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Was 2016 the Deadliest Year for Celebrities?

While many high-profile celebrities passed away in 2016, the overall "notable death" count for the year was not unusually high.

Published Dec. 28, 2016

 (kenny1 / Shutterstock.com)
Image Via kenny1 / Shutterstock.com

Was 2016 really the deadliest year for celebrities? The passing of entertainment icons such as David Bowie, Prince, Carrie Fisher and Muhammad Ali this year left many people feeling 2016 was an unusually morbid year for celebrities:

celebrity deaths 2016


Of course, attempting to quantify such a feeling involves several basic issues. Primarily, what makes a person a celebrity? Whose deaths are considered notable? For instance, the Los Angeles Times listed 91 "leaders, stars and other notable figures who died in 2016," while CBS News charted more than 150. So what standard(s) do we use?

Since there's no official body that determines the relative fame and importance of individuals, we'll examine this question by reviewing the "notable death" lists published by a variety of news outlets between 2013 and 2016:

2013 2014 2015 *2016
Hollywood Reporter 57 47 152 180
The Wrap 53 49 121 112
Chicago Tribune 75 128 170 131
CBS News x ~125 151 151
Legacy.com x 51 81 93
Los Angeles Times 117 129 118 91
The Telegraph 53 106 124 162
CNN 150 127 159 118


*The number of deaths listed for 2016 was compiled before the end of the year, on 27 December 2016.

While a large number of celebrities certainly passed away in 2016, the number wasn't unusually high when compared to those of recent years. The Hollywood Reporter, Legacy.com, and The Telegraph all counted more celebrity deaths in 2016 than in the previous three years, but this year ranked second, third, or even fourth among that group according to other news outlets.

If a trend can be spotted in the above-displayed data, it may be that there has been a general uptick in the reporting of (rather than occurrences of) notable deaths over the last few years:

celebrity deaths


The Guardian suggested that social media has brought people a step closer to celebrities and has turned the passing of notable persons into more widely publicized and emotional events:

There may not, in fact, have been an unusual number of celebrity deaths this year, but they seem to have been much more salient than before. Part of this must be the result of the growing reach and responsiveness of digital media. Technology makes it possible to observe and react to a distant readership almost as accurately and immediately as an actor can respond to their audience in a theatre. Sudden emotional impulses are amplified with astonishing speed across the internet just as they can be in a crowd. Each apparently solitary smartphone user is really sharing other people’s emotion as well as their own.

It’s not just emotions that are shared in this way. It’s memories as well. The generations of middle-aged people along with all their children and grandchildren have experienced a kind of collectivisation of childhood. This was a historic shift. Before the mass media, childhood memories were shared among very small groups, and anchored to particular places. But for the last 60 years, children in the west, and increasingly elsewhere, have grown up in front of televisions, and many of the most vivid characters of their childhood and adolescence were actors or singers.

Time magazine posited another theory: It wasn't the number of deaths in 2016 that made the year unusual, but rather the caliber of the celebrities who passed away:

The celebrities that have died so far this year are unusually prominent, beloved figures. The 2016 deaths of David Bowie, Alan Rickman and Prince are more notable for most than, say, the 2015 deaths of Stan Freberg, Geoffrey Lewis and Johnny Kemp — as significant as they may have been. Some, like Prince or A Tribe Called Quest’s Phife Dawg, have also met unexpectedly early ends.

The number of media sources reporting such information may have also contributed to the perceived "rise" in celebrity deaths. Whereas previous generations encountered celebrities primarily via three network TV channels and a handful of print publications, today's generation consumes entertainment through a multiplicity of sources. This change in the entertainment landscape has led not only to an increase in reports about celebrity deaths, but also to an increase in the overall number of persons considered to be celebrities. Reality shows such as Dancing with the Stars also bring older, "forgotten" celebrities back into the public eye, making their eventually passings even more impactful among those who might otherwise overlook them.

When the BBC looked into this issue in April 2016 after the deaths of Prince, David Bowie, and Alan Rickman, obituary editor Nick Serpell noted that modern audiences are simply aware of a larger number of celebrities:

"There are also more famous people than there used to be," he says. "In my father or grandfather's generation, the only famous people really were from cinema — there was no television. Then, if anybody wasn't on TV, they weren't famous."

It should also be noted that the above-displayed data don't actually encompass the "true" numbers of notable deaths, as there is no standard way of determining which deaths are notable and which ones aren't. It would be more accurate to say that these data tally the number of deaths the mainstream news media deemed worthy enough to mention. And since online celebrity death reports typically generate large numbers of clicks and page views (which explains the prevalence of Internet death hoaxes), one explanation for the seeming uptick in celebrity deaths might be that online publications are simply publicizing more of them in order to attract viewers.

Dan Evon is a former writer for Snopes.

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