Citations:buzzstorm

Noun: "an instance or state of intense publicity and/or interest over something"

 * 2000, U. S. News & World Report, Volume 129, Issues 1-8, page 150:
 * "Antimutant" pickets have protested at MTV's Times Square studio and at a tribute to President Clinton. It's all part of a buzzstorm for the X- Men movie, based on the bestselling Marvel comic and opening July 14.
 * 2006, Ron Rapoport, "Let's face it, Bulls' best just isn't good enough", Chicago Sun-Times, 26 April 2006:
 * Keith Hernandez, caught in a buzzstorm over his baseball-is-a-man's-game comment when he saw massage therapist Kelly Calabrese in the Padres' dugout, tried to recover by saying he never had a problem with female reporters.
 * 2011, Chuck Sambuchino, "Agents and Self-Publishing: Why Some Projects Sell and Some Don't", in 2012 Guide to Literary Agents (ed. Chuck Sambuchino), Writer's Digest Books (2011), ISBN 9781599632292, page 87:
 * Awards, accolades, reviews, press and endorsements—anything of significant value—can all help stir the buzzstorm.
 * 2011, Cormac Duffy, "The Duffington Post", The University Observer (University College, Dublin), 4 October 2011:
 * Few other releases this year matched the buzzstorm that was The Weeknd’s debut mixtape House of Balloons.
 * 2012, Kate Egan, The Hunger Games: Official Illustrated Movie Companion, Scholastic (2012), ISBN 9780545422901, page 10:
 * Everyone involved knew the best way to sell the book was to get people to read it. First up were the people in Scholastic's sales, marketing, and publicity departments, who were blown away and started off the buzzstorm.