Upon looking at Google Trends data, it's clear that there is a spike in searches in the week of September 20, 2015 when the episode first aired. There is also a large spike in the week of November 2, 2014 when the National Enquirer ran a piece detailing Mr. Vincent's struggle with addiction and his then-recent leg amputation.
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| USA Google Trends for Jan-Michael Vincent, August 2013 to August 2018 |
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Google Trends' public data is indexed to 100 to mask the actual number of searches done for a particular topic, so without special access there is no way of knowing exactly how many curious Rick and Morty fans searched for Jan-Michael Vincent when the episode was released. However, using a quickly-made Python script available on my Github page, we can calculate that on the week the episode came out, search interest for Jan-Michael Vincent was 5.4 times higher than the total average from August 2013 to August 2018. Searches for Jan-Michael Vincent remained over 1 standard deviation above average for 3 weeks after the release of the episode.
Following the Rick and Morty spike, Vincent's search interest has consistently been 54% higher than it was before the National Enquirer spike, and 44% higher than it was after it.
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| Analysis of worldwide Google search interest data by jan-michael_popularity.py |
These trends hold when looking specifically at search interest from Canada and the United States. Canada appears to have seen the largest increase in interest, with searches for Jan-Michael Vincent soaring by 71% after the release of the episode. However, these trends do not exist in Australia, the UK, Mexico, or any other region I've examined – most likely because the show is less popular and less widely aired outside of Canada and the USA.
While it may be hyperbole to say that Rick and Morty single-handedly launched Jan-Michael Vincent from irrelevance back to superstardom, Jan-Michael can live his new life sober, one-legged, and happy that people now care up to 71% more about him than they once did.

