From the text, it seems Mr. P 'made' the plot (perhaps a student did it for him) after getting the idea from Mr. S-D's work. Mr. S-D got an econ degree out of obsession with the "trends" tool and wrote a book about it too (entitled Everybody Lies). Importantly, the source info reveals what the real search was, which of course raises the following issue...
This is one reason the sketchy labelling of the curves and figure are so bad. The broader description of these curves as searches for "racist jokes", etc. really hides the issue. At the very least, he should have made an attempt to investigate different combinations, A OR B OR C... Apart from the issue of searches left out, there is also the issue of searches wrongly included. The claim is that in rap songs and African-American culture it's always spelled "n***a", which if true would eliminate that particular problem.Mugwump wrote:As I suspected, it is a very porous dataset. Instead of searching for "N***** jokes", people may nowadays search for "non-PC jokes", for "racist jokes", for "black deaths matter" jokes, or other combinations.
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Here is what the "trends" tool gives for "n***** jokes". This should now match Mr. P's Fig 15-2. Does it?