Joe Francica’s article last week on The Media, Mapping and the U.S.Election - Just Plain Boring brought quite a bit of discussion.Leading up to the election, we had heard that some interesting technology was going to be in play at the major TV news networks.Generally speaking, Joe’s sense was that if there was a lot of technology available, why weren’t we seeing it? Here’s a summary of much of the feedback we got at Directions.
Joe
Francica's
article last week on The
Media,
Mapping and the U.S.Election - Just Plain Boring
brought quite a bit of discussion.Leading up to the election, we had
heard that some interesting technology was going to be in play at the
major TV
news networks.Generally speaking, Joe's sense was that if there was a
lot
of technology available, why weren't we seeing it? Here's a summary of
much of
the feedback we got at Directions.
Kris
Goodfellow, Media Industry Manager at
ESRI, wrote in.Basically, Kris reminds us that TV coverage isn't for
GIS
techies, it's for the world at large, and so we need to keep our
expectations
reasonable:
...
Certainly ESRI
could have done more, but what CBS wanted was less detail, more speed.
Keep in
mind that this project was for 20 million everyday people, not 20,000
GIS
professionals.
To
clarify our
contribution, we were only a part of the John Roberts segments
throughout the
night.CBS has its own graphics tools that they used elsewhere.
What
we learned
through this process was that CBS didn't want to overwhelm viewers with
information: no legends, no county boundaries, no cities on a national
map, and
three breaks in our maps.It's understandable under the circumstances.
Our
longest "hit" was 1 minute.Our shortest were about 40 seconds.
Within that time, CBS wanted to show 3-5 different graphics.Viewers
only
really had a couple of seconds to synthesize the information.Most
viewers have
never seen a data driven map on paper, let alone on TV.
Where
we excelled
was in creating the live update maps within a couple of minutes.Never
has CBS
been able to update a 2D map for air showing the national
county-by-county
results in that short a time.Let alone doing it in 3D as we did every
5
minutes throughout the night.
The
2004 elections
were just a stake in the ground.We wanted to make CBS happy.In that,
we
succeeded.Hopefully next time, they are going to want to do more...
To
take a look at ESRI's page on what they did for CBS, click
here.Be sure to look at the fabulous animations!
Paul
Overberg, a database editor at USA TODAY, and the
person behind their election
mapping, wrote in as well.USA TODAY
printed very
good election maps, and also saw a major impact on their web traffic
through
the election:
...Our
traffic report showed great clickthru from the home
front to the map.I think it was fully a third of the unique visitors
who hit
the home front, and about half of those who went to the main writethru.
Our map
link ranked No.4 among links out of blogs on Friday, according to
blogdex.
There's
quite a cottage industry out there churning out
versions of the county-level map, especially by Kerry supporters who
think ours
is too stark, misleading, etc.A couple examples
- BOPnews
with "The Blogging
of the President: 2004"
- Stones
Cry Out
It's
surprising to hear how many people think we're trying to validate
Bush's victory with the way we did the map (dichromatic, no shading, no
cartogram).We heard it last time, too.We had good reasons - our
map in print is 17.5 inches wide and 11 deep. What scale is that -
about 1 to 10 million? Big enough so you can see even small Eastern
counties pretty well.And big enough so the 2000 map, published as an
inset, is still clear enough to do county-level comparisons.
That
was a big reason why we didn't tint the two colors by margin of victory
or use a cartogram.We rely on the county shapes and sizes to let
everyone find their own spot, and those nearby, and
those around where they used to live, etc.And let the record
show we did the same thing -- in black and white - after the 1992 and
1996 elections.It's all a testament to the power of maps, I guess.
I dusted off the data from 1996, rebuilt it in color and that will probably go online with 2000 and 2004 soon.We probably will also offer it on glossy stock via the Web site.
Your
readers might be interested in the interactive
county-level map put up Wednesday morning by
Ted
Mellnik at
the Charlotte Observer, which I think other Knight-Ridder papers may
have
linked to. He
used ArcIMS, a shapefile and
ASP...
Readers
commented as well (click here
to see the full comments):
Jane Kitson,
WaveFront: ...CBS showed county
level information on over 30 different maps...blacks, hispanics,
elderly, poor,
rich, blue collar, white collar etc....I don't think you saw enough of
their
coverage...but I can see why Dan Rather would have led you to turn over
to
another network...
Jeff
Thurston,
GeoInformatics Magazine: ...Us folks in Europe were waiting
into the
middle of the night for some cool mapping - which never came.
...
Brandon
Plewe,
Brigham Young University: ...Anybody see today's (Thursday)
NY Times? Excellent, excellent series
of maps throughout the election section (too bad they were printed on
newsprint
:-( ).And not just choropleth....Now, where do I get the data? ...
Phillip R.
Cramer,
Cramco Intl:
...We'll never see the county by county voting map on the Triumvirate
media
networks.Thanks to USA TODAY, we see that map of the United States
looks more
like it has a disease than a split in ideals.GOD BLESS "W".Liberals
see RED.
Brian Hines,
Energy Equity: ...Is there a GIS
map available showing Precincts or Counties which use electronic voting
machines by brand (Diebold, ES&S), whether they produce a audit
trail, the
vote tally, and the exit poll tally?
Ben Murphey,
METRO: ...I'm surprised that Mr.
Francica expected GIS analysis from network TV coverage.The networks
tout
"computerized maps and analysis" for the same reason that carnival
freak shows have barkers out front...FCC requirements for public service
aside,
networks will broadcast just about anything that lots of people will
watch.
That's how we got "Surreal World"...Darn capitalism anyway...
Thanks,
everybody, for your comments, and
keep them coming if you've still got something on your mind about
elections and
maps.

