This Data Scientist Made a Map of Every Single US Traffic Death In the Last Decade 

This Data Scientist Made a Map of Every Single US Traffic Death In the Last Decade 

Statistics about traffic fatalities don’t always have the power to shock most people. Huge numbers–like 373,377, the number of people who died in traffic between 2004 and 2013, for example–are difficult for our brains to really comprehend.

“Most people have seen the statistics about traffic accidents, [but] it’s hard to understand what those numbers mean in the real world,” the data scientist Max Galka recently told Gizmodo over email. That’s why Galka spent weeks compiling millions of records from the US government’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System to create a comprehensive map of every one of those 373,377 people who have died in traffic since 2003. “The purpose of the map is to show these statistics in terms of real people, some of whom may have died in your very neighborhood,” he says.

It’s an awful map; painful to look at for anyone who has been close to one of those almost half-million people–but Galka hopes it’ll help contextualize how large-scale statistics represent real people in real neighborhoods. The individuals are broken down by age and sex, as well as whether they were a passenger or driver, a pedestrian, a cyclist, and so on.

Seen as a whole, the map tends to follow the logic of the interstate system and clusters of cities, But as you drill down into locality, Galka also created tertiary maps that organize the fatalities into causal categories: Deaths caused by speeding, drinking and driving, or distracted driving. “I tried not to interject too much of my own views, but in my opinion, many, if not most, of these accidents were from preventable causes,” Galka says.

This Data Scientist Made a Map of Every Single US Traffic Death In the Last Decade 

Distracted drivers, highlighted in green.

Just like those statistics that don’t quite hit home with most people, warnings about not drinking, texting, or speeding while driving are repeated again and again in our culture–maybe seeing their real effects on a map will help drive them home. You can explore the interactive here.


Contact the author at kelsey@Gizmodo.com.

via Gizmodo
This Data Scientist Made a Map of Every Single US Traffic Death In the Last Decade 

Here are 10 deleted Star Wars scenes that you probably never saw before

Here are 10 deleted Star Wars scenes that you probably never saw before

Some of these scenes were rightfully axed. Like Luke and Leia about to share a creepy intimate kiss before C-3P0 saves the day by interrupting them. Other scenes should have never been cut. Like the scene showing the Emperor demanding that the second Death Star be fired up to blow up the moon that Han and Leia were on. And other scenes are just fun like Han being Han.

Watch these 10 deleted Star Wars scenes from ScreenRant below.


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Here are 10 deleted Star Wars scenes that you probably never saw before

Watch A Tickle Me Elmo Get Absolutely Blasted With A Jet Engine Just For Fun

Watch A Tickle Me Elmo Get Absolutely Blasted With A Jet Engine Just For Fun

If you had a jet engine strapped to a truck, the first thing you should want to do should be obvious – that’s right, you’d strap a Tickle Me Elmo to a post and shoot it with screaming hot fire.

This is well and truly what the Internet was created for, friends.

There has never been a better use for 2,500 horsepower than this. Even if he does call Elmo by the name “Elmer” a couple of times.


Contact the author at ballaban@jalopnik.com.
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Watch A Tickle Me Elmo Get Absolutely Blasted With A Jet Engine Just For Fun

How champagne is made

How champagne is made

Champagne is really hard to make. There are rules and regulations and specific grapes and soil requirements and is completely region specific and more that goes into each bottle that it’s impressive that even one bottle gets popped. In this video from the Science Channel, we get to see how Bollinger makes its champagne. It marries the old fashioned methods formed over hundreds of years of bubbly creation with impressive modern machinery. Delicious!


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How champagne is made