Anna Rosling Rönnlund: See how the rest of the world lives, organized by income
Anna Rosling Rönnlund's personal mission: to make it easy for anyone to understand the world visually. Full bio
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from the rest of the world?
the connection in our head
is that strange, actually.
and the richest on the other,
lives on this street.
are the ones with the same income.
other cultures, other religions.
they belong on a street like this?
that live in the world.
most likely you belong there,
images from the world,
while you're actually atop?
so far, still counting --
take the same set of photos.
or something at the moment,
just beneath it, you can see.
of the families we have visited.
the richer to the right,
as the concept says.
families we have been to so far.
a family in Zimbabwe,
and one in Mexico, for instance.
at the families this way.
if we want to see some certain countries
to see other things.
by front doors, ordered by income.
Ukraine, in these examples, for instance.
the scary images in the media.
of the world income.
the street to the middle,
not feel very at home.
do they feel more at home here?
typical bedroom looks like.
and the United States, for instance.
the home in which this bed stands,
from that family.
for anyone to use.
add more images, of course.
always tries to make me not show,
and that's toilets,
to look at people's toilets,
we have a lot of toilets.
as we're used to, right?
United States, Nepal and so forth,
through categories of imagery,
to understand what people do,
of everyday activities,
a short snippet of tooth-brushing,
is being used in all these places
start using sticks,
to brush their teeth.
and then she's brushing.
end of the street,
you will start using a toothbrush,
a toothbrush with your grandma.
distribution within the US,
in the richer end, the Howards.
in the poorer end, down here.
is we can do instant comparisons
in a green plastic box.
and some of them are plastic,
they have this wooden drawer
the same in other countries.
that it's a stupid thing
about other countries,
a certain way of doing things.
on what income level you have,
comparing across countries.
we have already seen in these countries,
and which one is the US, right?
to the other end of the street,
in China and Nigeria.
a lot in common, do they?
in identical ways.
that we would say we know anything
in China or Nigeria,
it's quite obvious --
on this income level.
through the imagery in Dollar Street.
of things in the poorest group:
different places of the world.
the same in these two places;
whether you're in Asia or in Africa;
pretty much the same experience
a huge group of five billion,
electric light, most likely;
leaking that much;
or Tanzania from this one.
black dogs, floors, soap,
all over the world,
is a very, very strange place.
at the Dollar Street images,
from the other side of the world
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Anna Rosling Rönnlund - Visualizer, lecturerAnna Rosling Rönnlund's personal mission: to make it easy for anyone to understand the world visually.
Why you should listen
Always with the end consumer at heart, Anna Rosling Rönnlund spends her days making sure that Gapminder -- a foundation she co-founded with Hans and Ola Rosling to promote a fact-based Worldview that everyone can understand -- provides the world with useful and meaningful data about the world. Passionate about the visual side of data, she invented the project Dollar Street, where she uses photos as data to show how people really live on different income levels, beyond country stereotypes. Dollar Street explores a lot of items in homes like, for instance, how people brush their teeth.
Anna Rosling Rönnlund | Speaker | TED.com