Google is demonstrating Black excellence yields results this Black History Month — no, literally. 

Simply titled "The Most Searched," the ad debuted during the Grammy Awards last Sunday and featured clips of Beyoncé, LeBron James and Serena Williams. The ad implied the aforementioned were the subjects of the most-searched performance, most-searched athlete and most-searched tennis player respectively.

"Black icons, events and movements that were the most searched within a specific category or field in the U.S.," Shea Jackson McCann, Google creative strategist, said in a blog post.

The ad also featured RuPaul, most-searched drag queen, Kendrick Lamar, the most-searched Pulitzer Prize winner and John Legend, most-searched EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony) winner.

Google search results also indicate the most-searched movement was the Civil Rights Movement. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech was also the most-searched speech.

"Last year, as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day approached, our team had a hunch that his monumental 'I Have A Dream Speech' might be the most searched speech in the United States in Google Trends history," McCann. "It prompted us to analyze 15 years’ worth of U.S. search trends data to find out."

"Sure enough, it was," McCann added.

Referring to the ad as a film, McCann stated that Google is invested in the Black community. The tech giant stated it will be awarding a $3 million from its Google.org foundation to support the NAACP's Afro-Academic, Cultural, Technological and Scientific Olympics (ACT-SO) program. 

"We're connecting Googlers to ACT-SO volunteering opportunities. ACT-SO provides a platform for Black high school students—more than 300,000 to date—to bring their ideas to life and kickstart their journeys to becoming leaders in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM), humanities, business, and the arts," McCann said.

Google has a history of supporting Black causes like donating $11.5 million toward fighting racial bias in the criminal justice system, reports USA Today.

Google also has partnered with HBCUs like Howard University to create a Howard experience on the West Coast called Howard West in the Silicon Valley, as Blavity previously reported.