U.S. Poverty Mapped

This week, one of my favorite news sources, The Guardian, released data and an interactive showing U.S. poverty mapped.

According to this data, record numbers of Americans are living in poverty – 46.2 million, according to the latest data from the US Census Bureau. You can see the data visualized on The Guardian’s Data Blog here.

New York City Subway System Comes Alive in HTML5 & Javascript [VIDEO]

I seem to have an obsession with subway visualizations. I’ve done a few visualizations, myself, of DC’s Metro system and I keep finding and sharing others. Here’s a cool motion graphic of the New York Subway:

Conductor: www.mta.me from Alexander Chen on Vimeo.

New York City Subway System Comes Alive in HTML5 & Javascript [VIDEO].

Streaming the Online News Association Conference

This weekend I volunteered to help produce some of the videos covering this year’s Online News Association conference held in my hometown, Washington, D.C.

This basically meant that I helped setup up video equipment and produce live video streaming of sessions of the conference so that people who couldn’t make it to D.C. could experience the sessions as if they were there in real time.  (The next best thing to being there.)

We had about 50 viewers tune in to each livestreamed session during the daytime backend sessions that I covered in the A/B Ballroom on Friday and Saturday.  And all of the videos are archived on livestream and the ONA site now so anyone can catch up on what they missed.

Here’s just a peek at one of the sessions I produced — “Coders are from Mars, Designers are from Venus” with presenters Tyson Evans and Dave Wright:



codersdesigners

Shooting video on the National Mall

It’s been almost three years since I’ve done any filming or video editing for work so it was great to get back into the swing of things yesterday, filming and interviewing passersby on the National Mall. I usually spend most of my time behind a desk… in front of a screen, so I was relieved to get out on such a beautiful Saturday and spend some time re-familiarizing myself with video equipment and my old shooting techniques.

*Most people probably don’t know that I used to be a videographer in college for the student yearbook, La Vie. I haven’t had many opportunities to shoot video since starting as a multimedia designer at Gannett, but I jumped at the chance to join my colleagues downtown yesterday, getting back to both my roots as a videographer and on the ground in my native hometown of Washington, D.C.

There’s something very calming yet exciting about shooting video that I have missed dearly in recent years. It’s truly an art and, in my opinion, the most raw form of journalism there is.

So yesterday was great. I spent about five hours interviewing folks on the Mall with coworkers Maria Fowler and a new addition to our team, Elizabeth Bewley, who just graduated from Yale. Elizabeth and I worked together interviewing a diverse crowd with some really interesting stories and opinions. We got a about three tapes of footage to go back and edit in Final Cut and eventually post to our work-in-progress site on civil rights.

How to prepare for a Hurricane

For the second year in a row, we decided to share a widget for all hurricane-prone news sites to help readers with hurricane preparation.

Our Florida papers had some excellent videos on hurricane prep, and we also had some great articles and news to share so we decided to build an all-inclusive widget. This widget features our new network’s hurricane prep videos on the first tab, helpful articles and guides on the second tab, and latest news and images on the last tab.

Design & Development

I designed and developed the widget in Flash, using Brightcove’s ActionScript 3.0 classes to integrate our news videos with the rest of the content module. The widget also pull’s in latest weather headlines from USA TODAY, and satellite images from the NOAA.

You can interact with the actual widget below: