This is not my original content. This is nearly daily newsletter from the site FiveThirtyEight about fun and interesting stats and figures. You can sign up to get it free in your email from their website:
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Significant Digits
Thursday, Nov. 30, 2017
By Walt Hickey
5 to 6 points
Three new polls out this week show that Roy Moore, the Alabama Senate candidate linked to allegations of child molestation and sexual misconduct, is up 5 to 6 points with just a few weeks to go in the election. [FiveThirtyEight]
9 body parts no longer considered to be from yetis
A study of nine samples — hair and teeth mainly — that were said to be from yetis has shown that most of them were from bears, instead. Only one sample wasn’t — but that was from a dog. Honestly it must have been an impressive canine specimen if the pup was confused with at best an abominable snowman and at worst a dang bear. [The Guardian]
57 percent
That’s the percentage of submitted net-neutrality feedback to the FCC that contained false, duplicate or temporary email addresses, casting doubt on their credibility. Moreover, on 9 different occasions, over 75,000 comments were sent to the FCC all at once. Most of them were highly similar or identical. The seven most-submitted comments made up a whopping 38 percent of submissions, and six of them were anti-net neutrality. Gosh, getting a real inkling that some of those letters may not be bona fide. [Pew Research Center]
15,000 flights
A scheduling error that allowed too many American Airlines pilots to take a late December vacation means that over 15,000 flights in late December do not have sufficient crew to fly. American is trying to pay time and a half to convince pilots to come into work during their vacation so that they don’t have to scrub flights during the holiday travel season. [Bloomberg]
$1.25 billion
Firing Matt Lauer from “Today” after allegations of harassment shakes up the largest franchise in American morning TV. “Today,” “Good Morning America” and “CBS This Morning” brought in $1.25 billion in 2016 in advertising revenue. “Today” is especially big business. It made around $508.8 million in its first two hours alone. [Variety]
$3.1 billion
Electronic Arts botched the rollout of its new game, “Star Wars Battlefront II,” by overloading it with pay-to-play features. This has angered nerds, and Wall Street took notice, sending its stock down 8.5 percent in November through Tuesday. Screwing up a Star Wars game wiped out $3.1 billion in shareholder value, which is frankly impressive, especially given that the whole of Lucasfilm sold to Disney for about $4 billion. [CNBC]
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