Hello! Welcome to our first newsletter on a new email service called Buttondown! We will no longer be emailing from Substack, so you'll be unsubscribed from there.
For the uninitiated, "shipping" is the act of creating a romantic pairing between two people or characters who may not already be romantically involved—a truly unique internet phenomena and a predominate theme in fan fiction.
Using 11 years of data from Archive of Our Own (AO3)—one of the world's largest fanfic sites and compiled by centreoftheselights—we set out to find who gets shipped.
Just like fanfic, this project is told in chapters: 1. Slash, 2. Canon, 3. Real Person Fiction.
If you love K-pop (or know someone who is a fan), this survey is for you. We're creating a first-of-its-kind dataset that crowdsources which K-pop groups belong to which generation.
At the end, you can also see how people have answered so far.
For most of baseball history, lineups followed simple rules: speed at the top, sluggers hit 4th, etc. But with the rise of analytics, things are changing.
For example, the leadoff has deprioritized speed and now includes more hitting for power.
The strategy behind constructing a batting lineup has evolved over time, and we've crunched the numbers to see how.
We're constantly scanning Google Maps, and one thing we love finding are unique basketball courts, like this one featuring a mural of Chadwick Boseman.
The stories behind court murals are fascinating, and playing on them must feel special. And that feeling isn't limited to paint: there are courts nestled into mountains and on the harbor of NYC's East River.
The history is beautiful too, if you know where to look. Go to Vernon V. Young Memorial Park in Ardmore, PA, and you can put up a fadeaway and shout "Kobe!", knowing that you're exactly where Kobe Bryant played pick-up in high school.
These images (and their stories) truly feel like they should exist in an art gallery. Except there's 59,507 outdoor courts in the US, and the best way to see them is to pan and zoom on a map.
So on The Pudding, we have a way to drop likes and comments on courts, as well as an easy way to explore satellite imagery by city, state, or even a court's color.
Bop Spotter - Riley Walz has an Android phone, randomly hidden somewhere in the Mission of San Francisco, set to Shazam constantly and logging the songs it records.
A report on the first year of the Pretrial Fairness Act, which eliminated cash bail in Illinois.
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