CensusAmericans by Jia Zhang
https://twitter.com/censusamericans
Explained here: http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/introducing-censusamericans-a-twitter-bot-for-america/
"I get to work around 6:25pm. I work in cement, concrete, lime, and gypsum products. I carpool with another person. I got married in 2003. "
— censusAmericans (@censusAmericans) January 19, 2016
I served in WWII. I got married in 1946. I used to be on active duty. I am married.
— censusAmericans (@censusAmericans) January 19, 2016
I got married in 1946. I started but didn't finish college. I am married. I have never served in the military.
— censusAmericans (@censusAmericans) January 19, 2016
I only worked around 3 months last year. I work for the federal government. I don't have health insurance. I have never been married.
— censusAmericans (@censusAmericans) January 19, 2016
I only worked around 3 months last year. I was widowed. I served during the Vietnam and Korean Era. I used to be on active duty.
— censusAmericans (@censusAmericans) January 18, 2016
This bot generates mini-biographies from American Census data. What I like most about this bot is how it manages to express an enormous set of data in a bizarrely unique way both detached and personal. The tweets, limited to 140 characters, follow a strict pattern and have most of the personality that could be communicated by the writing style stripped out. To some degree, it seems overly reductionist and belittling to summarize a person’s life in 140 characters. If I were to see a single tweet, I would think nothing of it, and nothing of the person it described. Oddly, when I see a long timeline of far more tweets than I could possibly scroll through, with each having a different summary, each tweet regains some individuality and I want to imagine what the other details in that person’s life are like. Because of the shortage of information available to me, my mind wants to latch onto even the most obviously computer-generated of quirks, like in the tweet “I served in WWII. I got married in 1946. I used to be on active duty. I am married.” where I imagine the repeated statement that the person is married being the summarized person’s personality leaking out. Unfortunately, because of the high number of tweets, these computer-generated artifacts tend to repeat very often which diminishes this quality after seeing it a few times.