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Finance Industry Giving Visualized
Wonder just how Wall Street has become so influential on Capitol Hill that it can command the attention of the federal government from the President on down? The answer isn’t only in how gyrations in the stock market may affect the real economy. The answer is revealed by the fact that the finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) industries that collectively are at the center of the current crisis are the single largest sector–by far–of all the major economic and interest groupings that give campaign contributions to federal politicians.
Our friends at the Center for Responsive Politics have been keeping track since 1990, and their data tells a compelling story. What you see is a new way of actually picturing the role of FIRE in relation to all these other sectors, and also in terms of how money from FIRE has tilted to one political party and then the other. You can click on the chart, which was built using Google’s Motion Chart tool, layered on top of a simple spreadsheet, and mouse over the colored circle to drill down on the data. First, we recommend you watch this explanatory screencast by our very own Larry Makinson.
Posted: September 25th, 2008 Tags: Bailout, Center for Responsive Politics, data visualization, Finance, insurance, Real Estate, screencast, Visualization -
March Madness Hits Sunlight
In his spare time (no doubt while watching nonstop basketball this ?weekend), our Creative Director came up with a way to visualize the estimated net worth of the top 16 wealthiest members of Congress.
Posted: March 24th, 2008 Tags: Congressional Net Worth, CRP, data visualization, OpenSecrets.org, personal financial disclosure -
File This Under “Cool”
At Wired magazine, Tim McKeough has pulled together a fascinating and beautiful slide show he titled "Frame that Spam! Data-Crunching Artists Transform the World of Information" where he displays the works of a new crop of data-crunching "artists" who are using data the same way "Picasso applied paint." The artists used blog posts, traffic patterns, government reports digital video, and email to transform "the world of information into mesmerizing abstractions."
These pieces of art and graphic design are amazingly beautiful, but they aren’t just "eye candy," as McKeough writes. The artists used census data, NASA images, and even human emotion samples from the blogosphere to display the information in an interactive and insightful manner. And it’s only the beginning of what the Web 2.0 revolution will do with information as it evolves.
