Television Explorer
Below is a visual dashboard summary of broadcast television news coverage of your search using data from the Internet Archive's Television News Archive. While the index is updated every 15 minutes, broadcasts take 24-48 hours to become available for search, so results for the past two days are incomplete. Refresh this page again in 15 minutes to see the most recent updates. Displays work best in Google Chrome.
More Info.
All visualizations are powered by the GDELT Project's TV 2.0 API using data from the Internet Archive's Television News Archive. Technical users will find "export" options on each of the visualizations on this page that allows them to download the underlying CSV/JSON/GeoJSON data for further visualization/analysis and to view the HTML code that allows them to embed each individual visualization on their own web page - the embedded visualization will update each time it is viewed/refreshed to display the most recent data as of 15 minutes prior (though broadcasts take 24-48 hours to become available for search).
Search Details
The displays on this page summarize coverage returned by the following search:
Data Source: Internet Archive Television News Archive
Human Summary: "Trump Hush Money Trial" AND (Station:CNN OR Station:FOXNEWS OR Station:MSNBC)
[Modify Search]
Volume Timeline
The volume timeline below shows the percent of all news programming airtime on each selected station monitored by the Internet Archive over the selected time period that matched your search. It offers a quick visual gauge of how much news attention your search is receiving on each selected station. Only news programming is monitored (commercials and entertainment programs are excluded, though some commercials may slip in). The total monitored airtime of each station in a given day/hour is broken into 15 second intervals and the timeline reports the percent of those 15 second clips that matched your search. A single mention of your keyword in a given 15 second interval will count as the entire 15 second interval, so keep in mind that the results are counted in terms of 15 second intervals.
Move your mouse over the timeline to see the value for a given day/hour. You can also zoom into a particular time period by clicking on the timeline and dragging to the right or left to select that date/time range. The entire Television Explorer display will then refresh to reflect just coverage from that zoomed-in time period. In this way, if you see a large peak in coverage on a particular day, you can zoom in and see what that coverage focused on and where it came from.
Click on the Export button at the top right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV/JSON for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page. Advanced users can use the "View Normalization Graph" option under the Export button to view the total airtime per day/hour monitored from the selected stations by the Internet Archive (note that days with less than 100 clips are automatically excluded from results).
Volume Timeline (Streamgraph)
The volume timeline below shows the matching airtime on each selected station monitored by the Internet Archive over the selected time period that matched your search. It offers a quick visual gauge of how much news attention your search is receiving on each selected station.
The results below are identical to those displayed in the traditional line-based timeline, but the unique visual characteristics of streamlines can make certain kinds of complex patterns more visible. A streamline displays each data series as a stacked area graph centered around the horizonal graph center. Series are stacked on top or under one another, meaning their relative Y axis sizes are what matter, not their absolute values.
Move your mouse over the timeline to see the value for a given day/hour. You can also zoom into a particular time period by clicking on the timeline and dragging to the right or left to select that date/time range. The entire AI Television Explorer display will then refresh to reflect just coverage from that zoomed-in time period. In this way, if you see a large peak in coverage on a particular day, you can zoom in and see what that coverage focused on and where it came from.
Click on the Export button at the top right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV/JSON for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page. Advanced users can use the "View Normalization Graph" option under the Export button to view the total airtime per day/hour monitored from the selected stations by the Internet Archive.
Online News Volume Timeline
The timeline below allows you to compare television news coverage of your query with online news coverage, searching all global English language online news coverage monitored by GDELT over the same time period that matched your query. This allows you to understand differences in the attention paid to different topics by television versus online news.
Station Chart
The station chart below shows what percent of news programming airtime (in 15 second intervals) monitored from each station by the Internet Archive matched your search. This allows you to directly compare how much attention each station is paying to a given topic.
Click on the Export button at the top right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV/JSON for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page.
Show Chart (Estimated)
The show chart below takes the top 500 shows airing coverage that matched your search and returns the top 10 as the percentage their matching airtime made up of the total matching airtime of the top 500 shows. Unlike the other graphs on this page, this yields an approximation rather than exact results, but for most queries should yield results very close to the actual values.
Click on the Export button at the top right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV/JSON for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page.
English WordCloud
The wordcloud below shows the most common words that appeared in the 200 most relevant matching clips (both the matching clip and the clips immediately before and after it).
Use the links at the bottom right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV/JSON for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page.
Top Clips
Below is a brief recap of up to the top 50 most relevant clips matching your search. Click on any clip to view it on the Internet Archive's Television News Archive website.