There’s no better way to celebrate Pi Day than with our Pie Charts of Pies.
Yes! Happy Pi Day to all and sundry.
An illustrated history of the Heimlich Maneuver.
Have you ever seen another infographic that features both Cher and C. Everett Coop? DIDN’T THINK SO.
(Illustrator Larry Buchanan made this to go with our latest short, which features an interview with Dr. Heimlich himself. Yes, he’s still alive.)
Kurt Vonnegut’s classic lecture on the shapes of stories, now in an infographic.
We talk about these Vonnegut graphs all the time at Radiolab, but we usually just scribble them on a coffee-stained napkin. This is much nicer.
Hi world! here comes the very first infographics for our Anatomy of Data blog. Enjoy!
You guys following Anatomy of Data? Looks like some good stuff happening over there.
You know those little things that keep bread bags closed? Well, the internet would like to tell you about them. If you’re not doing anything too important right now, I think you should visit HORG (that’s the Holotypic Occlupanid Research Group) and explore a beautiful, obsessive, hilarious taxonomy of occlupanids.
(ht Metafilter)
The Histomap by John Sparks, 1931, depicts the ebb and flow of world powers from antiquity to today, part of a visual history of the timeline.
Obviously we need this right now. Even better if it were offered in fruit-roll-up form.
The National Post follows up their epic shark-attack graphic with another bloody delight! Keep it up, guys.









