This report analyzes the TidyTuesday 2018-09-04 release on Fast Food Calories — 515 rows after cleaning and merge. Which chains pack the most calories per item?
Five charts track Calories across time, category, and named entities — trend, leaders, distribution, tiers, and relationships. Where companion files exist in the repo, they are joined before analysis so reception, geography, or metadata columns are not left on the table.
FAST FACTS
DATASET CONTEXT
The source is the TidyTuesday release from 2018-09-04 (R for Data Science community). This working file contains 515 rows and 17 columns after merging all available CSV/XLSX tables in the week folder.
Charts are exported as Plotly JSON with PNG fallbacks. Medians are used for robustness where distributions skew. Index-style fields (row numbers, sequential IDs) are excluded from metric selection.
How to read this report: start with the chart caption, then ask what the metric actually means, what a non-expert should notice first, and what an expert would challenge in the source. The goal is not to memorize every number; it is to leave with a sharper question than the one you arrived with.
Reader path: if you are new to the topic, treat each chart as a guided tour of one question: who leads, how concentrated the field is, what changes over time, and where the outliers sit. If you already know the domain, use the same charts as a challenge: check whether the metric is the right proxy, whether the source omits an important population, and whether the headline survives the limitations section.
CHART 1 — BREAKDOWN
20 piece Buttermilk Crispy Chicken Tenders leads at 2,430; 10 piece Buttermilk Crispy Chicken Tenders anchors the low end at 1,210.
Grouping by item exposes how the metric varies across the catalog's major entities.
CHART 2 — LEADERS
20 piece Buttermilk Crispy Chicken Tenders leads at 2,430 — 1,315 marks the median among the top dozen.
Head-of-field concentration is where quality, scale, or brand visibly separates from the pack.
CHART 3 — DISTRIBUTION
Category boxes reveal whether calories consensus is shared or contested across tiers.
Wide whiskers flag segments where outliers — not averages — drive reputation.
CHART 4 — GAP ANALYSIS
Sonic sits 80.0 above the median; Chick Fil-A trails by 100.
Diverging from the median exposes which tiers over- or under-perform — not just who ranks first.
SUPPLEMENT — RELATIONSHIP
Joint plot of calories and total fat surfaces clusters the averages erase.
Bubble size tracks repeat presence — outliers are archetypes, not noise.
LIMITATIONS
Community-cleaned TidyTuesday snapshots are not live APIs. Missing values, spelling variants, and week-of-export coverage limits apply. Merged tables may fan out or duplicate rows when join keys are imperfect.
Findings describe the file on hand — treat them as structural signals about Fast Food Calories, not exhaustive truth about the full domain.
CONCLUSION
Read as a teaching map, Fast Food Calories shows why one metric is rarely enough: leaders, tails, trends, and relationships each answer a different question about calories.
The best reading is modest: use the chart to sharpen the question, then check the source and limits before turning it into a claim.
REFERENCES
Data Science Learning Community. (2018). TidyTuesday: Fast Food Calories. https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rfordatascience/tidytuesday/main/data/2018/2018-09-04/fastfood_calories.csv
EDITOR'S NOTE
Artometrics data report from the TidyTuesday research pipeline. Charts and aggregates are reproducible from the embedded exhibits and public source files.
