COVID-19 pandemic in popular culture

The COVID-19 pandemic swept the world in the early months of 2020, causing massive economic and social disruption. In addition to the disease itself, populations have often dealt with lockdowns, shortages and pandemic fatigue, political and cultural turmoil. This has made the pandemic era a time of exceptional stress.[1] The pandemic has driven some people to seek peaceful escapism in media, but others towards fictional pandemics (i.e., zombie apocalypses) as an alternate form of escapism.[2]

"Afectos en pandemia," by Hilda Chaulo

Themes include contagion, isolation and loss of control.[3]

In media

The pandemic has been included in the narratives of ongoing pre-pandemic television series and become a central narrative in new ones, with mixed results.[4] Writing for The New York Times about the then-upcoming BBC sitcom Pandemonium on 16 December 2020, David Segal asked, "Are we ready to laugh about Covid-19? Or rather, is there anything amusing, or recognizable in a humorous way, about life during a plague, with all of its indignities and setbacks, not to mention its rituals (clapping for health care workers) and rules (face masks, please)."[5]

Film and television

"It was inevitable that films would be made about this significant chapter in global history, in part because a small group of people enduring an extended stay in their own homes is about the only scenario it's safe and logistically possible to actually shoot right now. But did the results have to start arriving while we're all still stuck in this nightmare?"
A. A. Dowd, The A.V. Club[6]

Horror

The horror film Host, a computer screen film, was produced and released during the pandemic and centers on characters attacked by a supernatural presence after conducting a seance via Zoom.

Another film, Safer at Home, plays out in a similar way.

Comedy

The film Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, a sequel to the 2006 mockumentary film Borat, was released on Amazon Prime Video in October 2020. It features the fictional Kazakh journalist Borat Sagdiyev (Sacha Baron Cohen) traveling around the United States and interacting with Americans during the pandemic. The film's conclusion jokingly postulates that COVID-19 was created by the Kazakhstan government, which used Borat to spread it and start the pandemic.[7]

The film Locked Down, about a jewelry heist during the pandemic, was released on HBO Max on 14 January 2021, after being filmed in September 2020 and set the previous spring.[6] It received mixed reviews.[8][9]

Staged is a British television comedy series set during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. It was primarily filmed using video-conferencing technology. In the first series, released in June 2020, David Tennant and Michael Sheen play fictionalized versions of themselves, trying to rehearse a play online during lockdown.[10]

The satirical American TV cartoon South Park did two double-length episodes about COVID-19, "The Pandemic Special" and "South ParQ Vaccination Special". It then did two approximately hour-long television films, South Park: Post Covid, and South Park: Post Covid: The Return of Covid.

Drama/thriller

The Gone Game is an Indian psychological thriller web series directed by Nikhil Bhat, shot almost entirely within the confines of homes and directed remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic in India. It premiered on Voot on 20 August 2020. The show follows the death of a COVID-19 patient with the plotline getting messier in each episode.[11]

The U.S. medical drama television series The Good Doctor and Grey's Anatomy began airing their season 4 and season 17, respectively, in November 2020. Both featured COVID-19's impact on the characters working at, and patients of, the hospital where the shows are set – including recurring characters becoming infected by the disease.[12][13]

The U.S. drama franchise One Chicago premiered on 11 November 2020, with Chicago Med featuring a COVID Unit in the hospital, where incoming patients were tested by paramedics in season 6.[14]

The U.S. procedural drama television series 9-1-1 began airing its season 4 in January 2021. The opening episode number 47, "The New Abnormal" featured a storyline centered around the COVID-19 pandemic and its impacts on both the recurring characters and everyday individuals.

Songbird, an American dystopian romantic thriller film directed by Adam Mason and produced by Michael Bay, in which "COVID-23" has caused the world to remain in lockdown for four years, filmed in Los Angeles during the real-world pandemic with consequently disrupted-production.[15] The initial response was negative, with critics arguing that it was "cashing in on human suffering"[16] and "throwing nightmare fuel on the fire of conspiracy theorists."[17] It is described as the first American film derived entirely from the pandemic,[18] was released on 11 December 2020, to generally negative reviews.[19][20] At least eight of the 75 movies announced for the 2021 South by Southwest included COVID-19 in their narratives.[21][22]

Putham Pudhu Kaalai (transl.A brand new dawn) is a 2020 Indian Tamil-language anthology film, consisting of five short film segments. It was entirely shot during the COVID-19 pandemic in India and is set against the backdrop of the country's 21-day lockdown in March 2020, the five short films talk about hope, love, and new beginnings during the pandemic. The film released on Amazon Prime Video on 16 October 2020.[23]

Karthik Dial Seytha Yenn (transl.The number dialled by Karthik) is a 2020 Indian Tamil-language short film written and directed by Gautham Vasudev Menon. A sequel to his Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa (2010), it stars Silambarasan and Trisha reprising their roles from that film. The film was primarily shot using an iPhone and released on 20 May 2020 on YouTube.[24] It follows filmmaker Karthik who is at home during the COVID-19 pandemic in Tamil Nadu without work as theatres are shut down, affecting his career as a screenwriter. While experiencing writer's block, he hesitantly calls his ex-girlfriend Jessie, who fled the effects of the pandemic in New York City and is under lockdown in Kerala. After the phone call, Karthik resumes his writing and composes Kamal & Kadambari – A Love Story.[24]

Coronavirus is an Indian Telugu-language film that explores life of a middle-class family amidst COVID-19 lockdown in India. The film was released on 11 December 2020.[25]

Operation MBBS Season 2 is an Indian Hindi-language medical drama set in the COVID-19 pandemic in a medical college which is under the impact of the pandemic. Directed by Amrit Raj Gupta, the series was released on Dice Media YouTube channel, with its first episode uploaded on 15 March 2021.

Eeswaran is a 2021 Indian Tamil-language action-drama film written and directed by Suseenthiran. It tells the story of a familial dispute during and due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India.[26]

A Pencil to the Jugular is a 2021 Australian drama directed by Matthew Victor Pastor. Set during the COVID-19 lockdowns in Melbourne it is the second instalment in a 2020 trilogy of feature films directed by Matthew Victor Pastor. The film premiered at the 43rd Moscow International Film Festival in April 2021.[27]

The Family Man is an upcoming Indian espionage thriller set during the COVID-19 lockdowns. The series follows the story of Project Guan-Yu, planned by Chinese terrorists during the pandemic to strike over India. The hint of this was given in the post-credit scene of the second season of the series. It is created by Raj Nidimoru and Krishna D.K. and is expected to release in 2022 or 2023.

Short

Pablo Larrain coordinated a short film anthology entitled Homemade, created during—and featuring stories about—the COVID-19 lockdown period. Each of the 17 directors were asked to produce a five- to seven-minute-long film, using only equipment found at home, and for a general audience. The project was conceived in March and released only three months later in June, via Netflix.[28]

Gotta Get Some Tissue! is an animated short film and music video inspired by the pandemic, released in 2021.[29]

Music videos and competitions

The annually televised Eurovision Song Contest was forced to be cancelled at short notice, the first time in its 65-year history. A special broadcast called Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light was quickly produced[30] and aired in its place across 45 countries.

The music video for the song "Phenom" by Thao & the Get Down Stay Down was recorded entirely via the "rigid grid format of the teleconferencing app Zoom," while the band members were in home isolation. Described as "the finest music video to emerge from our age of isolation," it took eight days to complete.[31]

The music video for "Lose Somebody" by Kygo and One Republic used large green screen footage and wild images while working remote from each other due to COVID-19 restrictions.[32] The video for "Freedom", also by Kygo and featuring Zak Abel, was shot separately from their homes and focused on their lives while under stay-at-home orders.[33]

In November 2020, K-pop boy band BTS released "Life Goes On", which described their lives during the pandemic as they lived in isolation, without the in person interaction of their fans and concerts. More personal and "sentimental" in nature, it presented the band living together in isolation in their dorm during the COVID-19 pandemic—in one scene RM "wistfully wipes a couple of fingers' worth of dust off his bicycle seat" as he can no longer participate in that outdoor activity[19]—having a pajama party, watching movies, and playing video games, intercut with a clip of V driving his band mates around South Korea and eventually past Seoul Olympic Stadium—he "peers out the window" and "longingly stares" at the venue as they pass it—where the band was slated to kickoff their Map of the Soul Tour several months prior, before it was ultimately cancelled due to the pandemic. The latter part of the video features a black and white sequence of the band envisioning themselves singing the song in the empty stadium "with stage lights shining down on them" as the video fades out. At a press conference held the day of Be's release, Jungkook said that his intent with the music video was to express the "sadness and the longing" the band felt due to the tour's cancellation "and because we couldn't see ARMY much".

Arivum Anbum (transl.Knowledge and Love – transl.Wisdom and Love) is an Indian Tamil-language song released on 23 April 2020, by Think Music India on YouTube in response to the pandemic in India. The song was composed by Ghibran and lyrics by Kamal Haasan. It was sung by 12 singers and recorded by the artistes from their homes. The lyrics of the song talk about the need to use "our heart and intelligence" to battle the crisis. The video also features visuals of the mass exodus of migrant labourers from cities across the country.[34]

Release schedules

Due to movie theaters shutting down, some movies originally intended for theatrical release have instead premiered on streaming services. Disney's Mulan premiered on Disney+ in September 2020, and Warner Brothers' film Wonder Woman 1984 was released on 25 December on HBO Max.[35][36]

Some movies, such as the James Bond entry No Time to Die, were postponed for over a year due to the pandemic.[37]

Music

As people turned to music to relieve emotions evoked by the pandemic, Spotify listenership showed that Classical, Ambient, and Children's genres grew due to COVID-19 while it remained relatively the same for Pop, Country, and Dance.[38] Out of these latter genres, however, Country appears to be the most resilient, with popularity soaring by 15.8%.[39]

Other examples of music influenced by COVID-19 include:

  • Markus J. Buehler at Massachusetts Institute of Technology produced a musical score from a sonification algorithm and the structure of the virus' S (spike) protein. Beyond the aesthetic appeal of the outcome of the analysis, it may offer another method of finding potential binding sites for therapeutic targets and thereby assist with treatment.[40][41]
  • Australian musicians Tim Minchin and Briggs produced the song HouseFyre—satirising Prime Minister Scott Morrison's leadership during the preceding months—whilst under isolation in their respective homes. The video clip was filmed from their mobile phones, with proceeds from the song's sale going towards a fundraiser for indigenous artists.[42]
  • Musician iMarkkeyz remixed an Instagram video by rapper Cardi B to release the song "Coronavirus" in mid-March. It reached No. 1 on the Brazilian iTunes chart[43] and No. 9 the US,[44] and was called "the first stirring of what a future historian may call pandemic pop".[45]
  • British Army veteran Captain Tom Moore raised more than $55 million for Britain's National Health Service (NHS) in the middle of the pandemic on the week of his 100th birthday with a version of You'll Never Walk Alone with singer Michael Ball and the NHS Voices of Care Choir, becoming the oldest artist to top the music charts and claim a UK number one single.[46]
  • The New York Public Library published an album of "audio landscapes"—recordings of ambient sounds evocative of the city—Missing Sounds of New York (including of the sound of peak hour traffic, a baseball game, a busy restaurant, and of the library's own reading room). Released on 1 May, it had been streamed on Spotify in the first week over 200,000 times and publicly praised by the city's mayor.[47]
  • The Finnish National Opera produced the opera Covid fan tutte, which premiered in Helsinki in March 2020. The opera takes its score from Mozart's Così fan Tutte, with an original libretto by Minna Lindgren discussing the effects of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic on life in Finland.
  • Another adaptation designed to give employment to musicians and live entertainment to patrons, was the revival of live concerts played during a break in a restaurant meal, such as the Sydney Symphony Orchestra string trio playing for diners when the restaurant at the Sydney Opera House reopened.[48]
  • NPR's "Morning Edition Song Project" has been inviting musicians to submit original songs about their unique experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic.[49]
  • Pop stars Justin Bieber and Ariana Grande released a song, "Stuck with U", which was a fundraiser for the First Responders Children's Foundation. The accompanying music video features various celebrities in a video chat, with "squares of Grande and Bieber singing isolated in their homes and video check-ins from fans and famous friends, including Kylie and Kendall Jenner, Stephen and Ayesha Curry and Chance the Rapper with his wife, Kristen Corley."[50]
  • British pop musician Charli XCX produced her fourth studio album, How I'm Feeling Now (2020), during COVID-19 lockdowns as a "do-it-yourself" collaborative process with her fans. Charli XCX has also referred to How I'm Feeling Now as a "quarantine album", and the album's lyrics contain many references to COVID-19 quarantine and lockdowns. NBC News called How I'm Feeling Now "the album full of quarantine anthems we need right now" and a "quarantine-defining work".[51]
  • New York anti-folk musician Jeffrey Lewis recorded a lo-fi album at home in 2020 inspired by the lockdown experience entitled "2020 Tapes: Shelter-at-Homerecordings & Pandemos".[52]

Literature

"For writers, as the tentacles of the coronavirus unfurl each day, everything is copy. But what happens when every writer on the planet starts taking notes on the same subject? Will we all hand in our book reports simultaneously, a year from now? The nature of tragedy is that it takes more than it gives, but it's also produced some of our most iconic literature."
Author Sloane Crosley[53]

  • The novel Lockdown by Peter May, written in 2005 and describing a global pandemic, was originally rejected for publication for being "unrealistic". When a fan requested that May write something related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the author said he thought about it for a minute before he "realized that I've kind of already done it." It was published in April 2020.[54]
  • Horror and supernatural fiction author Stephen King backdated the setting of Billy Summers from 2020 to 2019, so that the characters could plausibly congregate and go on a cruise ship.[55][56]
  • Paolo Giordano, Italian physicist and award-winning author of the Premio Strega, published his thoughts about the virus outbreak in an essay entitled How Contagion Works in March 2020. It was quickly translated into more than 20 languages.[57]
  • Italian virologist and author Roberto Burioni published Virus. La grande sfida [Virus. The Great Challenge], an examination of how epidemics shape civilizations in March 2020. The proceeds went toward research on the virus.[58]
  • Italian publisher Garzanti published Andrà tutto bene (Everything will be fine), an anthology of twenty-six short stories and essays about quarantine from a range of writers including children's author Elisabetta Gnone. Profits from the sale of the e-book went to the Pope John XXIII Hospital in Bergamo.[59]
  • Inspired by how many compared the COVID-19 response in the UK to the British sitcom Dad's Army, English historian and writer Niles Schilder wrote four scripts for the Dad's Army Appreciation Society, three of which looked at how the characters from the series would have dealt with the pandemic.[60]
  • The COVID-19 pandemic inspired the 2020 romance novelette Kissing the Coronavirus.[61]
  • LeVar Burton, host of Reading Rainbow, announced his desire to perform live-streamed readings of books for his podcast LeVar Reads but that copyright law was unclear as to whether this was allowed. Neil Gaiman replied to Burton via Twitter, giving him permission to read any of his works.[62]
  • The COVID-19 pandemic inspired the Javanese language audiobook novel, Endahe Lintang Kemukus (The Beauty of Kemukus Stars) by Ki Dr. Budiono Santoso Setradjaja, Ph.D., SpFK, a clinical pharmacologist who was interested about Javanese culture. Published by Yayasan Saworo Tino Triatmo (YASATRI).[63]

Performing arts

Madrid's Teatro Real debuted a modified version of Verdi's La Traviata where COVID-19 physical distancing restrictions were incorporated into the production. Performers began on stage wearing surgical masks, the staging featured a grid of 2m-wide taped red lines on the floor, with all actors' movements choreographed to remain apart, and the opera itself was selected as the plot features tuberculosis.[64]

Tamas Detrich, director of the Stuttgart Ballet, commissioned eight contemporary dance works "created within and for these straitened circumstances", three of which were premiered at the company's first post-shutdown event Response 1.[65]

Several professional dancers and companies, both classical and contemporary, filmed and published new works which responded to themes of isolation. Either through in the choreography itself (e.g. Rhiannon Faith's Drowntown), in the location (e.g. empty public places Taylor Stanley outside the Lincoln Center, choreography by Kyle Abraham), or the filming technique (e.g. in Flying Home by street dance group BirdGang via "...the now all-too-familiar segmented Zoom-style screen").[66]

The show believed to be the first full capacity premiere of a play anywhere in the world since the pandemic began was a theatrical adaptation of the popular children's television show Bluey entitled Bluey's Big Play, The Stage Show. After months of delay, the play - developed by Windmill Theatre Company from an original story by Bluey's creator Joe Brumm with new music by Bluey composer, Joff Bush - made its debut in Brisbane in late December 2020 at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre.[67]

Visual art

  • allegorical pencil illustration about the danger of COVID-19
    Illustration of Plague and Death encircling the Earth, by Spencer Alexander McDaniel
    In April, street artist Banksy published a new piece of his trademark wall art—this time located in his own bathroom, referencing the required self-isolation—with coronavirus as the theme and "stir-crazy rats" as its subject. He published photographs of it online.[68] In July he continued the rats theme, with several stencil graffiti of rats wearing and playing with facemasks in a London tube carriage.[69]
  • Artists in the United Kingdom painted portraits of National Health Service workers for free, as a way of recognizing their contributions, and with a view to holding an exhibition once the pandemic subsides.[70]
  • Damien Hirst produced two versions of a new poster artwork entitled Butterfly Rainbow—one as a free download "to raise the spirits", and another to be sold in limited edition as a fundraiser for the UK's National Health Service.[71]
  • Sculptor Antony Gormley created Hold while in lockdown—a small human figure made of dark clay, "resting its head between tightly wound arms, clasping bent knees and shoulders. Toes curled inwards" which he described as "trying to make an objective equivalent for the state that we're all in". It was "exhibited online" at White Cube gallery.[72]
  • Artist Sara Shakeel created a series of digital images to encourage proper hand washing and to thank health care workers, by depicting both collaged with the artist's signature glitter and crystals.[73]
E guarirai da tutte le malattie.. ed io, avrò cura di te, by Giovanni Guida
  • Italian artist Giovanni Guida created E guarirai da tutte le malattie.. ed io, avrò cura di te[74] [And you'll be cured of all diseases.. and I'll take care of you], a grattage illustration of God fighting the virus in a composition referencing Michelangelo's The Creation of the Sun and Moon.[75] The work was described by Italian media as having gone "viral".[76]
  • Dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei created "an initial batch" of 10,000 surgical masks with hand screen-printed illustrations of "sunflower seeds, mythical beasts and... a defiant middle finger". The items are to be sold via eBay with proceeds being donated to Human Rights Watch, Refugees International and Médecins Sans Frontières.[77]
  • Over 70 comic strips participated in The Big Thank You Search of 2020. Each strip included six symbols of workers who were essential during the pandemic.[78]
  • For the 2020 edition of the annual photography festival Cortona on the Move [It] organizers commissioned photographers for an exhibition entitled The COVID 19 visual project—the first Italian arts festival since the health emergency began.[79] A virtual exhibition was also produced.[80]
  • Graffiti artist Banksy also raised more than £2,500,000 for the NHS, with a production of the work to remain in the hospital.  The image is 1m x 1m in size, and it was hung in collaboration with the hospital's managers in foyer near the emergency room. The image shows a child holding a figure of a masked nurse wearing a cape. This black and white painting was considered a " universal tribute" to staff at Southampton General Hospital.  The artwork was used to raise money for the hospital.[81]
  • During Pandemic, Google Arts and Culture digitized thousand museums for people to "visit" these museums virtually from home. These museums include Hammer Museum in L.A, Anne Frank House, National Museum of Indonesia, Ghent Altarpiece in Belgium etc. Google Arts and Culture [82] made visitors become virtual globetrotters and see arts and exhibitions from over 1200 thousand museums around the world. It also provides the Zoom capability for people to explore the artworks in detail. The Ghent Altarpiece in Belgium also includes detailed descriptions of the works to make visitors' virtual learning experiences as good as in-person visits. Google Arts & Culture.[83]
  • Artist Francisca Lita Sáez created three artworks that show the experience of physicians during Spain's Covid-19 pandemic. The acrylic and pastel artworks all show the defenseless people's confrontation with the Covid-19 virus, which was hard to control. The combination of physicians' experience and art shows a visual representation of clinical magnitude and human's fight for survival. The three artworks entitled are The Threat (2020); An Unequal Fight (2020) and Stop Pandemic (2020).[84]

Websites

The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically affected website format, operations, and the way people surf the internet. Websites such as Brokerage, Live Chats, and Video Streaming Websites, E-Commerce, and Financial Technology have altered their website structure to better fit the unfortunate trends that COVID-19 brought to human society. Despite this, some websites have seen an increase in page views and/or sales, while a select few others in specific industries have not been so lucky.

Digital marketing

Since the start of the pandemic, many website companies have had to alter their digital marketing strategies to either attract more page visits, orders or discourage misleading advertisements that may reduce website credibility and traffic.[85]

To prevent misleading information, Facebook removed more than seven million ad posts listed as faulty information in relation to the COVID-19 virus. With other marketing techniques, digital marketers have seen it fit to normalize the societal depiction of the proper ways of dealing with this virus. By doing so, they have altered their message to the public by including practices of social distancing, staying at home, cleanliness, and the usage of masks in their advertisements. For example, NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, has said to continue its Santa Claus tracking on 24 December 2020, despite the pandemic. For NORAD to keep children safe and aware, they 3D cartoon photos of Santa Claus wearing a mask while riding his sleigh.[86]

E-commerce websites

A chart from Bazaarvoice.com shows a Year-over-Year ("YoY") increase in monthly page views and order counts from 1 January – 30 June 2020, averaged from 6,200 different e-commerce (ECOM) websites.[87]

As seen from the chart, before major statewide quarantines, ECOM was already starting to see increases in page views and orders from January - March, increasing 14% in page views and 19% in orders. When former President Donald Trump issued COVID-19 a National Emergency in mid-March, both page views and order counts had a YoY increase to 96% and 88%, respectively. The trending psychology behind this surge in ECOM usage is since most people at this time were in fear of in-person and Brick-in-Mortar alternatives that were still open at the time.[88]

The top trending ECOM sites amid the pandemic from highest YoY growth to least were Toys and Games, Business and Industrial, Sporting Goods, Hardware, Home & Garden, Entertainment, Animal & Pet Supplies, Electronics, and Food/Beverages/Tobacco. Down trending ECOM websites include those that sell products used in pre-pandemic times, such as Luggage websites. Luggage and Bag websites were one of the only websites to see over 10% decreases in page views and order counts.[87]

Financial technology

The COVID-19 pandemic has, fortunately, like ECOM, presented tail-winds to website usage. Financial analysts predicted that for many payment providers, it could also drive new purchasing habits that could leave the companies in a stronger position once the crisis is over. Credit card network websites such as Visa.com, PayPal.com, and Mastercard.com have seen page view and payment volume growth pressured by temporary business closures, elevated unemployment, and a cutback on international travel. Due to recent social distancing and shelter-in-place, these companies have also seen people increasingly move their spending online, as seen with the increase in ECOM popularity. However, for websites such as Squareup.com, with many Brick-in-Mortar operations, the crisis has negatively impacted them.[89]

Brokerage websites

With many people laid-off, unemployed, financially distraught, or bored during the pandemic and shelter-in-place, some have taken up retail trading as a new hobby or job. Robinhood, an investing platform founded in 2013, was among the platforms that gained millions of customers during the pandemic.[90]

Live chats and video streaming websites

Schools and businesses worldwide have altered their business structure to an online means of learning and work. As a result of the new norm to online chat and video streaming methods, websites such as Zoom have seen massive growth in page visits and user volume. These websites have allowed customers; fearful of contracting the virus; a risk-free way of communication, learning, and work.[91]

In social media

Many memes[92] (notably in the form of art-recreations,[93] songs,[45] and videos[94]) were created by, and shared among, the large numbers of amateur content creators from in their homes during the isolation period itself.

During the course of the pandemic, the social media app TikTok grew the most,[95] lending to a number of new trends in digital pop culture including video games like Animal Crossing, Among Us and Genshin Impact, banana bread baking, Tiger King memes, and quarantines.[96] The increasing popularity of TikTok led to the development of similar-looking features on other social media platforms, such as Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts.

Social media usage

Although social media usage has increased overall, posting activity has declined. This is due to a number of factors, such as having less to share or even feeling guilty or afraid of backlash after having attended unsafe activities. Many users have felt that it is inappropriate to share happy or celebratory posts in such a solemn atmosphere.[95] As such, the rise in social media activity has caused anxiety in users, which leads them to leave social media sites before rejoining soon after.[95]

Anxiety

In the early stage of the pandemic, a survey conducted by Gao J. Zheng shows a high prevalence of mental health problems, which is positively associated with frequent exposure to social media.[97] When the stay-at-home order was enforced, young people showed a higher level of frustration than other age groups because many mistakenly thought they were not part of the at-risk population.[98] Social media was one factor that promoted such frustration. For example, many posts on TikTok focus on young people's anxiety due to social distancing and isolation.[97] Such negative attitudes have spread rapidly over TikTok.

Unlike TikTok, whose users are mostly young people, the overall attitude towards the pandemic is different on Twitter.[97] For example, a study on Twitter users during the pandemic shows overall higher positive sentiments.[97] Among Twitter users, 48,157(51.97%) users expressed positive feelings, while 31,553 (34.05%) were neutral, and the rest of the tweets - amounting to 12,936 (13.96%) - showed negative emotions. One major reason behind the prominence of positive sentiment is that most people still appreciated the government and health workers despite their personal anxieties.[97]

In sports

COVID-19 has forced difficult and financially depleting decisions on the sports industry. Nearly every major sporting event in the sports-event industry had been canceled, moved, or postponed in the midst of the outbreak. As the unfortunate pan of events that emerged from the crisis, sports fans were distraught as some of their favorite teams were forced to withdraw from specific tournaments or even the season altogether. For example, in March 2020, during the Sweet 16, the Rams were forced to withdraw their position in the tournament after multiple players had caught the COVID-19 virus. A 2019-2020 YoY revenue growth chart listed on Forbes Magazine showed that YoY revenue growth had dramatically downsized for major sports leagues due to these cancellations.[99]

A 2020 chart from Forbes Magazine shows a revenue growth comparison of major sports leagues from 2019 to 2020.[100]

For the 2020 Summer Olympics, foreign spectators were banned from attending the games in Japan without a 100 percent refund. Moreover, the vaccinations rates were increased, and Major League Baseball gave the news to provide vaccine facilities in their stadiums. Vaccinations of the athletes were an ethical issue, if it was legal and ethical.[101] The NBA announced vaccinations were not mandatory, but vaccinated players would be more flexible. According to ESPN, the NBA were allowing vaccinated athletes to not wear masks in the training facilities, with extra freedom traveling. Before the vaccinations, the NBA was continuing in a bubble, where players were not allowed to leave. Players inside the bubble were wearing sensors for social distancing. Reporters who wanted to get inside the bubble were required for temperature and oxygen checks and COVID tests. The benches of the NBA athletes were changed, and they became socially distanced. Without their fans, some of the old NBA coaches were still wearing masks during the games. Popovich, the oldest coach in the NBA, who is 74, said that "I don't want to die", when he was asked about wearing masks.[102]

References

  1. Newman, Kira M. (11 August 2020). "Seven Ways the Pandemic Is Affecting Our Mental Health". greatergood.berkeley.edu. Greater Good. Retrieved 19 December 2020. In late March, nearly 3,500 people were surveyed in Spain, when the country ranked second in the world in COVID-19 deaths. Many people met the criteria for clinical mental health problems: 19 percent for depression, almost a quarter for anxiety, and 16 percent for PTSD. Within a week after Slovenia declared an epidemic, over half of the thousands of people surveyed had high stress levels. In April, 14 percent of Americans were experiencing serious psychological distress, more than triple the rate in 2018.
  2. Nobel, Emma (13 April 2020). "COVID-19 will shape pop culture for years to come, but for now we love pandemic stories". abc.net.au. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 18 December 2020. Fictitious stories about pandemics give us a way to experience the horror in a controlled way, with the pacing we've grown to expect, where resolution is always possible, and where we can always turn off the TV if it gets a bit too much.
  3. McCluskey, Megan (7 October 2020). "Horror Films Have Always Tapped Into Pop Culture's Most Urgent Fears. COVID-19 Will Be Their Next Inspiration". Time. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  4. "How The Covid-19 Pandemic Is Affecting Popular Culture". augustman.com. August Man. 24 November 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2020. In addition to existing shows, streaming platforms and cable channels have tried putting together new series centred on coronavirus, like HBO's "Coastal Elites" or Netflix's "Social Distance" – but with no real success.
  5. Segal, David (16 December 2020). "Are We Ready to Laugh About Covid-19? A British Sitcom Hopes So". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 December 2020. Are we ready to laugh about Covid-19? Or rather, is there anything amusing, or recognizable in a humorous way, about life during a plague, with all of its indignities and setbacks, not to mention its rituals (clapping for health care workers) and rules (face masks, please).
  6. Dowd, A.A. (2021-01-13). "The star-powered COVID drama Locked Down is nearly as annoying as, well, lockdown". avclub.com. The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2021-01-13. It was inevitable that films would be made about this significant chapter in global history, in part because a small group of people enduring an extended stay in their own homes is about the only scenario it's safe and logistically possible to actually shoot right now. But did the results have to start arriving while we're all still stuck in this nightmare?
  7. Buchanan, Kyle (23 October 2020). "The 'Borat' Sequel's 3 Wildest Scenes: Here's What Happens". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  8. "Locked Down (2021)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  9. "Locked Down Reviews". Metacritic. Red Ventures. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  10. Hawksley, Rupert (10 June 2020). "Staged, BBC One, review: David Tennant and Michael Sheen's Zoom comedy is better than The Trip". i. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
  11. "The Gone Game review: Voot's shot-during-lockdown thriller is an effective experiment". Hindustan Times. 21 August 2020. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  12. Grobar, Matt (3 November 2020). "'The Good Doctor' Creator David Shore On Season 4 Opener: COVID-19 Pandemic & New Residents Arrive As Shaun & Lea Set Up House – Q&A". Deadline. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  13. Lee, Jess (18 November 2020). "Grey's Anatomy star responds to cast's on-set face mask criticism". Digital Spy. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  14. Frederick, Brittany (30 September 2020). "Chicago Fire, Chicago PD, Chicago Med will all incorporate COVID-19". One Chicago Center. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  15. Countryman, Eli (29 October 2020). "Michael Bay's Covid-Inspired 'Songbird' Trailer Shows the World Ravaged by Pandemic". Variety. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  16. Ushe, Naledi (29 October 2020). "'Songbird' movie trailer about pandemic 'COVID-23' slammed by critics: 'Cashing in on human suffering'". Fox News. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  17. Kiefer, Halle (29 October 2020). "The Songbird Trailer Is Here to Bravely Prey on Your Worst Fears About COVID". Vulture. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  18. Vishnevetsky, Ignatiy (10 December 2020). "The first movie inspired by the pandemic is here, and it sucks". film.avclub.com. The A.V. Club. Retrieved 21 December 2020. Shot in July, it has the dubious honor of being the first American movie to come out of the pandemic—the first to be conceived, filmed, and released in the current climate.
  19. "Songbird (2020)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  20. "Songbird Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  21. Mattise, Nathan (27 March 2021). "Can you make a comedy set during COVID-19? Recovery takes the idea for a drive". Ars Technica. Conde Nast. Retrieved 1 April 2021. Of the 75 feature-length films on the SXSW Online 2021 schedule, more than a tenth (at least eight) explicitly involve COVID-19.
  22. Alter, Rebecca (10 February 2021). "Here Are All the Movies About COVID at SXSW This Year". Vulture. New York magazine. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  23. "'Putham Pudhu Kaalai' trailer: Tamil anthology set and filmed in times of COVID-19 lockdown". DNA India. 5 October 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  24. "'Karthik Dial Seytha Yenn': A letter to unrequited love, and then some". The Hindu. 21 May 2020. Archived from the original on 21 May 2020. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  25. Pathi, Thadhagath. "Coronavirus Movie Review: A slow narrative proves bane for this attempt to rightly question disastrous health policies". The Times of India. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  26. Ramanujam, Srinivasa (14 January 2021). "'Eeswaran' movie review: A predictable rural subject that goes nowhere". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
  27. "PH movie on antiracism screened in Russian fest". 5 May 2021.
  28. Ravindran, Manori (2 June 2020). "Kristen Stewart, Maggie Gyllenhaal Direct in Pablo Larrain's Netflix Short Film Collection 'Homemade'". Variety. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  29. Stone, Roger (22 November 2022). "Review: Gotta Get Some Tissue!". FilmInk. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  30. https://eurovision.tv/story/europe-shine-a-light-a-production-race-against-the-clock
  31. Kaufman, Sarah L. (2 April 2020). "The best music video to emerge from our age of isolation". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  32. Yopko, Nick. "Kygo and OneRepublic Drop Bizarre Green Screen-Powered Music Video for "Lose Somebody"". EDM.com - The Latest Electronic Dance Music News, Reviews & Artists. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  33. Kassam, Alshaan (17 April 2020). "Kygo – Freedom (ft. Zack Abel)". We Rave You. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  34. Ramanujam, Srinivasa (23 April 2020). "Kamal Haasan releases new song Arivum Anbum, states that 'knowledge and love' is the need of the hour". The Hindu. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  35. March 2021, Daniel Pateman 26. "Disney Plus Premier Access: what is it, how do I get it and what can I watch?". TechRadar. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  36. Alexander, Julia (18 November 2020). "Wonder Woman 1984 will be released on HBO Max the same day it's in theaters for no extra cost". The Verge. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  37. Katkov, Mark (22 January 2021). "New 007 Release Delayed For 3rd Time As Pandemic Continues To Batter Film Industry". NPR.org. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  38. "How the Coronavirus Pandemic Affects Music Genres on Spotify". How Music Charts. 23 April 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  39. "The Pandemic Could Have Hurt Country Music. Instead, the Genre Is Booming". Time. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  40. Taylor, Tegan (6 April 2020). "Scientists translate coronavirus spike protein into music, revealing more about its structure". ABC News (Sydney). Archived from the original on 7 April 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  41. Venugopal, Vineeth (3 April 2020). "Scientists have turned the structure of the coronavirus into music". Science. doi:10.1126/science.abc0657. S2CID 216483751. Archived from the original on 7 April 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  42. "Tim Minchin and Briggs release isolation track satirising Scott Morrison's leadership". The Guardian. 9 April 2020. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 10 April 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  43. "iTunesCharts.net: 'Coronavirus' by iMarkkeyz (Brazilian Songs iTunes Chart)". www.itunescharts.net. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  44. "iTunesCharts.net: 'Coronavirus' by iMarkkeyz (American Songs iTunes Chart)". www.itunescharts.net. Archived from the original on 3 April 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  45. "Pandemic pop: At home and around the world, dark-humored new songs about coronavirus go viral". Los Angeles Times. 2 March 2020. Archived from the original on 1 April 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  46. Shelton, Tracey (27 April 2020). "Captain Tom Moore becomes oldest artist to top the UK charts with You'll Never Walk Alone cover". ABC News. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  47. Flood, Alison (7 May 2020). "The sound of silence: visiting the library during lockdown". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  48. Dye, Josh (30 October 2020). "Dinner and a show: Sydney restaurants resurrect musical tradition". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  49. "Morning Edition Song Project". NPR.org. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  50. Lewis, Jon (8 May 2020). "Ariana Grande And Justin Bieber Team Up For Fundraising Single 'Stuck With U'". NPR.org. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  51. "Opinion | Charli XCX's DIY album is full of the quarantine anthems we need right now". NBC News. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
  52. Hornsby, Samuel (4 April 2021). "Art in isolation from New York neurotic, Jeffrey Lewis". spotlightmagazine.our.dmu.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  53. Crosley, Sloane (2020-03-17). "Someday, We'll Look Back on All of This and Write a Novel". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2020-04-02. Retrieved 2020-04-07.
  54. Elassar, Alaa. "A pandemic thriller, once rejected by publishers for being unrealistic, is now getting a wide release". CNN. Archived from the original on 7 April 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  55. King, Stephen. "Stephen King Is Sorry You Feel Like You're Stuck In A Stephen King Novel". NPR.org. Archived from the original on 11 April 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  56. Parker, Ryan (10 August 2021). "Stephen King Shifted Plot Elements of New Novel Due to Pandemic". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 23 September 2021. I had a couple of characters that I had to get off the stage for reasons that have to do with the plot … so I said, 'I'll put them on a cruise ship,'" King began. "And then COVID came along and I said, 'No, this is probably not going to work.' So what I did was I took the whole book, which was set in 2020 and shoved it back to 2019.
  57. Momigliano, Anna (9 April 2020). "In Italy, Coronavirus Books Rush to Publication". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 12 April 2020. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  58. Carpinelli, Rosalia (2020). "Roberto Burioni – "Virus. The Great Challenge"". www.consulenzeditoriali.it/. Archived from the original on 15 April 2020.
  59. "Andrà tutto bene". Garzanti.it. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.
  60. Schilder, Niles. "fanfiction". www.dadsarmy.co.uk. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
  61. "'Kissing the Coronavirus' is the steamy viral-erotica novel you need to get through the pandemic". The Daily Dot. 30 September 2020. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  62. Cole, Samantha (2 March 2020). "Please Don't Sue LeVar Burton for Reading Soothing Stories to Scared Children". Vice. Archived from the original on 27 March 2020. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  63. BAB 1. Langit Kasaput Mega – Novel Jawa “Endahe Lintang Kemukus”, 12 March 2023, retrieved 7 June 2023
  64. Higgins, Charlotte (8 July 2020). "The great reopening – how Britain's galleries Covid-proofed themselves". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  65. Roy, Sanjoy (16 July 2020). "Bouncing back: European dance is kick-started with huge state support". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  66. Winship, Lyndsey (17 August 2020). "No standing still: the best of lockdown dance". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  67. Dacey, Jason (23 December 2020). "Bluey TV series makes its theatrical debut on stage in Brisbane world premiere". ABC News.
  68. "Banksy follows stay-at-home orders and makes bathroom art during coronavirus crisis". ABC News. 17 April 2020. Archived from the original on 20 April 2020. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
  69. Bakare, Lanre (14 July 2020). "Banksy creates mask-themed work on London Underground". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  70. "The artists painting front-line workers for free". BBC News. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  71. "Damien Hirst's rainbow giveaway". BBC News. 2 April 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  72. Wills, Ella (2 April 2020). "How artists are depicting the coronavirus lockdown". BBC News. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  73. "Pakistani artist Sara Shakeel's crystal-covered image of exhausted medical worker sends powerful message". The National. 12 April 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  74. "Guida Giovanni nell'Enciclopedia Treccani". Treccani.
  75. Fabrizio Intravaia (27 May 2020). "Un'opera d'arte per sconfiggere la pandemia". Corriere Italiano.
  76. Emanuela Sorrentino. "Coronavirus, l'illustrazione dell'artista campano è "virale"". Il Mattino.
  77. Brown, Mark (2 May 2020). "Ai Weiwei creates 10,000 masks in aid of coronavirus charities". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  78. "Hawaii cartoonists participate in The Big Thank You Search of 2020". Star-Advertiser. 7 June 2020. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  79. "Cortona On The Move 2020". www.arte.it (in Italian). Arte. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  80. "COVID 19 visual project". covid19visualproject.org. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  81. "Covid: Banksy to auction Southampton hospital artwork for NHS". BBC News. 8 March 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  82. "Google Arts & Culture". artsandculture.google.com. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  83. "How to Experience Art & Culture During Coronavirus". Artwork Archive. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  84. Vicente-Herrero, T. (1 October 2020). "Paintings From Spain's COVID-19 Pandemic". AMA Journal of Ethics. 22 (10): E893–897. doi:10.1001/amajethics.2020.893. ISSN 2376-6980. PMID 33103653.
  85. "Three key ways the Covid-19 pandemic has changed digital advertising strategies". Marketing Tech News. 28 October 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  86. David Williams. "Covid-19 won't stop NORAD from tracking Santa's Christmas Eve flight around the world". CNN. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  87. "The impact of COVID-19 on e-commerce by category". Bazaarvoice. 15 July 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  88. "A Timeline of COVID-19 Developments in 2020". AJMC. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  89. Bary, Emily. "Muted spending growth in pandemic doesn't cancel big opportunities for payments companies". MarketWatch. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  90. Rega, Sam (7 October 2020). "How Robinhood and Covid opened the floodgates for 13 million amateur stock traders". CNBC. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  91. "How Have Websites Changed to Accommodate COVID 19". www.revize.com. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  92. Prescott, Emilia Brock, Pria Mahadevan, Virginia. "Coronavirus Goes Viral: How Online Meme Culture Reflects Our Shared Experience Of A Global Pandemic". www.gpbnews.org. Archived from the original on 23 May 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  93. Miller, Nick (2 April 2020). "An egg, a Pringle, some Lego: Aussies attempt DIY art masterpieces". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  94. "Online life explodes with COVID-19 memes, and hand-washing TikToks". Australian Financial Review. 2 March 2020. Archived from the original on 21 March 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  95. Molla, Rani (1 March 2021). "Posting less, posting more, and tired of it all: How the pandemic has changed social media". Vox. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  96. Schoenberg, Nara. "Americans are drinking quarantinis with Cuomosexuals. Your guide to quarantine culture". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  97. Bhat, Muzafar; Qadri, Monisa; Beg, Noor-ul-Asrar; Kundroo, Majid; Ahanger, Naffi; Agarwal, Basant (July 2020). "Sentiment analysis of social media response on the Covid19 outbreak". Brain, Behavior, and Immunity. 87: 136–137. doi:10.1016/j.bbi.2020.05.006. ISSN 0889-1591. PMC 7207131. PMID 32418721.
  98. Basch, Corey H.; Hillyer, Grace C.; Jaime, Christie (10 August 2020). "COVID-19 on TikTok: harnessing an emerging social media platform to convey important public health messages". International Journal of Adolescent Medicine and Health. doi:10.1515/ijamh-2020-0111. ISSN 2191-0278. PMID 32776899. S2CID 221098586.
  99. Traub, Matt (30 March 2021). "Sports and COVID-19: The Impact on the Sports-Event Industry". SportsTravel. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  100. Birnbaum, Justin. "Major Sports Leagues Lost Jaw-Dropping Amount Of Money In 2020". Forbes. Retrieved 9 April 2021.
  101. Traub, Matt (30 March 2021). "Sports and COVID-19: The Impact on the Sports-Event Industry". SportsTravel. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  102. Stein, Marc (4 August 2020). "Life Inside the N.B.A. Bubble". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.