Thursday, March 16, 2023

Landmark: 200,000 Pageviews!

 

A few weeks ago I noticed that the counter in the right column of my BirdsEyeViews blog was creepiing toward the 200,000 mark. I figured I would do a short post like this as I did in April 2017 when it hit 100,000. 

Well, a couple days ago during a class I was teaching (my feature writing class for a travel/destination piece assignment- I was showing a few of my travel posts) I was surprised to see the counter had suddenly surpassed 200K. Later, checking Blogger's "stats" feature I found out what happened. 


I'm calling it the Murdaugh Effect. For six weeks Alex Murdaugh was on trial in Walterboro, S.C. for the murders of his wife Maggie and son Paul at their vast Moselle hunting property that straddled Colleton and Hampton counties. 

On this blog in December 2021 I wrote a post titled "The Murdaughs of Magnolia Cemetery." I didn't really promote it that much after the cemetery's superintendent asked me not to share it on social media, which I took to mean Facebook and other platforms, particularly the popular Facebook site "Charleston History Before 1945." So I just put it on my blog and that was about it. 

Well, as you see in the graph above in March many people somehow, some way came across my "Murdaughs of Magnolia Cemetery" research. The graph shows a peak on March 3 with 1,090 pageviews of the post. The 6,740 figure represents the number of overall page views of my blog for the past one month period. 

As I look at the statistics today, March 16, the number of pageviews of this post since Dec. 10, 2021 is 5,771. 

What are pageviews, you ask? According to Google Analytics, a pageview (or pageview hit, or page tracking hit) is an instance of a page being loaded (or being reloaded) in a browser. Pageviews is a metric defined as the total number of pages viewed. 

What a splashy way to hit this landmark 200,000 figure. But, alas, it is so sad what happened to Maggie and Paul Murdaugh on June 7, 2021. The Walterboro jury did convict Alex of their murders and Judge Clifton Newman sentenced him to consecutive life sentences. Alex still faces some 100 financial crimes. State prosecutors have said they do plan to pursue these cases. 

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