This included trailers for The Princess & the Warrior, both trailers for Garden State, the Thor Ragnarok Teaser, Logan, and The Wolf of Wall Street. I also looked at a selection of movie trailers heavily centered around one song and noticed similar popularity graphs. Others with great music with high popularity across the entire trailer were the Snow Runner: United We Drive Trailer, Tools Up! , and Gorn VR. The same goes for the trailers I made for Anarcute and BattleBlock Theater which both have very fun music. Notably, pretty much every trailer I made for Ooblets had a strong popularity graph and my intuition says it's because they're all centered around one great piece of music (as opposed to a trailer made from multiple music cues) that's a lot of fun to listen to regardless of what's in the trailer. This could also be in conjunction with fast cut montages of shots people want to freeze frame, but my intuition (and own tastes) tell me these examples are trailers whose music had people coming back again and again. Music seems to be a HUGE reason people went back to rewatch parts of a trailer or the entire thing. These seem to be the key things people go back to watch/rewatch either in isolation or in combination (in no particular order): I was curious to see what parts of game trailers people go back to rewatch and drew some unscientific conclusions based on my own intuition, and a whole bunch of trailers. At the time I wrote this post it seemed like this information is only displayed for videos which exceed several tens of thousands of views. Unlike a retention graph (which shows what percentage of the audience is still watching at each part of the video), this graph indicates the parts of the video people go back to REWATCH. YouTube recently released a new feature which displays a popularity graph just above the progress bar of each video.
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