The Big Story — June 2026 Edition
The Month Football Swallowed the Chart

June belonged to football. The 48-team FIFA World Cup opened across the United States, Canada, and Mexico on June 11, and the tournament reshaped the top of the chart almost single-handedly: eight of the month's ten biggest risers were footballers. Lionel Messi, turning 39 during a record sixth World Cup, surged again as he stretched his run of scoring form and pushed deeper into the tournament's record books, while Cristiano Ronaldo, Kylian Mbappé, and Spain's teenage star Lamine Yamal climbed in lockstep. Norway's Erling Haaland was one of the month's breakout stories, dragging his country to its first World Cup since 1998 and then scoring the winner in Norway's first-ever World Cup knockout victory. The single largest mover, though, was not a footballer at all: American musician Oliver Tree added more than seven million views to top the month outright after his death in a Rio de Janeiro helicopter collision on June 14, at just 32.
The tournament's pull ran deep into the field. Japan goalkeeper Zion Suzuki was the third-biggest mover of the month, and the group stage lifted an unlikely supporting cast: host-nation forwards Folarin Balogun of the United States and Julián Quiñones of Mexico, Germany's Deniz Undav, France's Michael Olise, and Luca Zidane — Zinedine Zidane's son, keeping goal for Algeria. Even FIFA president Gianni Infantino and retired Swedish icon Zlatan Ibrahimović rode the broader World Cup media wave. Away from football, June delivered two more championship climaxes: Alexander Zverev won the French Open on June 7 for his first Grand Slam title, and Jalen Brunson carried the New York Knicks to their first NBA title since 1973, taking Finals MVP as a series that began in May finished in June. Off the field, Britain's Andy Burnham surged after winning the June 18 Makerfield by-election and emerging as the likely successor to Keir Starmer. And June carried its own roll of farewells beyond Oliver Tree: The Ring and Lilo & Stitch actress Daveigh Chase died on June 16 at 35, Buffy and Ted Lasso actor Anthony Head on June 1, and Persepolis author Marjane Satrapi on June 4.
The decline column was, once again, last month's front page in retreat. May's single biggest riser, Indian superstar Vijay, became June's steepest faller, shedding more than four million views. May's heavy cluster of deaths eased back toward baseline almost in unison — NASCAR's Kyle Busch, racer Alex Zanardi, CNN founder Ted Turner, and basketball's Brandon Clarke all falling sharply as their memorial surges passed. David Attenborough receded from his 100th-birthday spike, and the Michael biopic wave that had run since April finally broke, with Michael Jackson, Debbie Rowe, and Jaafar Jackson sliding together. May's Champions League touchline cooled as managers Mikel Arteta and Luis Enrique gave way to the international game, while screen names Gina Carano, Meryl Streep, and Stanley Tucci drifted back down. It is one of the dataset's most reliable signatures: this month's headlines become next month's steepest falls.
The Movers
View All TrendsRising
Oliver Tree was June's single biggest mover, adding more than seven million views after the 32-year-old musician was killed in a helicopter collision near Rio de Janeiro on June 14.
Lionel Messi surged as the World Cup opened across North America, staying in scoring form at 39 during a record sixth World Cup appearance.
Falling
Vijay was June's steepest faller, shedding more than four million views as May's chart-topping surge around the Indian superstar cooled back toward baseline.
Kyle Busch fell back sharply as the obituary traffic from his May 21 death faded — one of several May farewells receding at once.
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