I can’t help but compare “How Y’all” to “ The Scientific 7-Minute Workout,” a straight health article that was the paper’s sixth most-popular article. I’ll repeat: It took a news app only 11 days to “beat” every other story the Times published in 2013. That means that in the 11 days it was online in 2013, it generated more visits than any other piece. ![]() And it did this in a tiny amount of time: The app only came out on December 21, 2013. A news app, a piece of software about the news made by in-house developers, generated more clicks than any article. What interests me most about the list, though, is what's at the number one spot: A news interactive made by Josh Katz and Wilson Andrews called “ How Y’all, Youse, and You Guys Talk.” It was one of many stories that news organizations published about dialect this year- The Atlantic made a video!-all inspired by a North Carolina State University dialect quiz, but it was, for the Times, the most-visited thing. As The Atlantic’s business editor Derek Thompson noted, they include four breaking news articles, one of which was a map three health stories a long narrative about poverty in New York and two celebrity op-eds. The New York Times has released its list of most-visited stories of 2013. "LOOK: These Maps Debating 'Soda' And 'Pop' Have Basically Set The Internet On Fire". "Behind the dialect map interactive: How an intern created The New York Times' most popular piece of content in 2013". " "The Upshot" is the New York Times' replacement for Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight". : CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( link) Speaking American : how y'all, youse, and you guys talk : a visual guide. " A Detailed Map of Who Is Wearing Masks in the U.S."." 2020 N.F.L Playoff Picture for Week 17: Mapping All the Scenarios".Deaths Than Normal Since Covid-19 Struck" " Which Families Will Receive the Most Money From the Stimulus Bill".A Close-Up Picture of Partisan Segregation, Among 180 Million Voters".Katz has continued to contribute articles to "The Upshot, including: The book takes questions from over 350,000 unique survey responses about pronunciation and word choice to map where people live in America depending on how they speak. His book-length extrapolation of the piece, called Speaking American: How Y'all, Youse, and You Guys Talk: A Visual Guide was published three years later. In it Katz employed an algorithm and statistical analyses on data provided by Harvard University researchers. ![]() The article was called "How Y'all, Youse, and You Guys Talk". Katz's best known work came in 2013 when he was an intern at The New York Times when he created the newspaper's most popular piece of content that year. "The Upshot" is a section of The New York Times that combines data visualization and journalistic analysis of news. ![]() He has written numerous articles for The New York Times, where he covers sports, politics, and culture for " The Upshot". Katz studied philosophy and political science at Drew University then obtained his master's degree in statistics from North Carolina State University and then joined The New York Times in 2013. He is perhaps best known for the dialect quiz he created, which was published in the New York Times and which led to him writing the book Speaking American: How Y’all, Youse, and You Guys Talk. Josh Katz is an American journalist and graphics editor at The New York Times.
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