Miami Heat win the social NBA Finals - Lost Remote
Sure, the Dallas Mavericks <a href="http://www.nfljerseys-supply.com/"><strong>NFL shop jerseys</strong></a> beat the Heat in Game 6, but analysis by SocialGuide discovered the Miami Heat would’ve swept in 5 games — that is, if the score was social conversation, not baskets. SocialGuide added up all the social mentions of the teams, players and hashtags across Facebook and Twitter during the NBA Finals. They also measured the “unique” reach — how many people were commenting: 809,000 people made <a href="http://www.nfljerseys-supply.com/"><strong>NFL jerseys china</strong></a> 3.4 million social comments while the games were on the air. On average, each person posted 4.15 comments. In all 6 games, the Heat <a href="http://www.nfljerseys-supply.com/"><strong>MLB jerseys</strong></a> bested the Mavs in comments and reach. And the reason, as sports fans might suspect: “LeBron” was the top trend across the series, beating out the words Mavs, Bosh, #Heat and everything else. And that’s not a good thing for LeBron, as most comments were critical of his performance. After game 6, Twitter broke out into a public <a href="http://galerija.myexit.org/displayimage.php?pos=-1597"><strong>Jerseys FS » Blog Archive » 2010 New Astana Team Cycling Jersey+ ...</strong></a> mocking. But if you believe all PR is good PR, then the Heat handily beat the Mavs in the social finals, thanks to LeBron, winning 1,857,407 to 1,451,922. No related posts.
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