Online News Comparer
Below is a visual dashboard summary comparing global online news coverage of your search as monitored by GDELT. 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 DOC 2.0 API. Technical users will find "export" options on each of the visualizations on this page that allows them to download the underlying CSV/JSON 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. All comparison visualizations make use of the DOC 2.0 API's JSONP output capability and perform all comparison/merging activity entirely in the browser at display time.
Search Details
The displays on this page summarize coverage returned by the following search:
Data Source: Global Online News Archive
Query #1: ("climate change" OR "global warming" OR "climate strike")
Query #2: (inequality OR wealth OR wealthy OR wealthiest OR rich OR richest)
[Modify Search]
Timeline Merge
The display below merges the volume timeline of each of your searches and displays them on the same combined results timeline, making it easy to compare coverage across topics.
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 Online News Comparer display will then refresh to reflect just coverage from that zoomed-in time period.
Click on the Export button at the top right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page. Note that unlike the other GDELT Summary visualizations, the display below is generated entirely inside your browser on page load.
Timeline Percent
The results timeline for the first keyword is divided by the results timeline for the second keyword, resulting in a percentage/density timeline. Ie, if you choose "clinton context:"email"" as Keywords #1 and "clinton" as Keywords #2, you will get a timeline showing the percent of all clips mentioning Clinton each day that also mentioned her emails.
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 Online News Comparer display will then refresh to reflect just coverage from that zoomed-in time period.
Click on the Export button at the top right of the visualization to save it as an image, download the underlying data as CSV for further statistical analysis or get the code to embed it on your own web page. Note that unlike the other GDELT Summary visualizations, the display below is generated entirely inside your browser on page load.