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Showing posts from May, 2022

The Steve Doig Show

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 Today in Data Journalism class on 5/18/22 we had the pleasure of being joined by data journalist and newly retired journalism professor at ASU, Steve Doig, who has been fundamental in the learning the keys to success while using data journalism. the biggest takeaway I got from Steve was the fact he brought up the Census as being one off the key contributors to his success. In class we've been working with the Census data most often, and connecting Steve's experience and our class work shows a direct line to where our skills we're working on can end up. Another takeaway I got from him that I'm sort of lost on is the secondary skill of mapping. Even listening I'm not too sure what it is or how it's super helpful, but it's definitely on my radar as he said it was the second most helpful tool other than the Census. It was inspiring(might be too cliché) to hear him basically learn data journalism on the fly in the 90's, and if he can do that without being sh...

The Tales of Vingile and Dorathy

 My Grandfather's name is not Vingile, but Virgil. I know it it's him though because of his middle initial E-which stands for Eugene, matches up with the Census' middle initial of E. Plus the odds of there being a Vingile married to a woman named Dorathy are slim to none. The most outrageous information I saw was what the work hours for the last week of work for him was, and it was 85. As a farmer. Farming is no easy task as I've heard many times from my dad about the grueling summers picking onions in Walla Walla, Washington. While Virgil was out in the fields, Dorathy was at home with 0 hours of public work done. It's amazing to see what my Grandfather's work ethic was like back when he was 25. This information could be used in Journalism to compare other farmers in Washington or the comparison between farmers work lives and their wives work lives.