2017-04-25

Graphiq’s new Grammy Awards visualization suite adds 11 visualization templates to our knowledge graph, helping us visualize everything from how many awards Adele won in 2017 to how TV viewership for the Grammys has changed over time. This visualization suite was compiled using data from Grammy.com and Wikipedia.

Grammy Awards visualizations can be accessed via Graphiq Search by searching for:

[#]+ Grammy Awards (example: 58th Grammy Awards)

Grammy Awards TV viewership

{artist} + Grammy Awards (example: Drake Grammy Awards)

Grammy Award

Grammy Awards

Insights on the data from Sam, a Graphiq Knowledge Engineer who focuses on entertainment: Grammy data is highly dependent on the names and spellings of artists. “Simon & Garfunkel” must match with every instance of “Simon and Garfunkel” and similarly, “Jay Z” must match every instance of “Shawn Carter” (Jay Z’s real name). Through careful, intricate, and thorough data transformations, our Grammy data suite accounts for these discrepancies in order to display data as accurately as possible for bands’ and artists’ Grammy awards and nominations.

Some Highlights:

Search Term: 59th Annual Grammy Awards

Search Term: Grammys vs Other Award Shows viewership

Search Term: Drake Grammy Nominations

Search Term: Artists with most Grammy nominations

Stay tuned for more updates and please let us know if you have any questions or feedback by reaching out to us via our live chat on Graphiq Search or by emailing sources@graphiq.com.

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Visualization Update: Grammy Awards was originally published in Graphiq Blog on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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