also in 2000 that said Christian conservative (in the form of George W. Bush) last went on to win the party's nomination. If Ted Cruz bucks that trend, there will be a collective gasp from the Capitol, since before running for President, the Texas senator had a reputation as one of the most loathed men in Washington, at least among his Senate colleagues. John McCain called him a "whacko bird"; John Boehner called him a "jackass", and even fellow Texan and former boss George W. Bush admitted, "I just don't like the guy". He spearheaded a highly unpopular government shutdown in an ultimately failed attempt to stop Obamacare; he has openly embraced organizations that call for the execution of homosexuals and abortion doctors, and he actively disbelieves in the existence of man-made climate change. And yet it is this very antipathy he has generated that seems to have energised his popularity among America's most conservative voters, particularly those of a Christian fundamentalist bent, as voters across the political spectrum turn in rage against "the Establishment." Which goes some way towards explaining how he won this year's Republican Iowa Caucus. Well, that and some skulduggery involving his staffers deliberately releasing false reports of Ben Carson dropping out.
6 O. J. Simpson B-Class 1,019,172
As if we didn't have enough to fret about, the scandal once thought safely tucked away in the 90s is back with a vengeance, thanks to, as with most things in this decade, popular entertainment. The former football player, Leslie Nielsen costar and alleged murderer got a doubtless undesired surge in the popular consciousness on 2 February when American Crime Story, the true-crime spinoff of American Horror Story chose his trial as the focus for their first season, which means we will likely be seeing him on this list for months to come. Predictably this has also led to a surge in tabloid media coverage, which has upped the trial's currency by connecting it to the Kardashians.
7 Groundhog Day B-class 957,194
This idiosyncratic American not-really-holiday (I once tried to explain it to a Chinese exchange student in college and failed) fell, as it always does, on 2 February. Thanks to the movie, most people in the world probably think it involves doing the same thing over and over again, but they're wrong; that's an average workday. For the still-perplexed, let me explain: every year, on the second day of February, Americans watch a groundhog, which is a large, potbellied marmot, emerge from its burrow. If it sees its shadow, it goes back in; if it doesn't, it comes out. Coming out heralds an early spring; staying in means six more weeks of winter. The custom is strongest in Pennsylvania, where it originated, and particularly Punxsutawney, home of the world's most famous groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil, who speaks his forecast in Groundhogese into the ear of the chairman of the Groundhog Club Inner Circle, who then translates for the audience. No I did not make that up.
8 Bernard Madoff B-class 908,819
Television again raises a scandal from slumber this week, as the man who made off with tens of billions in a Ponzi scheme that cost the fortunes of, among many others, Kevin Bacon got a biopic miniseries from ABC. Like any good actor, Richard Dreyfuss, who portrayed him in the bio, tried to find some way to sympathise with the man and his actions, but ultimately, could not. “I started out thinking he was an inexcusable monster, [and] that’s the only conclusion,” he told Forbes. “I have no desire to find sympathy. His ability to inflict pain on others was unbelievable.”
9 Martin Shkreli C-class 833,443
On 4 February, the former CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals was called in to testify before the US Congress, after having been arrested by the FBI in December on charges of securities fraud. The 32-year-old Shkreli was already the prime target for current dissatisfaction with corporate greed after Turing obtained the manufacturing license for an antiparasitic drug and jacked up the price by over five thousand percent. His behaviour at the hearing, described by The New Yorker as "nothing but theater", only increased the vitriol being spewed at him from all sides. Commentators mocked his repeated use of the phrase, “On the advice of counsel, I invoke my Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and respectfully decline to answer your question,” even when asked to reaffirm the name of the Wu-Tang Clan.
10 Frederick Douglass B-class 804,187
Thank you, Google Doodle, for capping this parade of unrepentant reprobates with someone genuinely admirable and heroic. The former slave whose oratory and literary skills lit a flame under the cause of abolition and also undermined the slavers' claim that the Negro could never attain the intellectual level necessary for free thought received deserved recognition on his 198th birthday. We don't know exactly when Douglass was born, but it was in February, and so Google granted him the first of the month.