I fully and 100% concur with you. But during the time of the hype, even if you already held the same opinion as you do now, would you have traded against the momentum? My whole point is that it is not worthy and potentially dangerous to let one's rational motivate putting on trading positions against market momentum. It is way better to hold off until after the bubble bursts if you cannot position yourself beforehand with the market due to your own convictions. Look at Chipotle, the hype and stock price move was absurd, it is a frigging fast food burito chain, nothing more, nothing less. Yet the stock kept moving up for years in a straight arrow fashion.
"The Angry Birds Movie has grossed $106.1 million in North America and $235.5 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $341.6 million.Worldwide, it is the second highest-grossing video game film of all-time, behind Warcraft ($430.1 million)" It seems the Finns weren't very good at licensing and shit because Rovio isn't doing well, but apparently some people still care.... Compared to the movie being at least 3 years late, it did surprisingly well...
The explanation lies in peoples' retarded preferences and drive to be relatable through movies others watch, and games others play, clothes others wear. It's not hard to see how this can blow out to absurd proportions for any student of history. The tulip mania still remains one of the world's great lessons. The IT bubble or Web 2.0 or other hypes were nothing compared to the tulip mania.
As I remember from the reading, the tulip thing went on for many years, thus giving the movement credibility in people's minds