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Analysis
The total number of IG users following @username on last update.
The total number of IG users that @username was following on last update.
Indicated the number of follower @username has for every user he/she follows.
Indicates how this user uses his/her Instagram account.
The number of photos in @username’s feed. It might not be the same as the total amount of photos posted over time as Instagram offers the option to delete a photo at any time.
The date when @username last posted a photo to his/her feed.
How often does @username usually post a new photo/video.
The average amount of likes a photo by @username gets.
Two users might have an average of 100 likes on their photos. One got 100 likes on every single one of his photos, while the other got 20 in most of them and 2000 in a couple. The first user will have a high consistency while the second one will have a low consistency.
A good consistency is always a good sign.
The average percentage of IG users who follow @username who like his/her photos.
A good engagement rate is a sign of a healthy and responsive community.
The average amount of comments a photo by @username gets.
The average percentage of IG users who follow @username who comment on his/her photos.
Two users might have an average of 10 comments on their photos. One got 10 comments on every single one of his photos, while the other got 2 in most of them and 200 in a couple. The first user will have a high consistency while the second one will have a low consistency.
A low comment consistency can indicate that the average amount of comments might have been affected artificially due to a promotion.
The average percentage of comments a photo gets in relationship to the likes.
popularity
1,385,739
439
mega influencer
@nytimestravel is a mega influencer with 1,385,739 followers.
content
3,468
nan% vs. nan%
560 chars
1
Oct 10
daily
@nytimestravel is quite active, usually publishing every day, with a great use of captions and a good use of hashtags
community engagement
7,776 / 0.56%
66%
131 / 0.00009%
19%
@nytimestravel's community is decently engaged but not very consistent
not good nor bad
very low
low
good
high
very high
History
30 days
90 days
all
date
followers
following
uploads
eng. rate
avg. likes
avg. comments
Oct 13
61
1,385,739
439
3,468
0.56%
7,776
131
Oct 12
617
1,385,678
439
3,468
0.56%
7,765
131
Oct 08
912
1,385,061
439
3,466
0.65%
8,956
152
Oct 04
742
1,384,149
439
3,464
0.66%
9,138
136
Sep 30
484
1,383,407
438
3,460
0.65%
8,963
141
Sep 26
216
1,382,923
438
3,456
0.66%
9,186
151
Sep 25
71
1,382,707
438
3,455
0.61%
8,420
135
Sep 24
26
1,382,778
437
3,454
0.56%
7,682
116
Sep 23
55
1,382,752
437
3,453
0.55%
7,667
123
Sep 20
86
1,382,697
437
3,451
0.58%
7,958
102
Sep 19
68
1,382,783
437
3,450
0.53%
7,308
84
Sep 18
362
1,382,715
437
3,450
0.51%
7,032
82
Sep 17
71
1,382,353
437
3,449
0.54%
7,506
86
Sep 16
155
1,382,282
437
3,449
0.54%
7,412
85
Sep 15
202
1,382,127
437
3,448
0.58%
8,020
86
Sep 14
313
1,382,329
437
3,447
0.61%
8,446
90
date
followers
following
uploads
eng. rate
avg. likes
avg. comments
Sep 13
576
1,382,016
437
3,447
0.58%
7,995
84
Sep 12
313
1,381,440
437
3,446
0.61%
8,451
111
Sep 11
390
1,381,127
437
3,446
0.56%
7,671
101
Sep 10
394
1,380,737
437
3,445
0.54%
7,475
97
Sep 09
684
1,380,343
437
3,444
0.58%
8,033
99
Sep 08
584
1,379,659
437
3,443
0.63%
8,658
100
Sep 07
446
1,379,075
437
3,443
0.62%
8,518
98
Sep 06
586
1,378,629
438
3,442
0.59%
8,102
94
Sep 05
577
1,378,043
438
3,441
0.55%
7,617
83
Sep 04
694
1,377,466
438
3,440
0.52%
7,096
98
Sep 03
442
1,376,772
437
3,439
0.51%
7,035
96
Sep 02
718
1,376,330
437
3,437
0.78%
10,765
160
Sep 01
405
1,375,612
437
3,436
0.79%
10,919
163
Aug 31
312
1,375,207
437
3,435
0.85%
11,665
197
followers vs
Feed
last 12
last 24
last 36
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
Quiz time: Where in the world is this spectacular temple?
đź“·: @poraschaudhary
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
The pandemic and the global travel restrictions introduced in March to slow the virus’s spread have decimated the tourism industry. Nowhere in the United States is the impact more visible than in New York City.
International arrivals to New York are down as much as 93 percent, and the people and businesses of the city’s tourism industry are on the brink.
“I have no fares. There’s no flights coming in, no tourists visiting and there’s less people on the streets,” said Jean Metellus, a 71-year-old Queens resident who has owned his taxi since 1988. “So there’s no business, but we still have to pay the bills.”
Jarring scenes from all around the city lay bare the devastating impact of the absence of tourism, evident in idle pedicab bikers, empty tour buses and shuttered restaurants in once-crowded sites like Times Square and Grand Central Station.Â
“Before all this, I couldn’t count the number of customers I’d have in a day,” said Ossama Elsayed, a 43-year-old hot dog and pretzel vendor who recently moved his cart from Times Square to a new spot on West 46th Street and Broadway. “Today, I’ve had only three customers,” he said.
Tap the link in bio to read the full story by @ceylansnaps and @derek_norman on how the evaporation of tourists in New York City is hurting those whose livelihoods depend on it.
đź“·: @karstenmoran for The New York Times
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
The shopkeepers at Nupi Keithel, a market in India run solely by women, have emerged as activists for a more equitable society.
Collectively, around 5,000 of them in the Indian state of constitute one of the largest markets run by women in all of Asia. Trishna Mohanty, a writer and photographer based in Pune, Maharashtra, set out to document those vendors.
“At the age of 16, I found my heroes in a group of disenfranchised women using their voices and bodies as an instrument of change in a conservative society,” writes @darbadartrails. “Ever since, I have been trying to understand how women living in far-flung corners of this country, with little to no privilege, are asserting themselves in a culture that oppresses and subjugates them.” See the full photo essay at the link in our bio.
For the first time, we're turning our list over to you in 2021. 🗺️
52 Places to Go is our yearly guide to the world's most awe-inspiring destinations, and traditionally draws on New York Times editors, reporters and contributors for recommendations. But the coronavirus pandemic has changed global travel in ways we've yet to fully comprehend.
That’s why we’re turning to you for next year’s list, which we are calling 52 Places We Love. 🌎
It's easy: In a few words, tell us about *one place in the world that you love and why.* It can be a popular tourist destination, or a place that’s largely overlooked. If your submission is chosen for our list, you will be contacted by a Times reporter for a phone interview.
👆 Follow the link in bio to submit 👆 and we look forward to publishing your contribution!
We want submissions from people all over the world, so share this callout far and wide!
🎨: @larsleetaru
Quiz time: Where in the world is this storybook scene?
đź“·: @claratumaphotography
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
Apple cider doughnuts, a highway ghost and otter sightings: Six writers in six states reveal their favorite fall drives and hikes, while being mindful of pandemic travel precautions. Tap the link in bio for the full list. 🍎👻
đź“·: @taradonnephoto for The New York Times
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
Where is the best place in the world to see fall colors? 🍂 @calebkenna took this aerial photo over Sudbury, Vermont.
See his full photo essay of stunning drone photography in Vermont as part of series at the link in bio.
Would you dare? A resident of Katayga, a settlement along the Ket River in Western Siberia, bathes in a lake on a day when the temperature dropped to minus 49 degrees Fahrenheit.
Tap the link in bio to see the full photo essay by @emileducke about the isolated communities along the banks of the Ket River.
The founder of @accidentallywesanderson, a popular Instagram account documenting real-life settings that look like frames from the director's movies, has turned the concept into a book.
A lover of the nostalgic and the exotic, Anderson composes tableaus out of Eastern European baroque architecture and candy-box colors (“The Grand Budapest Hotel”), antiquated trains and custom Louis Vuitton luggage (“The Darjeeling Limited”) and retro technology and marine blues (“The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou”). Every shot is framed, propped and scripted to be as pretty as a picture.
Also named “Accidentally Wes Anderson,” the book, which is due out in October, has been blessed by the director himself, who writes in the forward, “The photographs in this book were taken by people I have never met, of places and things I have, almost without exception, never seen — but I must say: I intend to.”
đź—ş Where in the world have you found an @accidentallywesanderson setting?
Link in bio for the full story.Â
📷: Lighthouse, Little Curaçao/Jeffrey Czum; Post office, Wrangell, Alaska/Robin Petravic and Catherine Bailey; Roberts Cottages, Oceanside, Calif./Paul Fuentes; Ascensor da Bica, Lisbon, Portugal/Jack Spicer Adams.
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
Once a vast prison ground for political exiles, the banks of the Ket River in Western Siberia are now home to a range of isolated communities: among them loggers, weather-station attendants and a persecuted religious group called the Old Believers, who found protection in the remoteness. Â
The photographer @emileducke explored the settlements along the Ket River first in the summer of 2016, and returned in 2018 when temperatures held between minus 20 and minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit, turning the river into a snaking, sturdy avenue of ice.
Historically, the region’s isolated location served as the grounds for a prison before and after the Russian Revolution, one that relied on endless miles of emptiness instead of walls or barbed wire. Yet for some of today’s residents along the Ket, @emileducke writes, they had found “the liberty of a life in the wild, away from the rest of the world.”
Tap the link in bio to see more photos by @emileducke from the remote communities of Western Siberia.
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
When Paris goes wild 🌱 @sliceofpai took this photo while on assignment a few years ago in the Marais district. Couldn't you happily set up on that bench with a book all day?
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
Quiz time: Where in the world is this gorgeous view? (Hint: This adventure capital is home to the first commercial bungee-jumping operation.)
đź“·: @markcoote
Apple cider doughnuts, a highway ghost and otter sightings: Six writers in six states reveal their favorite fall drives and hikes, while being mindful of pandemic travel precautions. Tap the link in bio for the full list. 🍎👻
đź“·: @taradonnephoto for The New York Times
hashtags
analysis
This post got
66% more likes
compared to @nytimestravel's average. It uses
100% less hashtags
and its
caption is 51% shorter
12,377
245
Oct 10 2020 GMT15:00
captions
Quiz time: Where in the world is this spectacular temple?
đź“·: @poraschaudhary
hashtags
analysis
This post got
59% more likes
compared to @nytimestravel's average. It uses
100% less hashtags
and its
caption is 86% shorter
10,131
68
Sep 29 2020 GMT19:48
captions
The founder of @accidentallywesanderson, a popular Instagram account documenting real-life settings that look like frames from the director's movies, has turned the concept into a book.
A lover of the nostalgic and the exotic, Anderson composes tableaus out of Eastern European baroque architecture and candy-box colors (“The Grand Budapest Hotel”), antiquated trains and custom Louis Vuitton luggage (“The Darjeeling Limited”) and retro technology and marine blues (“The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou”). Every shot is framed, propped and scripted to be as pretty as a picture.
Also named “Accidentally Wes Anderson,” the book, which is due out in October, has been blessed by the director himself, who writes in the forward, “The photographs in this book were taken by people I have never met, of places and things I have, almost without exception, never seen — but I must say: I intend to.”
đź—ş Where in the world have you found an @accidentallywesanderson setting?
Link in bio for the full story.Â
📷: Lighthouse, Little Curaçao/Jeffrey Czum; Post office, Wrangell, Alaska/Robin Petravic and Catherine Bailey; Roberts Cottages, Oceanside, Calif./Paul Fuentes; Ascensor da Bica, Lisbon, Portugal/Jack Spicer Adams.
hashtags
analysis
This post got
30% more likes
compared to @nytimestravel's average. It uses
100% less hashtags
and its
caption is 123% longer
comments
9,411
634
Oct 03 2020 GMT16:00
captions
Quiz time: Where in the world is this storybook scene?
đź“·: @claratumaphotography
hashtags
analysis
This post got
384% more likes
compared to @nytimestravel's average. It uses
100% less hashtags
and its
caption is 85% shorter
12,377
245
Oct 10 2020 GMT15:00
captions
Quiz time: Where in the world is this spectacular temple?
đź“·: @poraschaudhary
hashtags
analysis
This post got
87% more likes
compared to @nytimestravel's average. It uses
100% less hashtags
and its
caption is 86% shorter
7,713
143
Sep 26 2020 GMT18:10
captions
Quiz time: Where in the world is this gorgeous view? (Hint: This adventure capital is home to the first commercial bungee-jumping operation.)
đź“·: @markcoote