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Gasoline pumped in Poland correlates with...
| Variable | Correlation | Years | Has img? | 
| Bachelor's degrees awarded in Business | r=0.98 | 10yrs | No | 
| Global iPod Sales | r=0.97 | 9yrs | No | 
| Google searches for 'restaurant near me' | r=0.95 | 12yrs | No | 
| How cool MrBeast's YouTube video titles are | r=0.95 | 11yrs | No | 
| The number of airline pilots, copilots, and flight engineers in New York | r=0.89 | 19yrs | No | 
| Google searches for 'elon musk' | r=0.86 | 13yrs | No | 
| Netflix's stock price (NFLX) | r=0.83 | 20yrs | No | 
| Air pollution in Morgan City, Louisiana | r=0.68 | 23yrs | Yes! | 
| Low-fat and nonfat ice cream products consumption | r=0.52 | 32yrs | No | 
Gasoline pumped in Poland also correlates with...
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You caught me! While it would be intuitive to sort only by "correlation," I have a big, weird database. If I sort only by correlation, often all the top results are from some one or two very large datasets (like the weather or labor statistics), and it overwhelms the page.
I can't show you *all* the correlations, because my database would get too large and this page would take a very long time to load. Instead I opt to show you a subset, and I sort them by a magic system score. It starts with the correlation, but penalizes variables that repeat from the same dataset. (It also gives a bonus to variables I happen to find interesting.)
