Google celebrated the 100th birthday of the famous British paleoanthropologist with a Google Doodle on February 6, leading to over 2.7 million views, the highest weekly views of any article to date in 2013.
It was announced this week that the long missing remains of the former King of England, who died in 1485, had been positively identified. Even the article about Shakespeare's play Richard III saw a boost, appearing at #300 on the WP:5000 this week with 124,390 views.)
The Super Bowl XLVIIhalf-time performer. As noted in the Signpost article last week, performing at the Super Bowl half-time show is a guarantee of popularity. Beyonce's article peaked at 110–120 views per second!
The Americandocudrama television series on the Discovery Channel that seeks to portray people who produce (illegal) moonshine in the Appalachian Mountains. Almost 800,000 of these views fell on February 7, coinciding with a new episode, but this spike seems quite large in any event.
Up from 505,963 views last week. The popularity of this article is a bit mystifying, possibly could be influenced by non-human views. Its popularity increased in June 2012 and has stayed that way.
An IndianTamil spy thriller film released on January 25, starring Kamal Haasan. Only down slightly from 555,463 views last week, though in a week with many highly popular articles it drops from #3 to #22 on the Top 25.
That's 14 of the Top 25 related to the Super Bowl this week (assuming you count the Illuminati, who are probably the cause of it.)
Compared to last week, traffic in the Top 25 articles was very high. Last week's #1, Royal Rumble (2013), would only have been #16 this week.
Almosts: Super Bowl related articles also appear below the Top 25, including List of Super Bowl halftime shows (#28, 382,463 views) and Bar Refaeli (#37, 322,017, who appeared in a "controversial" Super Bowl commercial).
This list is derived from the WP:5000 report. It excludes the Wikipedia main page (and "wiki"), non-article pages, and anomalous entries (such as DDoS attacks or likely automated views). One notable removal this week: Ernst Litfaß (919,854 views), with an unexplained massive spike in views from Feb. 1–8. Litfaß (or Litfass) was the German inventor of Advertising columns. Whether the views are the work of a spambot with a sense of humour is unknown. The German Wikipedia version saw no view spike.
The revision of WP:5000 containing the data used to create list: [1]