Some personal news: After 17 years (and one pandemic) at the NYT, I’m taking a sabbatical to work on a project with
Jonathan Corum’s Tweets
Illustrated traces of #LongCovid in today's
See the online version 👇nytimes.com/interactive/20
Extraordinary graphic summary, by w/
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I have been experiencing exhaustion and brain fog since I got Covid in January 2021.
Trying to figure out what was happening inspired me to write this piece, which visualizes the physical evidence for long Covid.
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Thanks to for adding this gorgeous diagram of 13 intriguing mutations in Omicron’s spike to my recent story nytimes.com/2022/01/24/sci
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Visual journalism often reveals what can’t be seen with the naked eye: the microscopic, gigantic, hidden or historical. This year, we examined virus particles, deep ocean currents and partisan segregation. Here are some standout visual stories from 2021.
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Exceptional and educational #SARSCoV2 graphics on viral biology, aerosols, and variants
nytimes.com/interactive/20 by "assemble 1.3 billion atoms and track all their movements down to less than a millionth of a second" by and team; input
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NASA’s Lucy spacecraft launched last week on a 12-year mission to study the Trojan asteroids. Here’s the winding path it will take. nytimes.com/2021/10/16/sci
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Hard to believe it, but the coronavirus vaccine tracker turns one year old today. Then: web.archive.org/web/2020061009 Now: nytimes.com/interactive/20 Some thoughts on looking back at its debut... 1/13
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For months, my colleagues and I have been immersed in the world of archival maps, photographs, city directories, books, newspapers, survivor accts. and census data to recreate what was lost 100 years ago in Greenwood, also known as the “Black Wall Street”. nytimes.com/interactive/20
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Rest in peace, Michael Collins. He captured all of humanity in one photograph, except himself. nyti.ms/3u4NEta
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Go behind the scenes at a Pfizer factory to see how mRNA vaccines are made. Very cool video/graphics piece by @elliotdebruyn nytimes.com/interactive/20
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If the recent news has you wondering about how vaccines from companies such AstraZeneca or Johnson & Johnson work, and I have a guide to nine leading vaccines
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Having trouble telling B.1.1.7 from B1.351? Never fear: here’s the new coronavirus variant and mutation tracker, complete with maps, links, and molecular illustrations. Brought to you by & me nytimes.com/interactive/20
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Portrait of a mutant: & I dive deep into the changes—dangerous and otherwise—in the B.1.1.7 variant nytimes.com/interactive/20
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Visual stories can often express what words alone can't. When information is complex or scarce, reported graphics illuminate.
In 2020, they offered what was essential: scale. How big? How bad? How many? Here’s some of what published.
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Whew—a lot of updates for coronavirus vaccine tracker today, including the first full-out approval of a vaccine from Canada.
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In the print edition of today’s NYTimes, a full-page map of the presidential results so far showing the margin of victory for each candidate, county by county.
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Over the past few months, scientists have gotten a better look at the terrible beauty of the coronavirus. Here’s my feature, with gorgeous images from the scientists and an awesome design by nytimes.com/interactive/20 (This one is from & co.)
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WOW -- the coronavirus has you've never seen it. Stunning work by and on what scientists have been learning about our nemesis
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A simple, lucid explainer on viral load, tests, and symptoms of covid
nytimes.com/interactive/20
by and
Reinforces why Trump's "missing" test results from last week are so important
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The amazing made me an offer I couldn't refuse: to chart out the immune response to the coronavirus... and use the logic to understand why certain treatments work better at certain times.
My latest for
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Latest updates to the treatment tracker are not what I was expecting when we started it… nytimes.com/interactive/20
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(Another) Incredibly informative piece of work by the great
and colleagues.
"Charting a Coronavirus Infection"
nytimes.com/interactive/20
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Today we’ve updated the coronavirus vaccine tracker with a bunch of changes—not just updates on individual projects, but updates to how we follow this fast-moving field. A thread! nytimes.com/interactive/20 [1/10]
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Buenas noches... y, tal como están las cosas, mejor si soñáis con otros mundos...
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Adding the Chandra X-ray Observatory by popular demand. Exploring the Solar System nyti.ms/2P5Ivy5
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Are you ready for a big meet-up on Mars? Three missions are launching to the red planet this summer. Go inside our special issue of Tuesday's Science Times dedicated to the fourth planet from the sun: nyti.ms/3hIwAmd
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Some projects take a few tries to complete. Here’s the original sketch, from 2018
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130 tiny spacecraft to start your week: Exploring the Solar System nyti.ms/2P5Ivy5
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You probably won’t travel to the moon like Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins 51 years ago. So we brought the Apollo 11 mission to you, or at least to your smartphone.
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Big morning for updates to the coronavirus vaccine tracker. In fact, I need a thread! nytimes.com/interactive/20 1/9 #covid19
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So thrilled to debut the coronavirus treatment tracker, a group effort from me + amazing colleagues
We will be updating this regularly in the months to come, in an attempt to wade through the daily deluge.
nytimes.com/interactive/20
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., , , and have developed a cool tracker, so folks can follow the COVID-19 vaccine candidates as they progress through clinical trials. nytimes.com/interactive/20
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