Ever wonder what your neighbors are looking at online? Hmm, maybe we're better off not knowing sometimes.

But if you are actually curious what residents of the state of New York googled about most this year, then you're in luck. An app called Estately used the data to find out what Americans looked up on Google, and how it differed from state to state.

The results may surprise you.

So according to the data collected, information on the Panama Papers was what New Yorkers were searching for most this past year.

The Panama Papers were the biggest data leak in history. The eleven and a half million leaked documents revealed the often underhanded ways the richest and most powerful people around the world used secretive offshore tax havens.

So how about our neighboring states? Looks like people in New Jersey and Connecticut had politics on their minds.

According to the information, the state of New Jersey was very curious about Donald Trump in 2016. Makes sense.

Connecticut? FBI Director James Comey's letter to Congress over Hillary Clinton's emails.

For Pennsylvania, it was golfing legend and native son Arnold Palmer, who died on September 25.

Some states were looking up some pretty odd stories this year.

People in Tennessee seemed to believe some apparent hoax that Mr. T had died. North Dakota wanted to know all about one of Robert de Niro's latest films, Dirty Grandpa.  The state of Missouri seemed ecstatic over McDonald's all day breakfast.

Who knows? Maybe California has it right. The most googled inquiry was whether 2016 was the worst year ever? 

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