Submitted by Aggressive-Ad7843 t3_zer0bq in dataisbeautiful
Comments
JoshuaACNewman t1_iz81o6k wrote
Fun, but the line graph implies that it’s continuous data. If you did it for each year you could do it as a high res histogram.
AZ-roadrunner t1_iz841i6 wrote
Pork had a moment in 1990.
AZ-roadrunner t1_iz847v0 wrote
Fun fact: The slogan "The Other White Meat" was introduced in 1987.
madeByMemories t1_iz849vw wrote
Surprising that the y acis is only single digits. I would have expected more references. But movie scripts probably have more generic terms like lunch/dinner instead of specific meats
FederalSlutInspector t1_iz86vjd wrote
Mostly talking about sex I bet. "I'm gonna pork your mom, OP" as an example. And I imagine chicken refers often to people being cowards. For example: "I'm gonna pork your chicken, OP"
OG-Bluntman t1_iz90due wrote
1985: Nobody calls me, “Chicken.”
Extra_Intro_Version t1_iz9472j wrote
“Say, I smell bacon, does anyone else smell bacon?” Wayne’s World
Aggressive-Ad7843 OP t1_izaij9f wrote
The frequency number isn't the word count, it's the target word count divided by the total word count. It's all in le-5 space. There are a lot of data points going into that number.
tbilisicat t1_izbsl2q wrote
What's the target word count?
Aggressive-Ad7843 OP t1_iz81dwm wrote
Source: https://imsdb.com/all-scripts.html
Tools used: Google Colab, Python
I scraped all of the movies scripts from the imsdb website and calculated the word frequency of words such as "pork", "beef", "bacon", "chicken", "steak", etc.