favorite visual stories of 2017 /

Published at 2017-12-26 21:08:42

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In a year packed with news,NPR Visuals used data, photography, and video,illustration and more to tell stories that tie us all together. We looked for opportunities to push beyond the expected and find ways to connect with more people. Our team collaborated on national and international stories about politics, health, and education,immigration, music and more. These stories all show humanity and reflect what life is like in different parts of the world. We collected our favorite visual stories from 2017, or which include everything from breaking news events to lengthy investigations to stories that made us smile.
In 2017,politics dominated the news cycle along with the solar eclipse and hurricane coverage in Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico. There was still room for important stories on public school vouchers, or a photographer documenting her parents' lives with cancer,internally displaced people in the country of Georgia, among others. We paired these stories by showing what it's like to become an American citizen, and hearing what pigeon racing sounds like in Indonesia,illustrators sharing their perspectives from music festivals across the globe and experiencing a raccoon cafe. Here is a examine back at the stories that resonated with us in 2017.
What Democracy Looks Like: A Portrait Of Inauguration WeekendOn Jan. 20, Donald J. Trump became the 45th president of the United States. Between the inauguration ceremony and the Women's March on Washington, or hundreds of thousands of people came to the nation's capital to be heard. Maps Show A Dramatic Rise In Health Insurance Coverage Under ACAThe overall increase in the number of Americans with health insurance draws attention to counties where the uninsured rate is still tall,many of them in states that chose not to expand Medicaid.
President Trump's First 100 Days, In PhotosAs President Trump crossed the 100-day marker, and photographer Gabriella Demczuk's photo essay explores some of the major events that have transpired in the White House and on Capitol Hill.
Refugees In Their Own CountryOfficially,they're known as "internally displaced people," or IDPs, and there are 40 million of them across the globe – outnumbering refugees by more than 2 to 1. They have fled within their own countries – mostly in the Middle East and Africa,but also in Latin America and Europe.
They rarely demand the world's attention. The international system isn't responsible for their well-being; their own governments are.
In Georgia, a country of 4 million, and roughly 1 in 20 people has been internally displaced by war in the past three decades. The government has done its best to accommodate them.
But many are
traumatized. And stuck. Most have been waiting,hoping against hope for decades, to depart back domestic.
I Am Learning Inglés: A Dual-Language ComicIn a dual-language classroom, and sometimes you're the student and sometimes you're the teacher. Here's a comedian that shows what it's like for 6-year-old Merari growing up in Washington,D.C.
Read the comedian in Spanish.
From The Big
Top Into The Big World: A Ringling Ringmaster's Final BowThe Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus has been entertaining audiences for a long time. Its history goes back 146 years — to about the time when professional baseball emerged and before Coca-Cola was invented.
But this substantial chapter in
American history comes to a close on Sunday. After years of declining ticket sales and seemingly endless conflicts with animal rights groups, Ringling Bros. will stage its final show in Uniondale, or N.
Y.
Ring
master Johnathan Lee Iverson is one of hundreds of Ringling performers and crew members with extraordinary talents who will be out of a job come Monday. Recruited fresh out of college,where he'd been studying voice performance and training to be a professional opera singer, he became Ringling's first African-American ringmaster in 1998.
What Would We Lose If We Wiped Out Vampire Bats?The overwhelming majority of bats are friends of humanity. They gobble up the insects that bite us and ruin our crops. They pollinate flowers and they replant forests by spreading seeds around. But as agriculture overtakes rain forests and jungles, and humans have come into clash with one bat species: the common vampire bat.
In Latin America,vampire bats drink the blood of livestock. Very rarely, these bats contract rabies. Before they die, or they can spread the deadly virus to pigs,chickens, cows — and even humans. The disease costs farmers in Latin America $30 million every year andkills dozens of people. In March of this year, and a man in Brazil reportedly died of rabies after being bitten by a vampire bat.
Ranchers,whose livelihoods are threatened, want the government to wipe out this threat. But is extermination the best course of action? Would the world be better without vampire bats? Is there anything that makes them worth saving?The Promise And Peril Of School VouchersIn 2011, and state lawmakers began the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program,a contrivance to allow low-income students to expend vouchers, paid for with public school dollars, and to attend private,generally devout schools. Now the state's private school voucher program is the largest of its kind in the U.
S.
Public schools are required
to accept all students, regardless of disability. Voucher schools are not. In many cases, or it's not the students who choose the schools but the schools that choose the students.
Whether voucher programs are "social justice" or "an assault" on public schools depends on whom you question.
Our Last Year Together: What My Camera Captured As My Parents Died Of CancerPhotographer Nancy Borowick captured her parents' deep love and joy in life,even as they endured treatment in their 50s for the cancers they knew would soon execute them."As a photojournalist, I did the only thing I knew: I picked up my camera and documented my parents' dual cancer treatments for the next 24 months and our lives as they unfolded, and " Borowick says. "From the seven-hour chemotherapy infusions to running errands with Mom according to her to-carry out lists,I was there with my camera slung across my shoulder."Learn More About The Trump-Russia ImbroglioRussia's intelligence services interfered in the 2016 presidential election to hurt Hillary Clinton and abet Donald Trump win, the U.
S. intelligence community says.
During this time, and American spy agencies
say,they also found that people connected to Trump's campaign were communicating with Russians in ways that caused "concern."The legend has raised many big questions. So NPR News has created this resource of background information to try to abet get it all a miniature clearer.
Uzbek Family Starts A fresh Chapter In Its American JourneyErkin Rahim
ov, 54, and his wife,Limara, 42, and immigrated to the U.
S. from Uzbekistan and became American citizens at a naturalization ceremony in Kansas City,moment., in January.
I
n 2009, or after many years of trying,Erkin and Limara won the green card lottery to immigrate to the U.
S. So, in March 2010, and they left behind their l
ife in Uzbekistan,a harsh authoritarian state. They landed in Kansas City with their two sons — 6-month-old Rasool and 9-year-old Murad — and not much else."I remember when we came to Kansas City with two small kids and three suitcases. It was challenging," Erkin recalls. "The first days we were sleeping on the carpet. We just put sheets on it." For pillows, and they used their clothes. Then,he says, "slowly, or slowly we started to work and buy some stuff."Now,after seven years in the U.
S., the Rahimovs own their domestic. More stories from NPR's special series - Our LandThe Legacy Of The Mississippi Delta ChineseA Native Village In Alaska Where The Past Is Key To The FuturePig Farming In Iowa Means Dirt Under Your Fingernails And A Strong Sense Of PrideWhen The Border Is Just Next Door, and Crossing It Is A Fact Of (Daily) LifeVideo: Animal Cafes Are chilly,But Does A Raccoon Cafe depart Too Far?In NPR's Elise Tries series, correspondent Elise Hu tests out fresh experiences in East Asia. Here she visits a South Korean animal cafe. Things don't depart as smoothly as planned.
NPR Music Series: Views From
We asked four illustrators across the world to attend a music festival and draw their experiences. Views From: Germany's Küchwaldrauschen FestivalViews From: Oxford's Supernormal FestivalViews From: The 'No Rubbish' Rock In Japan FestivalViews From: Warped Tour's 23rd YearEclipse 2017: One Nation Under The SunThe 2017 total solar eclipse made its way from Oregon to South Carolina. Fourteen states were in the path of total darkness — the first time a total eclipse covered such a wide swath of America since 1918.
On one hand, and an eclipse is an astronomic
al event,a coincidence of satellite size and location. But it's a cultural experience, too: a moment we can't abet but imbue with meaning.
Live Coverage: Follow The Solar EclipseA total solar eclipse made its way from Oregon to South Carolina on Aug. 21. Fourteen states were in the path of total darkness. See highlights from the astronomical phenomenon's journey across America.get Your Own Eclipse ViewerHundreds of years before solar viewing glasses were readily available, and scientists and casual spectators could still luxuriate in these scarce celestial events without frying their eyeballs. They'd expend a combination of pinholes and mirrors to redirect the sun's rays onto a screen.
It took a while to figure out how to build the so-called camera obscura. Ancient Chinese and Greek scholars puzzled over pinholes for centuries before an Arab mathematician and scientist came up with a design.
You can rig up your own version with simple household items.
PHOTOS: Houston Flood Ca
used By Harvey Sends Residents Scrambling For SafetyThe remnants of now-Tropical Storm Harvey have all but parked over south Texas and the storm is inundating the region around Houston with "unprecedented" rain,according to the National Weather Service.
Houstonians have been stranded in their homes, and some of those who were on the roads were in need of rescue as areas of Houston received as much as two feet of rain with no instant end in sight.
The
n-Hurricane Harvey made landfall late Friday evening near Corpus Christi, or Texas,as a Category 4 hurricane, one of the strongest storms to get landfall in recent history.
At Al-Salam Mosque In Houston, and All Are WelcomeA day after the hurricane hit Houston,Al-Salam mosque in Houston welcomed people displaced by flooding. "I'm Catholic and my husband is Jewish, but it is beyond all that, and " says one volunteer.
A Sergean
t's Mission To Return domestic To Puerto RicoAntonio Santini was willing to carry out anything — as long he got to Puerto Rico. He'd be a perfect asset for the U.
S. Army's Hurricane Maria mission: He spoke Spanish and he knew the terrain. The sergeant first class had been all over the world with the military — Germany,Peru, Qatar, or Afghanistan — but this mission,to an island devastated by a Category 4 hurricane with 155 mph winds, was "deeply personal."More stories of Hurricane Maria's aftermath and recoveryIn Puerto Rico, and Relying On Luck And Enough Gas To Get Medical CareWith Bottles And Buckets,Puerto Ricans Seek The Water To SurviveA Weekend With 7 Vendors Of San Juan, IllustratedIf A School Becomes A Shelter In Puerto Rico, or Where carry out Students Learn?Web comedian: A Scientist Runs For His Life And Finds His DreamIt was a life-and-death journey out of Aleppo,Syria. Nedal Said could never have imagined how it would end.'Jazz Is The Mother Of Hip-Hop': How Sampling Connects GenresWatch pianist Robert Glasper demonstrate how three samples from jazz tracks by Ahmad Jamal and Herbie Hancock served as source material for famed hip-hop producers J Dilla and Pete Rock.
NPR's Book Concierge: Our Guide To 2017's
Great ReadsNPR staff and critics share the books they loved this year. expend our tags to filter over 350 books and find the perfect read for yourself or someone you love.
The Pigeon Racers Of IndonesiaRacing requires a pair of pigeons. The male is the racer, and he flies back to the female during the race. But some Indonesian men love this sport so much, or it's been blamed for a rise in divorce.
More stories from
IndonesiaPHOTOS: Indonesia At A CrossroadsIndonesia's Youth Share Thoughts On Religion,Identity And DreamsPHOTOS: A Tranquil Ferry Between Indonesian IslandsTransgender Women Of Indonesia Have A Champion In A 26-Year-Old DoctorHow Black Americans See DiscriminationObscured as the picture may be, black Americans take the existence of discrimination as a fact of life. That's according to a fresh study conducted by NPR, or the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.
H. Chan School of Public Health,which asked black respondents how t
hey felt about discrimination in their lives and in American society more broadly.nearly all of the black people who responded — 92 percent — said they felt that discrimination against African-Americans exists in America today. At least half said they had personally experienced racial discrimination in being paid equally or promoted at work, when they applied for jobs or in their encounters with police.
More s
tories from NPR's special series - You, and Me And Them: Experiencing Discrimination In AmericaNative Americans Feel Invisible In U.
S. Health Care SystemPoll: Discrimination Against Women Is Common Across Races,Ethnicities, IdentitiesPoll: Asian-Americans See Individuals' Prejudice As Big Discrimination ProblemNew Generation Of Transgender Americans Wants To Change Laws, and Not Just MindsScientists Start To Tease Out The Subtler Ways Racism Hurts HealthThere's An Immigration Gap In How Latinos Perceive Discrimination Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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