Trends

Trending in Australia
on May 3, 2024

The most searched Wikipedia pages in Australia: discover what people are looking for!

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  1. EN
    Baby Reindeer
    + 4%
  2. EN
    The Idea of You
    + 44%
  3. EN
    Richard Gadd
    - 1%
  4. EN
    Nicholas Galitzine
    + 48%
  5. EN
    Heeramandi: The Diamond Bazaar
    - 10%
  6. EN
    Anne Hathaway
    + 40%
  7. EN
    Death of Asunta Basterra
    + 2%
  8. EN
    Roxette
    + 5%
  9. EN
    Peter Stefanovic
    new
  10. EN
    deaths in 2024
    - 2%
  11. Coordinate Me 2024
    - 2%
  12. EN
    Peter Daicos
    new
  13. EN
    The Tattooist of Auschwitz
    - 12%
  14. EN
    Marie Fredriksson
    - 26%
  15. EN
    Paul O'Grady
    new
  16. EN
    Unfrosted
    new
  17. EN
    Nick Daicos
    new
  18. EN
    Bonza
    + 15%
  19. EN
    Mason Cox
    new
  20. EN
    Margin Call
    + 22%
  21. EN
    Scott Pendlebury
    new
  22. EN
    Fallout
    - 13%
  23. EN
    Wayne Carey
    new
  24. EN
    Anya Taylor-Joy
    - 93%
  25. EN
    Challengers
    - 10%
  26. EN
    Wayne Bennett
    - 14%
  27. EN
    Lale Sokolov
    + 7%
  28. EN
    Sharmin Segal
    - 11%
  29. EN
    The Fall Guy
    + 14%
  30. EN
    Dog
    new
  31. EN
    Page Eight
    + 15%
  32. EN
    Pornhub
    - 4%
  33. EN
    No Escape
    new
  34. EN
    Radical Optimism
    new
  35. EN
    Charlie Curnow
    new
  36. EN
    Steve Erceg
    - 4%
  37. EN
    Jessica Gunning
    + 8%
  38. EN
    Australia
    - 4%
  39. EN
    shade of green
    new
  40. EN
    baseball in the United States
    new
  41. EN
    Jalen Brunson
    new
  42. EN
    War for the Planet of the Apes
    new
  43. EN
    Bear
    new
  44. EN
    Shōgun
    - 5%
  45. EN
    YouTube
    + 5%
  46. EN
    Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga
    - 36%
  47. EN
    2024 United Kingdom local elections
    new
  48. EN
    Paul Dear
    new
  49. EN
    Our Lady of Perpetual Exemption
    new
  50. EN
    Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes
    new
Those data refers to the most visited pages on Wikipedia from Australia on May 3, 2024.
The green, red and yellow indicators on each row are based on data from the day before: to get insights about the historical records, click here.
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