How fast is the coronavirus spreading in countries around the world? Our NodeXL #ddj mapping from September 14 to 20 finds data visualization designer Jan Willem Tulp simulating the speed of COVID-19 infections and German television news program ZDF heute mapping how the pandemic traversed the globe. Meanwhile, Thibi Recipes explores tutoring data journalism as if you’re following a cooking recipe, the Financial Times reports on climate extremes, and ICIJ and Buzzfeed bare suspect financial data.
How Fast COVID-19 Spreads
Want to get a glimpse of how fast the coronavirus is spreading by country around the world? Data viz designer Jan Willem Tulp created a cool (albeit scary) simulation project to show the speed of COVID-19 infections, both visually and through sound. The ticker-timer visualizations for the top three most affected countries — United States, India, and Brazil — are especially alarming.
🎉NEW — side project🎉 A simulation to get an intuitive sense of how fast #COVID19 is spreading in each country, see it, and hear it! You can customize the view too! Always loads the latest data from @OurWorldInData https://t.co/CbcYXMybac #dataviz pic.twitter.com/6oX6KorPhd
— Jan Willem Tulp (@JanWillemTulp) September 14, 2020
Japan’s Shrinking Population
The Financial Times took a look at Japan following the resignation of Premier Shinzo Abe, assessing the challenges facing his successor, Yoshihide Suga. One graphic from the story, produced by Chris Campbell, was particularly striking. It shows how Japan’s population has shrunk since the 1950s and how drastically the numbers are projected to ebb in the next eight decades.
This gif of Japan's declining population is frightening https://t.co/oJucnL09dF pic.twitter.com/C9jdBNXpkq
— Josh Spero (@joshspero) September 15, 2020
Data Journalism Recipe
Inspired by the ubiquity of step-by-step cooking recipes, Thibi Recipes, a data and design consultancy based in Southeast Asia, wants to break down the process of data journalism in the same manner. Its first “data journalism recipe” walks journalists through the process of building a so-called scrollytelling map — that shows animated changes over time — using Google Sheets, Tableau, and Webflow.
The concept of Thibi Recipes (https://t.co/Vq6IFrPbZm) is also very interesting: Similar to the meal subscription service Blue Apron, which teaches users to cook gourmet meals, the website (still in beta) provides step-by-step guides for users to create data journalism projects.
— Yaling Jiang (@yaling_jiang) September 18, 2020
Extreme Temps
“Where we really see the clearest and biggest sign of climate change is in extreme temperatures,” Friederike Otto, head of the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford, told the Financial Times. The newspaper visualized anomalies in surface temperatures compared to historical temperatures across the globe, and the results showed that most of the world is warming up.
Animation showing how smoke from the wildfires on the west coast of the US is affecting areas as far away as New York, and even northern Europe
Read @FinancialTimes' @lesliehook's fascinating article https://t.co/qOLZ1JTi8M@QGIS #gistribe #dataviz #ddj pic.twitter.com/4j6Kk135iN
— Steven Bernard (@sdbernard) September 17, 2020
FinCEN Files
Take 110 media partners in 88 countries, led by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and BuzzFeed News. Throw in thousands of leaked US financial intelligence reports, and then mix for 16 months. What do you get? The latest big data leak-infused financial scandal, showing how banks and regulators allowed dirty money to flow unchecked around the globe despite evident red flags. Explore the FinCEN Files data and some of the notorious names linked to the reports, including Paul Manafort and embattled Brazilian firm Odebrecht.
A cast of colorful characters from Kazakhstan to Venezuela and Senegal, explore our Confidential Clients interactive and trace their money as it zips across the world, according to #FinCENFiles documents. #ddj https://t.co/vuByXsygPt
— ICIJ (@ICIJorg) September 20, 2020
Google Search Trends in US Election
Curious what Americans are asking Google’s search engine ahead of the November elections? You can explore their search interests on Google Trends, with filters by state, key political issues, and political party.
We have a site of realtime Trends data around the US #election. All of the charts are embeddable and shareable.https://t.co/nfYDxkDMAT#ddj #dataviz pic.twitter.com/CfoixzrxPN
— GoogleTrends (@GoogleTrends) September 16, 2020
Pop-Up Cycle Paths in Berlin
A court in Berlin this month ordered the city’s authorities to remove eight pop-up bicycle paths that had been introduced during the coronavirus pandemic. The reason? The roads were not dangerous enough for cyclists to even warrant creating bicycle lanes in the first place. However, German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel pointed out that data from its earlier survey showed that the routes in question were not particularly safe. (In German.)
Journalismus wirkt – jetzt auch vor Gericht. Heute hat die @SenUVKBerlin beim Verwaltungsgericht Beschwerde gegen das Urteil eingelegt, laut dem 8 Pop-up-Radwege abzubauen sind. Darin bezieht sie sich u.a. auf Daten aus unserem Projekt #Radmesser. #ddjhttps://t.co/y44XJmzyES
— Hendrik Lehmann (@plateauton) September 16, 2020
Hate Crimes Debate
Paul Krugman, the American economist, journalist and Nobel laureate, tweeted earlier this month that in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the US, “there wasn’t a mass outbreak of anti-Muslim sentiment and violence.” His comment sparked an outrage, and he attempted to explain his tweet by showing that hate crimes against Blacks far outnumbered hate crimes against Muslims, using data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). But data journalists were quick to point out that Krugman’s interpretation of the data was skewed, as it failed to factor in the huge difference in the size of the Black and Muslim populations.
I’m going to do a delayed update on a tweet from 9/11 that sparked a lot of outrage. Before I start, however, let me give you some data from the FBI’s hate crimes database, showing victims of hate crimes by motivation in selected years. https://t.co/GQso0uaFq4 1/ pic.twitter.com/rMFNwEG6UU
— Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) September 13, 2020
Exploring El Salvador’s Conflict
From 1980 to 1992, El Salvador was embroiled in a civil war that ravaged the country and claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people. Morning newspaper El Diario de Hoy compiled a database and created a digital memorial honoring the victims of the conflict. Explore the database by each massacre event or by victim. (In Spanish.)
Faces and voices of the war in #ElSalvador by @EDHNoticias Data Unit #ddj #dataviz #datajornalism https://t.co/u6n9TkuBHh pic.twitter.com/6ZqNOgrK5O
— Lilian A. Martínez (@LAMartinezSV) September 19, 2020
Mapping COVID-19 Across Continents
German television news program ZDF heute mapped how the coronavirus pandemic has traversed the globe over the past eight months. The graphics show how the global health crisis first flared up in Asia, then moved to Europe, onwards to North America, and later to South America, before returning back to Europe. (In German.)
Mehr als 30 Millionen #Corona-Fälle und jeden Tag kommen Hunderttausende dazu. Wie sich die Welt infizierte: #ddj https://t.co/b6jQyaCWQS
— ZDF heute (@ZDFheute) September 18, 2020
Thanks again to Marc Smith and Harald Meier of Connected Action for gathering the links and graphing them. The Top Ten #ddj list is curated weekly.
Eunice Au is GIJN’s program manager. Previously, she was a Malaysia correspondent for Singapore’s The Straits Times, and a journalist at the New Straits Times. She has also written for The Sun, Malaysian Today, and Madam Chair.