More Fun with Maps
Along the same lines as the international stereotype maps and US States by TV and movies, there are several fun US maps floating around out there right now. Sure we can argue with a lot of the data and how they're drawn, but these are just for fun. Yes, I'm a bit of a geography geek and love fun maps.
These maps would lead us to some unusual (and completely unsubstantiated) stereotypes...
Utah is full of very healthy people, who watch a lot of porn and basketball instead of Jeopardy and have the Highest Reported Wellbeing. Must be the green Jell-O they eat...
Illinois wins the prize for being the most average, which they are...pizza lovers of average health level and of average Jeopardy watching, but with the 5th largest GDP, the most robbery and a great interest in Lotto (hmmm...is there a connection?).
Poor Mississippi...growing up 20 years ago in Georgia, which was often ranked 49th in most positive stats and 2nd or 3rd in the bad ones, we often said "Thank goodness for Mississippi!" In its defense, I quite enjoyed the little time I spent in Oxford...great food, art, and bookstores. But the great Mississippi literary tradition is forgotten here, and instead we see the state portrayed as large, pie-eating, churchgoing, football watching, Jeopardy freaks living in a state with the GDP of Bangladesh.
Texas, as usual, is a bit of a contradiction...though it seems to be full of high school dropouts, it has the 2nd largest state economy (on par with Russia's), the most wind power production, and apparently is very well-fed by steak. We could have a whole blog on Texas, of course, and it is a pretty interesting example economically of doing things right. On the educational side, well...TX is kind of a mess right now...but they are doing something right in terms of innovation, business, and jobs. I'm afraid to ask if the autocomplete "Texas Rangers" is for the baseball team, for law enforcement, or for Chuck Norris.
First we have The United States of Shame, showing stats at which each state ranks 50th (or 1st, where it's a negative statistic).
via Neatorama, original and source data at Pleated Jeans
But Ilya Gerna has made a United States of Awesome map to balance out the shame, showing where each state ranks first in something positive.
via Neatorama
And a bit less scientific, the map displaying what Google suggests first to autocomplete when the state name is typed into the search function:
via Strange Maps
One that has been in the news often is the Obesity Map
via CalorieLab
And one that might help explain the Obesity Map, the map of foods representing each state
via EdibleCrafts
The original, interactive version is on The Economist website, and also has one by population. Most shocking to me is that Italy has a bigger economy than Russia. I guess it shouldn't be that suprising, but my guess would have been that all the oil and gas and minerals would have put Russia higher.
via Neatorama
And finally, the map of Jeopardy fans...
via Strange Maps
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