Here are the Winners of Tonight’s Academy Awards – as Predicted by Social Data


The 90th Academy Awards will be announced tonight, and as always, social media will be flooded with real-time updates, predictions and commentary on every aspect – from the films to the fashions and more.

But can social media data predict Oscar winners – and more importantly, can that help you in your pool against your friends?

We’ve been provided with a range of predictions based on mention volume – here’s where the social data suggests the trophies will go this evening.

Best Picture

According to Twitter data, ‘Call Me by Your Name’ leads in Twitter mentions since the nominations announcement.

Does that mean it’s more likely to win? It’s obviously hard to say – mention volume alone doesn’t necessarily influence Academy judges. But then again, mention volume has been cited by various academic studies as the leading factor in predicting election outcomes via tweet.

The popularity of ‘Call Me by Your Name’ is also supported by data from social analytics company Shareablee, which found that the film has seen the most engagement of the nominees on Instagram in particular.

According to Shareablee:

“Overall, Lady Bird, Dunkirk and Call Me By Your Name have the strongest engagement across the three platforms [Facebook, Twitter and Instagram].”

(Shareablee does note, however, that the popularity of ‘Dunkirk’ could be tied to its heavy social media promotion on release, not the film’s popularity. Take from that what you will.)

Sprout Social’s insights also point to ‘Call Me by Your Name’, with the film seeing both the most mentions overall, and the most positive mentions, according to their sentiment tracking data – with ‘The Shape of Water’ coming in second.

Call Me By Your Name

  • Total Mentions: 152,880
  • Positive Mentions: 64,758 
  • Negative Mentions: 18,095

The Shape of Water

  • Total Mentions: 115,578
  • Positive Mentions: 48,039 
  • Negative Mentions: 12,304

Lady Bird

  • Total Mentions: 64,063
  • Positive Mentions: 34,268
  • Negative Mentions: 7,249

The safe bet would seem to be ‘Call Me by Your Name’, but ‘The Shape of Water’ and ‘Lady Bird’ are also in with a shot.

Best Actor

Twitter has also outlined the leaders in the Lead Actor, Lead Actress and Best Supporting Actress categories, based on tweet volume.

To clarify, Daniel Kaluuya (“Get Out”) and Timothee Chalamet (“Call Me by Your Name”) and nominated for Best Actor, Margot Robbie (“I, Tonya”) and Saoirse Ronan (“Lady Bird”) are nominated for Best Actress, and Mary J. Blige (“Mudbound”) is nominated for Best Supporting Actress.

Going on this, you be picking Kaluuya, Ronan and Blige in their respective categories, which all seem like fairly solid bets.

Kaluuya is also backed by Sprout’s insights, leading in mentions and positive mentions over Chalamet, while Sprout’s data also has Robbie beating out Ronan (and Streep) – with almost 5x more total mentions.

Margot Robbie (I, Tonya)

  • Total Mentions: 2,007​
  • Positive Mentions: 593
  • Negative Mentions: 589

Meryl Streep (The Post)

  • Total Mentions: 549​
  • Positive Mentions: 196​
  • Negative Mentions: 183

Saoirse Ronan (Lady Bird)

  • Total Mentions: 404​
  • Positive Mentions: 188​
  • Negative Mentions: 34

 Also, if you’re looking to join in the surrounding tweet conversation this evening, Twitter’s also provided a listing of the most common emojis used in mentions of the nominated films.

It’s been an interesting year for film, and the surrounding social conversation is likely to be as lively as ever tonight. Hopefully these data points will help you demonstrate your superior knowledge of the Hollywood machine. 



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