Wright ‘01 vs. Wright ‘08.

I had a little excess energy available tonight while watching Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s appearance on Bill Moyers’ program, so I dumped the transcript of his new statements into Many Eyes and ran it against what the Guardian bills as an “excerpt” of his famous post Sept. 11 sermon.

See anything interesting?

More Many Eyes.

Today we sprung what might be the LAT’s first ever data app plugged directly into the front page. Some new foreclosure numbers came and we were able to quickly turn around the data so users could pop in their zipcode, or drill down and browse around the vast five county area we call “SoCal.”

yep.

Anyway, with a little free time this evening, I ferried the data over to Many Eyes and cooked up a couple data visualizations. They’re too much fun to keep to myself.

First, a visual version of the zipcode search, via ME’s “block histogram.” Try popping in “LA” or “Santa Monica” or 90210. The data isn’t adjusted to account for variations in population, but you can see what a cool spin on the classic search-and-return mechanism this gives you. Not only can you easily learn more about a particular locality, you can — at the same time — see where it falls on the distribution curve.

The second is a bit fancier. It’s a three-dimensional scatterplot charting foreclosure frequency on the Y axis against median household income on the X axis, with the size of the zipcode dots determined by the number of foreclosures per 1000 households (the Z-axis), a number that gives you a nice angle for comparison. Try flipping the Y and Z around, for a fun twist. It gives a quick way to explore the richest and poorest areas hit by the foreclosure boom, and it’s a hell of a lot of fun to mouse around with.

Or at least I think so. What do you think?

Petraeus ‘07 vs. Petraeus ‘08.

Here’s a word cloud I cooked up real quick over at Many Eyes comparing today’s opening statement from Iraq commander General David Petraeus to his previous Congressional visit last September. As Dana Milbank has noted, you’ll find less focus on Al Qaeda this time around, and more mentions for Iran.

Note that this isn’t his entire testimony. Just the opening statements. So, it doesn’t include the many questions he’s fielded.