News organizations are pulling out some special efforts for election night. Here’s a handful of the coolest projects we’ve seen.
The WNYC map
“We knew that The New York Times, L.A. Times, The Chicago Tribune — everybody would be doing the red-blue map,” John Keefe, Senior Editor for Data News & Journalism Technology at WNYC, told me Tuesday night. “We thought, what can we offer that would be different?”
The result was this map, which categorizes the vote results by the “community types” designated by the Patchwork Nation project. So at a glance you can see how communities with labels like “military bastions,” “monied ‘burbs,” and “tractor country” are voting.
New York Times’ change vector map
Another unique approach to mapping the vote comes from The New York Times. One of the mapping options it provides is this view of how partisan votes shifted in each county from 2008 to 2012. It’s a novel way to see what’s changing around the edges of Red America and Blue America.
NPR’s Tetris-style dashboard
The NPR dashboard for following election results is great. There’s a blend of information types — the vote count, a visualization of the totals, the live blog of news and the “back channel” Tumblr for entertainment and discussion. But the one feature that really stood out is the Tetris-like falling blocks of electoral votes when each state is called. On Twitter, NPR news app team leader Brian Boyer shared one of the app’s early concept sketches:
How it’s made. twitter.com/brianboyer/sta… — Brian Boyer (@brianboyer) November 7, 2012
Northwestern journalism professor Jeremy Gilbert and student Tyler Fisher paid tribute with a quick browser bookmarklet hack to style the NPR dashboard like an old 8-bit videogame.
In action: Gilbert shared the backstory with me Tuesday night:
On Friday I was on the phone with Brian Boyer, actually one of my first graduate students, talking about sending a Medill undergraduate to NPR for an internship. As we wound up the conversation he mentioned that he was working on NPR’s election center map. He shared a prototype and we started talking about how the icons of the states reminded him of 8-bit video games. We started riffing back and forth and suddenly I had pledged to help make an 8-bit version of the election center.
Over the weekend I worked with one of my current undergraduates, Tyler Fisher, to build on top of the existing NPR app. Tyler made the MIDI version of hail to the chief and together we rebuilt the CSS. I “pixelated” a bunch of the graphics files but mostly it was a matter of typography and imaging how we were going to get our CSS into the hands of users.
The bookmarklet seemed like a great way to deliver the fun experience. It also [allowed] NPR to be as serious as needs to be for most users, but it can be fun and engaging for those that want it.
Aggregating the calls
So many networks, how can anyone keep up with which states have been called? The New York Times steps up with a web app that charts each network’s stance on the outcome of each state election.
Illustrating the calls
Digital video news startup NowThis News is having some fun announcing its calls of each state on Twitter, using ASCII art or illustrations made up of text characters.
Related: Poynter’s Regina McCombs gathers some interesting elections projects in multimedia and mobile || Earlier: News orgs innovate with election coverage
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