The Arcade Fire Hypecloud.
If you visit the new link I’ve added to the sidebar, you can play around with a dinky Web toy I made this afternoon. It’s a series of tag clouds that report the words most frequently found in reviews of this year’s indie hype monster, Arcade Fire’s “Neon Bible.” It’s hardly revelatory — and a long toss from scientific — but it can still make for a bit of fun.
If nothing else, it’s clear that the band’s lead singer, Win Butler, is getting more attention that his mates. And a bit interesting, though hardly surprising, that the band’s debut album, Funeral, played pretty high in most reviews.
How about how often “war” makes its way in?
I made the hypecloud using a free application developed by a bright guy named Chirag Mehta. You can check that out here. Mehta has done some cool stuff with it, particularly an excellent cloud that displays the most commonly used words in presidential rhetoric since the founding of America.
Tagsarcade fire, data visualization, humor, music, music criticism, quantitative analysis, rhetoric, web, word cloud














David Buckna wrote:
Thursday, March 15, 2007
A Neon Bible Study [21 Questions and Answers]
By David Buckna
http://www.assistnews.net/Stories/2007/s07030103.htm
Posted on 17-Mar-07 at 6:29 pm | Permalink
bmerkl wrote:
Wow, cool web toy. It is strikingly similar to what we do over at http://www.chainofthoughts.com. I like it because it looks like you use slightly different shades to help delineate words. if you make it to chainofthoughts.com check out the “see the world” feature. It is all just a little html and perl, but effectively does the same thing.
Cheers, brando
Posted on 19-Mar-07 at 7:47 pm | Permalink
bmerkl wrote:
oh and by the way, I forgot to mention that I stumbled upon this mainly because I am a huge fan of the album. So Cheers again, brando
Posted on 19-Mar-07 at 7:53 pm | Permalink