Friday, January 29, 2010

Corporate Candidates

Think Progress

Murray Hill, a PR firm in Maryland, is planning to run a satirical campaign for congress as a response to the recent Supreme Court decision. Their argument is that if a corporation can be considered an entity, then they should be allowed to run for public office. They will be running in the Republican primary in Maryland's 8th district. So Robert, move back to Bethesda so you can vote for them.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Global Population Decline

I got really interested in population decline while in East Germany, so I've been doing some research into causes and patterns. I had a file on my computer that included population estimates for 122 countries since 1950, so I've been doing some estimates on future population change. The current shift in population is a surprisingly global phenomenon. Half the countries in my sample will peak in population prior to 2060, and they represent a huge variety a nations, not just industrialized western nations.

I did notice a few patterns in doing this project. The current wave of decline started in eastern Europe, beginning with East Germany. Decline in East Germany was accelerated by the loss of the younger population who fled to West Germany prior to the Berlin Wall's construction. Later, Hungary started to decline with the rest of eastern Europe soon to follow after the fall of Communism.

I originally used a model that incorporated all the years from 1950 to 2008 (59-year model), but I noticed there was a major shift around 1989. Most of this can be attributed to the fall of Communism, but there were a number of nations that showed this shift that had nothing to do with Communism. Using just the years from 1989 to 2008 (20 year model), I found a huge change in my numbers, showing there has been a definite deceleration in population growth in recent years. Many countries that showed continuous growth in the future using the 59-year model showed eventual decline using the 20-year model.

Only a handful of countries buck this trend: Denmark, France, Iceland, Netherlands, Spain, United Kingdom, and New Zealand. Using the 20-year model, all these countries either show continuous future growth or at least a delay as to when they will reach peak population. They are also all industrialized countries. The reasons as to why this reversal has happened is likely different for each one, but it is probably related to increased immigration or policies that encourage more children. These examples show that not all countries at destined to decline once they industrialize.

I made a table of all the countries that already have peaked or, according to my estimates, will peak by 2100. They include 72 out of the 122 countries in my sample. The dates beyond 2020 are probably way off as anything can happen. Most signs point to the fact that population growth is decelerating faster than most models predict, but a few countries might be able to delay it. All countries listed at peaking in 2010 are countries that the 20-year model predicted should have already peaked, but haven't.

1968 - East Germany
1981 - Hungary
1988 - Armenia
1989 - Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Trinidad and Tobago
1990 - Georgia, Romania
1991 - Lithuania
1992 - Kazakhstan
1993 - Belarus, Moldova, Ukraine
1994 - Croatia, Czech Republic
1995 - Russia
1998 - Poland
2001 - Zimbabwe
2003 - Slovenia
2005 - Germany, Japan
2007 - Italy
2010 - Austria, Greece, Iran, Macedonia, Slovakia, Sweden
2011 - Finland
2012 - Cyprus
2013 - South Korea, St. Lucia
2014 - Malta
2015 - Belgium
2016 - Taiwan
2018 - China
2019 - Uzbekistan
2021 - Albania
2022 - Thailand
2023 - Azerbaijan, Cambodia, South Africa
2027 - Tunisia
2028 - Switzerland, Singapore, Vietnam
2029 - Canada, Mozambique
2031 - Algeria
2034 - Bahrain, Israel
2037 - Ecuador
2039 - Chile
2041 - Turkey
2045 - Mexico
2052 - Zambia
2055 - Jordan
2056 - Venezuela
2058 - Peru
2059 - United States
2063 - Norway, Uruguay
2069 - Costa Rica, India
2070 - Myanmar, Saudi Arabia
2071 - Bolivia
2076 - Serbia, Montenegro (combined)
2094 - Cote d'Ivoire
2096 - Argentina

Monday, January 25, 2010

Recording Critique

I finally got some mics set up and started recording. I recorded one of my songs and decided and after hearing, I thought it needed a change. So I have two recordings of the same song and was wondering which one people thought was better. The only change is that one is in the key of Bb and the other is C.

Slow Down Version One
Slow Down Version A

Leave a comment here or on YouTube as to which you think is better or if there's something I could do to make either better.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Movie Distributions

NY Times

The NY Times put together a fantastic map of Netflix rental patterns. It shows the popularity of certain movies by zip code in twelve major cities. What I find fascinating are the patterns that show up and how they match up. From this I came up with four categories of movies. Let me know if you find any more patterns.

Elitist films: Films popular in areas that tend to be seen as trendsetting or fashionable. The demographics of these areas tend to be young, educated, liberal, and white. Examples: The Wrestler, Milk, Rachel Getting Married

Proletariat films: Films most popular in poorer areas. These tend to be action films or films about minorities. Examples: Transformers, Lakeview Terrace, G.I.Joe

Bourgeoisie films: These films are hard to distinguish from Elitist films, but there are a few that stand out. The ones that stand out are generally romantic comedies popular in wealthier areas with older populations. Examples: Mamma Mia!, Last Chance Harvey, Australia

Everyman films: I also like to call these "fleeing the center films" as they are films that equally popular everywhere except in Elitist areas. Examples: Seven Pounds, Body of Lies, State of Play

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Elections of the Decade

World Elections

The World Elections blog has made a listing of the most influential and most interesting elections of the past decade. I definitely think it's worth a look.

Monday, January 04, 2010

And so it begins

Youtube

Albania has decided to ring in the New Year by being the first country to select its Eurovision entry. This is our first glimpse into things to come in 2010.