I happened to come across this graph, and I love it so much that I’m sharing it again.
For those who missed it the first time, enjoy.
P.S. Also, every graph should contain the seeds of its own destruction.
I happened to come across this graph, and I love it so much that I’m sharing it again.
For those who missed it the first time, enjoy.
P.S. Also, every graph should contain the seeds of its own destruction.
As of this writing, this post was dropped over sixteen hours ago and there hasn’t been a single comment or query, much less a criticism.
One can agree it’s intriguing and its great that you love it. But wtf is it supposed to be demonstrating that has anything to do with Benford’s Law?
Nicolas:
I posted this graph earlier and there was discussion then, so I’m not really expecting a whole new set of comments. If you follow the first link to get to this graph, and follow the link there to get to the original source, you’ll see the connection to Benford’s law (the red dots and lines on the above plots). If you don’t want to follow the links, that’s fine too.
Actually, this is your third posting of this graph, Andrew. Your link in this post is to the second. The first was https://statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu/2021/09/16/breaking-benfords-law-violations-in-california-hollywood-tv-and-movie-franchises-have-some-splainin-to-do/ .
[Insert clever comment about number of post repetitions following Benford’s law here.]
I guess Biden and the Dems got to these movie franchises, too. Sad!