An illustration by Laila Milevski for ProPublica. Image: ScreenshotIf you have tried to mix cocktails at home lately, you’re not alone. Tired of waiting for bars and restaurants to reopen, more consumers have started buying premium alcohol, according to data published by the Financial Times. Our NodeXL #ddj mapping from March 1 to 7, which tracks the most popular data journalism stories on Twitter, also found an analysis by Bloomberg showing that global food prices have hit their highest level in six years, an explainer of the connection between bats and virus outbreaks by Reuters, an interactive piece on Atlantic currents by The New York Times, and a musical map by The Pudding.
High Spirits
For most of us, going out for a drink may seem like a distant memory. But with bars and restaurants closed as governments try to restrict COVID-19 transmission, many consumers have started bringing premium alcohol into their living rooms. The Financial Times notes that high-end spirits like tequila, vodka, and liqueurs have outperformed the broader alcohol market. Among the reasons: people are mixing their own cocktails at home.
Pandemic shift to premium brands leaves drinks makers in high spirits https://t.co/sSbaK8e5lH pic.twitter.com/RiCvOA7Zfc
— FT Data (@ftdata) March 8, 2021
Soaring Food Prices
Demand from China, vulnerable supply chains, and adverse weather have pushed global food prices to their highest level in six years, according to Bloomberg. But food inflation is affecting countries unevenly. The team’s analysis puts the spotlight on Brazil, Russia, Nigeria, Turkey, and India where factors like inflation and political mismanagement have contributed to basic products becoming much more expensive.
Food prices are skyrocketing in these countries https://t.co/VtSEMhiQvt pic.twitter.com/ScESX4EpdK
— Bloomberg Graphics (@BBGVisualData) March 1, 2021
Bats and Zoonotic Diseases
From the start of the pandemic, scientists have speculated that the coronavirus outbreak began with bats. With the World Health Organization due to report on its findings on the zoonotic origins of the virus, a graphics team at Reuters explored what makes these flying mammals the ideal hosts for viruses. To find out, explore the comprehensive visual explainer.
🦇 As the @WHO reaches its findings on the zoonotic origins of the coronavirus, @jhjanicki and @SimonScarr explain why bats make such ideal hosts for disease-causing viruses https://t.co/GZSsH79laS
Illustrations by @CatherineTai5 1/7 pic.twitter.com/0Q73AHmgX7
— Reuters Science News (@ReutersScience) March 2, 2021
Warning Signs in the Atlantic
New research indicates that Atlantic Ocean currents may be slowing, which could affect the climate around the world. If this were to happen, the weakening of the currents could result in faster sea-level rise, stronger hurricanes, and reduced rainfall in northern Africa. The New York Times published an interactive piece to explain how scientists study currents and why the Gulf Stream is influencing weather patterns on four continents.
Scientists are watching the Gulf Stream closely. Some argue that Atlantic currents are already changing, others that it’s too soon to tell. “It’s not at all predictable how bad things will be,” one oceanographer said.
Read the story from @nytclimate here: https://t.co/jaD7EiphpJ
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 3, 2021
Job Crisis in Tourism Hotspots
Areas with seasonal employment in the UK have been hardest hit by the COVID-19 jobs crisis, according to an analysis by the BBC’s Shared Data Unit. The figures suggest that popular tourism hotspots such as London, Scotland, and parts of Wales are more likely to have furloughed workers. Says one economist: “The pandemic has exposed a number of underlying inequalities in the labor market.”
Tourism hotspots hit hard by Covid-19 jobs crisis https://t.co/BQErC8mMae
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) March 2, 2021
Vaccine Roadblocks
In the US, getting a coronavirus vaccine can be difficult even if you are eligible for a shot. ProPublica has collected and illustrated stories from Americans around the country who have had difficulties trying to reserve appointments or reach vaccination sites. Common challenges include accessibility issues, language barriers, and confusing information.
2/ Accessibility Issues
José Balboa, who is paralyzed on his left side and needs a wheelchair, could make an appointment but struggled to get to a vaccination site. pic.twitter.com/U9r99B9xyI
— ProPublica (@propublica) March 4, 2021
Living on Minimal Wages
In the 1960s, Americans saw the height of the minimum wage’s buying power with the bar at $1.58 an hour, or around $12 an hour in today’s money. Back then, minimum-wage workers paid less for almost every type of living expense, according to an analysis by the Wall Street Journal. The newspaper compared the current cost of various products such as a gallon of gasoline, a dozen eggs, and a monthly mortgage payment to their prices a half-century ago. Overall, the comparison illustrates that today’s minimum wage has less purchasing power.
Working minimum wage has never been ideal, but it used to be more manageable a half-century ago. https://t.co/GFAL75s4JR via @WSJ
— WSJ Graphics (@WSJGraphics) March 5, 2021
Race and Education
US universities are trying to predict how likely their students are to drop out of school based on their race, according to an investigation by The Markup. After reviewing documents obtained through public records requests, the outlet found risk algorithms deeming Black students a “high risk” at a significantly higher rate than their white peers, a practice experts worry could be pushing Black and other minority students into “easier” classes and majors.
Major universities are using race and other variables to predict future student successes, @themarkup has learned.
Black students are regularly labeled a higher risk for failure to graduate than White students. @ToddFeathers reports. https://t.co/bXyuq0M9ds
— The Markup (@themarkup) March 2, 2021
Understand Your Audience
Data has become crucial to news organizations that seek to better understand the preferences of different audiences and, in turn, improve their relationship with them. But journalists often forget that an analysis based on metrics merely results in educated guesses about what their readers need. And these educated guesses often don’t come close to reality. In this article for Slate, Jacob Nelson explains that newsrooms should use data to find out not just how their audiences behave, but why.
"Audience metrics show journalists how people behave, but not why. Journalists therefore use these data, which reflect what audiences do, to make educated guesses about what they want," writes @jnelz from @Cronkite_ASU https://t.co/RdBgPuUENw
— Reuters Institute (@risj_oxford) March 5, 2021
Top Songs Around the World
Wondering what was the most popular song in your country in February? What about the favorite tune of people living in Latvia or Uruguay? Check out this musical map of the world by The Pudding. By scrolling around the graphic, you can stream the top songs in each place, and find out which ones dominate across the globe.
Our new map of music borders is live, depicting the geographic shifts in the top song in 3,000 cities for February 2021. https://t.co/TbUsugXKRW
— The Pudding (@puddingviz) March 1, 2021
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.
Peter Georgiev is GIJN’s social media and engagement editor. Previously, he was part of NBC News’ investigative unit in New York. He also worked as a correspondent for Bulgarian National Television and his reporting has been published by The Guardian, Deutsche Welle, and other international outlets.