Interactives are increasingly popular ways to personalize news stories and gather big data on audiences for analysis
Question:
Interactives are increasingly popular ways to personalize news stories and gather big data on audiences for analysis or resale. You probably have a favorite that has moved you, which you can share with others. If not, see, for example, Losing Ground (http://projects.propublica.org/louisiana), a 2014 collaborative environmental journalism interactive project that maps how most of southeastern Louisiana “is losing a football field of land every 48 minutes … due to climate change, drilling and dredging for oil and gas, and levees on the Mississippi River.” Another example is the 2016 Oil and Gas Threat Map, created by Earthworks, Clean Air Task Force, and FracTracker Alliance, with publicly available information, videos, and interviews, showing what they believe is the widespread public health threat caused by methane gas
(http://oilandgasthreatmap.com/threat-map). Also noteworthy, students at UNC Chapel Hill created this website: Coal: A Love Story (http://mj.unc.edu/research/student-work/coal-love-story)
Step by Step Answer:
Environmental Communication And The Public Sphere
ISBN: 9781506363592
5th Edition
Authors: Phaedra C. Pezzullo, Robert Cox