#charts/graphs
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commensal-behavior · 11 months ago
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coolnessgraphed · 3 months ago
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meabeck · 8 months ago
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courtingwonder · 2 years ago
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Guide For The Geological Time Periods In Order
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hartteart · 7 months ago
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the shipping chart inside their head must be insane
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ethereal-w0lf · 11 days ago
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@potato-lord-but-not statistic update
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344 drawings, 206 are gay which is a 59.88% chance of their art being gay.
The subcategories are working on being updated too
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facts-i-just-made-up · 1 year ago
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Tier Ranking the Ranking Tiers:
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B is so Amazing!
A is okay but even in last it's not bad, it's just not as good as S.
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processes · 6 months ago
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George Mayerle's "international eye chart"
(positive) ca. 1907.
One of many immigrants to live in early 20th-century San Francisco, Mayerle — an optician originally from Germany — invented this chart which allowed anyone to do an eye test regardless of what language they spoke.
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olenvasynyt · 5 months ago
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@kateprincessofbluewhales made this post about high fae aging and how the older high fae should look like they’re 40s-50s instead of 20-30 and I completely agree and I wanted it show this insane headcanon that I made charts for because I’m crazy lmao. I thought the high fae aging was so confusing and badly written but I really needed to understand it!
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So how I think the High Fae age is this: the child grows at a steady rate that appears the same as how a human ages. So when they are one year old they look like they’re one, when they’re 5 they look like they’re 5, etc until we get to approx. when a high fae puberty starts. Mor got her bleeding late, she got it when she was 16, (as seen by the red dot I wrote her age wrong sorry). I headcanon the average age of puberty starts around 12-13 which is about the same as a human’s.
But when the high fae begins their development, this is when the age in appearance starts a logarithmic growth rate. It comes quickly in the beginning but begins to rapidly decrease as they age. Mor is 16 when she got her first bleeding so she might have appeared a little younger; Rhys (purple mark), was in his thirties when he was fighting in the Human War so he might have appeared 19 or 20.
This time in a high fae’s life is when their magic is developing, and it stops developing when they reach maturity, which is 80 years old. I put a teal mark for Tarquin, which works out because I always saw him to be 20 or in his early twenties. And at 80, their age in appearance evens out to a rate that is almost impossible to notice until you expand it out.
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So that purple mark is Rhys’ age at ~500 years old. And I always pictured him to look like he’s in his late 20’s early 30’s so this steady growth matches up perfectly.
And this also works well with the idea that High fae children are rare. So they are rare because they’re hard to conceive and because they age rapidly compared to the immortal high fae life.
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And if we expand this out further, this growth rate matches up with how I always see Beron, so I always pictured him middle-aged so approximately 50. And with this rate, he would be about 1,500 years old which I think is perfect because I headcanon that Beron was near the same age as Rhys’ father.
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And if we expand this further, we can see Madja and how old I think she could be.
Madja is confusing to me and we know almost nothing about her. But Feyre describes her to be ancient looking: she’s got white hair, she has wrinkles, her hands are wrinkled and knobbly. So in my head, I pictured her looking like she’s about 80 or 90. And with this growth rate, she would be about 4,000 years old. Which makes sense to me.
We don’t know when High fae usually die. They’re immortal, but even this immortality has a limit. Amren said that she was immortal before in her previous form, and she says not immortal like the high fae but Immortal. So Madja might be in a high fae’s elderly stage. And also she’s pretty rare too we haven’t seen another eldery high fae because a high fae usually doesn’t have a safe life that allows them to live this long. They had the war, they have these very competitive lives, they love fighting in battles to the death.
So yeah, that was my very autistic explanation of my very specific headcanon for how the high fae age in ACOTAR lmao
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commensal-behavior · 5 months ago
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coolnessgraphed · 3 months ago
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youkaigakkou-tl · 5 months ago
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Yohaji Character Survey 2024
With the release of the anime and the end of cour 1, I figured I'd do the character survey again! You can see last time's results here, which was in Oct 2022
I'll tally the results in about 2 weeks, before cour 2 starts (Jan 7), but the form will still stay open after that
Since last time, over 2 years ago, this blog's gone from around 100 followers to 600+, and I've made a twitter (which now has more followers than this blog. u guys r still my fave tho <3) so I wanna see if I can get a bigger sample size
Some funny numbers under the cut if you like numbers too
The 2022 poll had 22 responses at the time I tallied the results, but I never closed it and it now has 32 responses
Of which, the most recent responses are from.... THIS MONTH????? WHO ARE YOU PEOPLE WHERE DID U COME FROM
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Takahashi stan who answered this month i respect u so much. me too same tbh
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I don't actually remember how many followers I had at that point, the only milestone I know is 300 because I made this post. I was going to make this same joke for twitter too when i hit 300 there but it jumped from like 300 to 600 in like 2 weeks and I missed my chance lol
But anyway I think it was around 100 because at the time I tallied the results I remember thinking "hey 1/5 of my followers responded! pretty nice ratio!"
Some kinda irrelevant stats: Because I set up google SEO for the wiki, I get to see search trends and stats for it and yohaji in general!
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Impressions (purple) is "how many people see the wiki in their google search results", which roughly equals "how many people are searching yohaji-related keywords" because the wiki is almost always on the first page of results anyway
Clicks (blue) is "how many people clicked on the link to the wiki in google search", or rather "how many people clicked on the miraheze wiki over the fandom one, either because google put it above or ppl already knew its the active one"
(Don't actually know what's going on on the fandom wiki nowadays, I don't check on it regularly, and a few weeks ago fandom staff revoked my admin and removed all the links to the miraheze wiki when they haven't cared for most of the year, presumably because the anime is driving up viewcounts for the fandom wiki too)
So sort of unexpectedly, it's actually trending upwards week by week!
For the spike on Nov 26, I have to assume that's because of one of those tiktoks that blowed up
The most searched character (that brought them to the wiki, at least) after Haruaki is..... RANMARU?????
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After that, it's Ebisu, Miki, Sano and Oota, in that order, all roughly tied in clicks. Massive spike for Ebisu last week and then this week of course
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For a long while pre-anime, 2 of the top queries that showed the wiki were Seiryuu and Suzaku, probably because they snuck into searches for those names from other anime lmao
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ethereal-w0lf · 2 months ago
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Graph of @potato-lord-but-not art so far in 2025.
So far they have posted 161 drawings and 83 of them have been art of gay stuff.
Comic count as one drawing unless different panels fall into different categories, reposts and Reblog are not counted. And the Jarthur buttfuck image was only counted twice
I was gonna also do 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021 but this was a lot of work for a joke. So maybe I’ll update the graph end of the year
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ispyspookymansion · 7 months ago
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this is what i do for fun, basically. bright sessions character chart!! more notes under the cut:
SO each character column is the collective opinion of other characters on that character, character rows are what they think of every other character. i tried to keep it to canon, textual dynamics only. if the squares alternate, the feeling is mixed. some of the other color groups are relationship developments chronologically, or they dont feel strongly enough to have a full four color set. had to simplify some complex stuff for the sake of color coding but it was funnnnn! hoping i didnt miss anything huge and embarrassing but well the character dynamics ARE messy so its possible something slipped by me!
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raointean · 6 months ago
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Silmarillion Survey Essay!
My essay was due last night (submitted it with 6 minutes to spare!) and my professor said I could post it to Tumblr if I wanted to. It's divided into four sections, all marked. The first section is the introduction where I explain the point of the survey, who I studied, and why. The second section is the methods I used to design the survey, get answers, record answers, and control for variables. The third section is results, where I highlight several of the questions I thought would be most stratifying and explain what I actually found (it has graphs!). The fourth section is the discussion where I talk about what I found and what conclusions I drew from that.
I'd love to hear all of your thoughts on the results and my conclusions!
Introduction
            For this project, I looked into age (and length of time in fandom, in one case) affected knowledge and attitudes about fandom language. I investigated several terms and phrases, both from fandom at large and from the Silmarillion fandom specifically. The group I studied was the fandom of The Silmarillion on Tumblr because I am intimately familiar with that internet space (and could therefore phrase the questions in a way that would be understood) and because the majority of Archiveofourown.org (a popular fanfiction website) users are also Tumblr users.
            For the purposes of this paper, I am defining the Silmarillion fandom as a community of practice. The Wenger-Trayner article, “Communities of practice a brief introduction”, defines a community of practice as an entity with three parts: domain, community, and practice. The domain is “an identity defined by a shared domain of interest” (Wenger-Trayner 2). The domain in this case is The Silmarillion. As The Silmarillion is a history book set in a fictional universe, it is incredibly dry at times (there is an entire chapter titled “Of Beleriand and its Realms” which deals mostly with geography) so anyone who reads it by choice is necessarily interested in the work. The second part, community, is made up of “members [that] engage in joint activities and discussions, help each other, and share information” (Wenger-Trayner 2). Most fandoms engage in discourse/discussion, create transformative art (mostly written or visual, but I have seen musical as well) and exchange craft advice to better each other’s creative work, but due to the almost academic nature of the Silmarillion fandom, we exchange background lore knowledge, additions to Tolkien’s conlangs, translations, timelines, and character sheets in addition to the regular fandom activities. Finally, the Silmarillion fandom also has a shared practice, defined as “They develop a shared repertoire of resources: experiences, stories, tools, ways of addressing recurring problems—in short a shared practice” (Wenger-Trayner 2). As mentioned above, the Silmarillion fandom has shared resources (such as tolkiengateway.net, Nerd of the Rings on YouTube, as well as several established “fandom elders” who are happy to answer questions), stories, established characterizations for “only-mentioned-once-in-a-footnote” type characters, settled linguistic debates, and several research-oriented blogs (such as two of my own) that record niche or new knowledge about either Tolkien’s work or the fandom itself. Almost all of the above (with the possible exception of the website and the youtuber previously mentioned) is unpaid hobby work.
            When doing this survey, I expected to find a rather steep difference between older and younger members of fandom regarding their knowledge of fandom terminology. I expected the 18-25 age group to be the most knowledgeable of fandom terms with the under 18 group to be only slightly behind them and the 26-30 group a slightly further way behind the under 18 group. For the groups over 30, I anticipated that the rate of knowledge would sharply decline and that older fans would be unfamiliar with fandom terminology for the most part. I was… incorrect.
Methods
            There are eight questions highlighted in this paper. The first chart (Figure 1.) is the total percentage of answers that amounted to “I don’t know”, filtered by age. The first table (Figure 2.) looks at the people who did not know the term “Isekai” based on whether or not they were native speakers of English or live in Asia (given that “Isekai” is a Japanese word). The second table (Figure 3.) compares the percentage of people who mentioned that the word “angst” is also present in everyday German, categorized by German speakers and non-German speakers. The third table (Figure 4.) examines attitudes towards the anti/pro-ship terms based on age. The second chart (Figure 5.) examines attitudes towards the term “omegaverse” separated by age. The fourth table (Figure 6.) compares groups of people who could define the difference between “peredhel” and “peredhil”, separated by how long they have participated in the fandom surrounding the Silmarillion fandom. The third chart (Figure 7a.) looks at people who understand the phrase “Fëanor did nothing wrong” as a joke, filtered by age. Finally, the fourth chart (Figure 7b.) shows the percentage of people who used the phrase “tongue-in-cheek” in the 31-40 group as opposed to other age groups (that one was not explicitly asked for in the survey; I simply noticed a steep trend while dissecting the results from the “Fëanor did nothing wrong” question).
            I compiled all of these questions (along with several others) in a google form as a three-part survey. The first part was comprised of basic demographic questions, the second of general fandom terms and phrases, and the third of terms and phrases specific to fanfiction of The Silmarillion. The 418 responses were recorded and examined in Google sheets, which I used to filter the demographic information for ease of synthetization.
            The group I examined was people who participate in the Silmarillion fandom on Tumblr. I chose this group because I am familiar with them, because they are the most likely to be aware of these terms (due to the large overlap between Tumblr and Archive Of Our Own), and because fandom language is (to the best of my knowledge) not well studied. I was able to isolate this group by only posting the survey to Tumblr itself. Tumblr posts are only viewable to Tumblr users, so even if someone were to post a link to the post elsewhere, the only people able to access the survey would be Tumblr users. I further attempted to control by including several fandom related and The Silmarillion-specific questions in the demographic portion of the survey. Anyone who completed the demographic portion would have been well aware of the nature of the survey by the end, regardless of how poorly they understood the original survey posting. These measures, of course, did not stop everyone. I had a few respondents who submitted only the demographic portion or the demographic and general fandom portions. Luckily, due to the Google Sheets functions, such responses were relatively easy to filter out.
Results
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(Figure 1. A chart observing, out of all 16,065 answers, how many equate to “I don’t know?” Under 18: 14.24%, 18-25: 5.9%, 26-30: 7.43%, 31-40: 9.17%, 41-50: 13.63%, 51-60: 7.3%, 61-70: 9.7%)
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(Figure 2. A table comparing different categories of people and what percentage of them are unfamiliar with the term “Isekai”; a Japanese term which is most commonly defined as “a trope in which a character somehow travels from the mundane ‘real’ universe into a fictional one.” 23.08% of native English speakers are unfamiliar with the term. 27.07% of non-native English speakers are unfamiliar with the term. 20% of respondents who live in Asia are unfamiliar with the term.)
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(Figure 3. A table comparing different categories who mention that “Angst” (defined in fandom context as “dramatic, serious, and sometimes dark”) is an everyday word in German. 12.73% of German speakers mentioned it. 1.38% of people who either do not speak German, or did not mention it in their language background, mentioned it.)
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(Figure 4. A table comparing the attitudes of different age groups to the terms “anti-ship” and “pro-ship”. These terms are hotly debated in fandom. Those on the anti side of the debate define anti-ship as “being morally against abuse and pedophilia,” and pro-ship as “excusing abuse and pedophilia in fandom.” Those on the pro side of the debate define anti-ship as “puritanical and chronically online people who can’t separate reality and fiction” and pro-ship as “letting people ship whatever they want and separating reality from fiction.” Those under 18 are 4% anti, 4% pro, and 92% neutral. Those from 18-25 are 2.44% anti, 29.27% pro, and 68.29% neutral. Those from 26-30 are 0% anti, 33.67% pro, and 66.33% neutral. Those from 31-40 are 2.2% anti, 26.37% pro, and 71.43% neutral. Those from 41-50 are 0% anti, 46.15% pro, and 53.85% neutral. Those from 51-60 are 12.5% anti, 37.5% anti, and 50% neutral. Those from 61-70 are 0% anti, 50% pro, and 50% neutral (although, admittedly, there are only two respondents in that group.))
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(Figure 5. A chart that shows the rate at which respondents cringed (using phrases such as “please don’t make me define this,” “oh god,” and “Nuh uh. Sorry man. Sweet baby rays good lord.”*) within their responses while defining “Omegaverse” (an erotica subgenre within fandom based on outdated wolfpack dynamics. Very popular, but also very taboo). Under 18: 16%, 18-25: 6.71% 26-30: 7.07%, 31-40: 6.45%, 41-50: 12%, 51-60: 12.5%)
*All real responses I received
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(Figure 6: A chart exploring the differences between who can correctly identify the difference between the terms “peredhel” (half-elf, singular) and “peredhil” (half-elves, plural) based on how long they have been in the fandom. Those who have been in the fandom for less than a year are 31.71% correct and 14.63% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 1-2 years are 71.67% correct and 10% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 3-4 years are 74.44% correct and 7.78% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 5-9 years are 65.93% correct and 9.89% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 10-14 years are 73.85% correct and 12.31% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 15-19 years are 76.92% correct and 11.59% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 20-24 years are 69.57% correct and 13.04% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 25-29 years are 100% correct and 0% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 30-34 years are 75% correct and 0% incorrect. Those who have been in the fandom for 35-39 years are 100% correct and 0% incorrect.)
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(Figure 7a. A chart observing who sees the phrase “Fëanor did nothing wrong as ironic” divided by age. Under 18: 23.53%, 18-25: 35.77%, 26-30: 36.9%, 31-40: 42.67%, 41-50: 22.22%, 51-60: 37.5%)
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(Figure 7b. A chart observing the percentages of age groups who used the phrase “tongue-in-cheek” while answering the above question. 18-25: 1.84%, 26-30: 2.04%, 31-40: 9.78)
Discussion
            Observing these results, I can see that, while there is some level of stratification by age and length of time spent in the fandom, it is not nearly as dramatic as I had expected it to be. These results strongly demonstrate the power of communities of practice. These people, across ages and continents, communicate so often and so deeply, that nearly all terms are understood to the same degree by everyone, and nearly everyone has similar stances on divisive pan-fandom debates.
            Were I to do this study again, or a similar study in the future, I would probably narrow the purview by a lot. I would ask fewer questions (or at least, only ask questions of a single type), compare them against only one demographic question, and sincerely consider making them multiple choice. That being said, I do not regret this survey having short answer questions. There were several definitions of several terms that I never could have come up with in a million years. Synthesizing the short answers may have taken more effort on my part, but I learned a lot about my fandom.
@proship-anti-discussion (ship debate was mentioned)
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dionrevel · 26 days ago
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And posting my In the Loop movies list, I got a few requests for the others. So I'd like to present...
In The Loop Music!!!
Since 2021, I've used this list to help me feel more culturally present and able to hold a conversation about music for more than 3 seconds.
#1 for the OG GOATS.
Starting with the classics like Bach before going into early 20th century artists like Rosetta Tharpe who basically invented modern music. You NEED to know these people in order to spot homages (or plagiarism) in newer songs.
2nd playlist for the Modern Essentials
These are the songs that have somehow reached every part of the planet except under your little rock. Or the artists you've heard of but don't even know where to start!
And the Masterlist
More comprehensive. Background descriptions and includes artists not on the playlist. See where your fav ended up!!
For me, this list has been my social ladder. I've found that even just being AWARE of the zeitgeist automatically puts you at a huge advantage. Even if it's not your style, knowing popular culture gives you a foothold to criticize it intelligently.
@unattended-fire-in-bagging-area @crewncal @caucasianbuttslut @shortergaything @bentothuglife @horton-hears-a-who-cares
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