Visualizing #Sochi2014
From the opening ceremony to the final medal count, #Sochi2014 games will dominate the Twitter conversation. How can you see and interact with millions of Tweets — the athletes, audience and experts tweeting about every win and medal?
We’ve produced some visualizations, each of which can be easily shared online and embedded on websites.
We have visualised the key @TwitterData around the big moments at #Sochi2014
Where in the world is the conversation?
The games are a global phenomenon. This map, which will be updated every day shows exactly where that real-time conversation is taking place.
Click on map to interact with it
It shows countries ranked by numbers of Tweets about the games; Russia and Japan are currently at the top of the list. The map is truly proportional, in that it shows countries ranked by Tweets per million population, so it reflects the relative size of each country.
This link will always take you to the latest map, created with @Datawrapper. It can be embedded by clicking ‘embed this chart’ on the map itself. Alternatively, click the top right-hand corner to view it in fullscreen.
The #Sochi2014 photo grid
Each day, millions of real-time images are shared across Twitter. This photo grid, created by our visualization scientist Nicolas Belmonte, will show a selection of the most-shared images on Twitter every morning.
Click the image to explore the interactive #photogrid
The image defaults to the world’s most-shared images. Click the country buttons and you can see the most-shared images from a selection of countries. Each of these links will always take you to the page for that country:
And if you want to embed it on a website, click ‘embed’ to get the iframe code.
Which athletes follow each other?
Many of the world’s top athletes competing in #Sochi are on Twitter, and often follow each other. This visualisation, created by our staffer Isaac Hepworth, shows the mutual follows of nearly 700 Winter Olympians.
Click image above to explore the big, zoomable version of this image
See how the Australian and UK teams are intertwined, for example, and how the Netherlands team is less connected to other countries.
Tweets from the Opening Ceremony
The conversation about the Olympics isn’t just interesting in the aggregate; individual Tweets offer a great close-up glimpse into Sochi. During today’s opening ceremony, Olympians are sharing their views of the pageantry in Fisht Stadium:
Live updates every day
Follow @TwitterSports and @TwitterData to get the latest content numbers, including top moments, Tweet-per-minute peaks and total Tweet numbers. For the U.S. broadcast of the opening ceremony, follow this list of athletes and celebrities as they tweet along with the broadcast on @NBC.
We’d love to know what you are doing with Twitter data around the Olympics. Tweet us at @TwitterData.