A project for IEEE Pacific Visualization (PacificVis) 2017 Visual Data Storytelling Contest.
Authors: Fei Fang, Wei Zhang (in alphabetical order).
A new kind of "Lipstick Effect" occurred in Asia during the past five years, as more and more Korean drama shows began to lead the trend in lipstick shades, and some even caused certain lipstick shortage. Customers are more willing to buy the lipsticks that appeared on some popular Korean drama shows. We collected all the search results (750 in total) of "Korean drama + Lipstick" at Baidu.com, which is the biggest search engine in China; then scraped the main articles of all these results (about 327,000 words), and calculated the occurrence of each lipstick shade from the collected text dataset. Then we used the data to analysis and visualize the popular lipstick shades, drama shows, cosmetic brands involved in this effect, and finally further proved the effect using Google Trend data.
https://feifang.github.io/New-Lipstick-Effect/
- Collected Dataset: https://github.com/feifang/New-Lipstick-Effect/tree/master/data
- Webpage Template by FREEHTML5.co
- URL Extract Tool: http://www.convertcsv.com/url-extractor.htm
- HTML Tags Remove Tool: http://tool.chinaz.com/htmlfilter
- HTML Main Body Extract Library: python-readability https://github.com/buriy/python-readability
- Chart Library amCharts: http://www.amcharts.com/javascript-charts/
- A Korean TV Show Caused a YSL Lipstick Shortage. Kathleen Hou. http://nymag.com/thecut/2014/04/korean-tv-show-caused-a-ysl-lipstick-shortage.html . April 3, 2014.
- Hit K-drama boosts sales of South Korean products. http://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/entertainment/hit-k-drama-boosts-sales-of-south-korean-products . APR 2, 2016