A BRAND NEW LIFE AROUND THE BEND: Via Forbes, an interactive map you'll enjoy playing with: a visual exploration of 2008 IRS data indicating, on a county-by-county basis,
where Americans are moving to and from. Just don't click on Wayne Co., Michigan (Detroit), because that's depressing.
Wowee, geez: just noticed that once you pull up a county, you can hover your cursor over any destination county and see just how many people came/went, and what the per capita income in each direction was. Whoa.
ReplyDeleteIt's the little things you find; who were the 19 people who moved form Taylor County, TX, to Cook County? An extended family?
ReplyDeleteIt'll be interesting to see these data in a few years time, to trace the effects of the foreclosure crisis.
ReplyDeleteI noticed a few of those sorts of things. A block of people from some county in Montana to Pulaski County (Little Rock), AR. Might be a business moving, too.
ReplyDeleteWhat, no "There's a new girl in town, with a brand new style. She was just passing through, but if things work out she's gonna stay awhile."?
ReplyDeleteWoopsie, the guest was me with newly refreshed browser privacy settings.
ReplyDeleteA slightly different map, but fascinating - the NYT has an interactive map of immigration data since 1880, by county.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/10/us/20090310-immigration-explorer.html
Yep, looks like Traverse City will soon be the largest city in Michigan.
ReplyDeleteWait, where's the part that tells us who, exactly, is the boss?
ReplyDeleteNot to spoil anything, but it's Samantha.
ReplyDeleteAlso 12 people from Benton County, Washington which makes me thinks probs related and do I know them?
ReplyDeleteI always thought it was Mona.
ReplyDeleteIt was so very Mona. Angela didn't get to wear her bigboss pants really until she became Clare Meade.
ReplyDelete