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You’ve no doubt noticed the series of posts linking to The Pudding that landed here in rapid succession. A quick explanation may be in order.
When I linked to how animals sound in various languages, I originally ended it thusly:
Another engrossing piece from the brainy folks at The Pudding.
My plan: To link to my previous entries from The Pudding, but to my utter surprise, those entries did not exist.
Wut?
I double-checked, and sure enough, despite first bookmarking The Pudding in late September 2024—likely after seeing this—and saving several individual stories since, I had indeed neglected to actually share any of those links.
Oops.
The Pudding was new to me, even though they’ve been creating interactive, data- and visualization-driven stories since 2014. I was immediately enamored of their work: unique, engaging stories which start from a place of genuine curiosity and open-mindedness, with a large dollop of data nerdery, and then are presented in novel, compelling, downright fun ways, which help transform mere data into information and knowledge.
Some stories start with a deceptively simple question, a personal observation, or a distinct perspective; others challenge assumptions or resolve personal obsessions; still others aggregate disparate data or simply encourage discovering something new.
In short, The Pudding is perfectly calibrated to flip every one of my nerdy, inquisitive, learning-for-the-sake-of-learning switches. It’s a deeply satisfying, absolutely delightful site, and I’ve spent more hours exploring its rich archives than may be wise to admit.
For those of you who didn’t command-click every inline link above, I’ve collected them here; a Pudding Starter Pack, if you will:
I hope this makes up for not linking to these sooner.
I mentioned above that I first bookmarked The Pudding on September 27, 2024, but that’s not the only link from that day I neglected to share!
Outrageous!
Here’s my dirty little secret: I bookmark way more links than I will ever have time to write about. For every link I share, there are a dozen more I don’t get around to.
In an effort to further assuage my guilt, here is every bookmark from that day:
I did manage to share one story I bookmarked that day—Saving the Internet Archive (published three days later)—plus Member Update #3, exclusively for Workshop+ subscribers.
Regrettably, I’ll always be in a deficit—we’re halfway through March and I’ve already captured 260 bookmarks!
David Mora and Michelle Jia wondered if it’s true that they don’t make love songs like they used to:
The proportion of love songs in the 1960s was 23%. In the 2020s, it’s 12%. The proportion of love songs has almost halved! So, was Boomer Bob right? Are love songs, in fact, dying?
Not quite: we think Boomer Bob has too narrow a view of love. Sure, these lovey-dovey tunes have declined. But what about other songs? What about Adele’s Someone Like You? Or T-Pain’s Buy U a Drank? Or WAP? If we look more closely, we uncover a story that will change how you see love in pop music.
A thoroughly engaging visual and aural exploration of the evolution of the love song. Today’s “love songs” are much more… nuanced.
As with most pieces from The Pudding, the methodology is as interesting as the results, so be sure to read “Nerds: learn about our methods and data” at the end. Of particular interest to me: the use of ChatGPT 4o, with an extensive prompt, to help label songs. I may have more to say about this in the future.
Shirley Wu, a self-described “obsessed” fan of Hamilton, explains her astonishingly deep dive into Lin-Manuel Miranda’s brilliant work:
When I started digging through the lyrics, I was curious about two things: the relationships between the main characters, and the recurring phrases associated with those characters.
So I went through every single line in Hamilton (twice 😱 ) and recorded who sang each line, as well as who that line may have been directed towards. I've noted every phrase that was sung more than once across more than one song, and grouped them into broad themes.
It’s a good thing I didn’t see this visualization a decade ago when I was completely obsessed with this musical, or I wouldn’t have slept for days. As it is, I spent all too much time exploring the themes and relationships and, yes, singing the lyrics. It’s a brilliant and fun way to revisit what is certainly one of my all-time favorite musicals.
On a recent trip to Los Cabos, another tourist imitated the ducks wandering along our path, and from those vocalizations, I guessed he wasn’t a native English speaker. Thanks to this fun and illuminating data visualization (and sonification?) of the onomatopoeia of animal sounds in multiple languages, I now know it was the Korean version of “quack.”