A portrait of Nicolas Cage, an equals sign, and a photo of a crowded swimming pool
Illustration Photographs by (L) Fotos International, Getty (R) Bernadett Szabo, Corbis

Nick Cage Movies Vs. Drownings, and More Strange (but Spurious) Correlations

ByRobert Krulwich
September 11, 2015
10 min read

When Tyler Vigen was finishing law school a few years ago, he went on a search for identical twins—not in the real world but in data sets.

So he would find a study like this:

scan-sept1

And then keep searching until he bumped into a totally unrelated study, one that looked like this:

scan-sept

Then he’d put one plot line on top of the other, and—lo and behold!—at least wiggle-wise they looked close to identical.

A chart showing two separate line graphs, one showing spending on scientific research, the other suicides by strangulation
Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen

Seeing them coupled like this, it’s hard not to think, just for a second, that, Oh my god, science research causes hanging, strangulation, and suffocation.

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I know, I know, that’s wrong. Correlations like these are total accidents. They don’t even imply causation, but when the match is compellingly close, you can’t help telling yourself a this-caused-that story. Tyler calls these “spurious correlations,” which is also the name of his blog. And his new book. They’re wonderfully silly and totally random. Unless …

What If … ?

… unless by some uncanny and particular set of circumstances, one data set did cause the other. I mean, it could happen, right? What looks absurd might, in some weird scenario, be true. But what would the story be?

Well, I looked very closely at some of Tyler’s graphs, closed my eyes, and told myself, Here’s what really (might have? could have?) happened …

A cheese pizza, an equals sign, and a bed with rumpled white sheets
Illustration Photographs by (L) Bon Appetit, Alamy (R) Dorling Kindersley, Getty Illustration Photographs by (L) Bon Appetit, Alamy (R) Dorling Kindersley, Getty
A chart showing two line graphs, one charting per capita cheese consumption, the other people who died by becoming tangled in their bed sheets
Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen

So here’s what I imagine: Eating melted cheese in bed isn’t safe. There should be a warning label: “Do Not Bring Cheese Products Into Close Contact With Bed Linen” for the obvious reason that mac and cheese, a warm pizza, or any “soft” cheese like brie or camembert can slip out of one’s sleepy hands, drop onto the bedsheets and create an oily surface that is potentially dangerous—especially to a restless sleeper. Tossing and turning on “cheesed linen” creates extra knots and tangles, and as they say, “Tangles can kill.”

Had Will and Sandra Beckerman read such a warning, they might not have brought a Big Mamma Giant Sicilian pizza to their bed while binge-watching the History Channel’s seven-part series, Sunken Luggage of the North Atlantic. When they lost consciousness during episode seven, their sheets became so slick with mozzarella that it took only one left-to-right body flip to lock Sara’s torso into a knot so tight she lost circulation and ended up in the critical care unit at her local hospital. She survived, but as you can see from the rising black line on our graph, she was one of the lucky ones.

Nicolas Cage, an equals sign, and a photo of a crowded swimming pool
Illustration Photographs by (L) Fotos International, Getty (R) Bernadett Szabo, Corbis Illustration Photographs by (L) Fotos International, Getty (R) Bernadett Szabo, Corbis
chart showing the graphs of people who drowned by falling in pools and a separate graph of films Nicolas Cage appeared in
Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen

So here’s what I imagine: The Nicolas Cage Aquatic Society loves to meet, especially when there’s a new Nick Cage film to see and everybody’s all excited and can jump in the pool and organize themselves into rows, each person treading water, while Nick’s up on the big screen (which hangs above the diving board at the deep end).

Bobbing through a Nick Cage film is, as any Cage-aholic will tell you, the best way to watch our favorite actor at work. When Nick has a really busy year (he made four movies in both 2007 and 2009), so many fans show up poolside that—yes, it’s true—more people than usual fall into the pool and, well … drown. Forensic pathologists were surprised that in many years, most pool drownings took place at Nick Cage Aquatic Swim-ins, but hey, that’s understandable: In Moonstruck, when Nick first sees Cher all dolled up, standing in the moonlight, hair glistening, the night beckoning, he is so bewitched that he can barely breathe. Same for his fans. The ones who stopped breathing? They go up on this graph.

A group of motorcycle riders in action, an equals sign, and a photo of sour cream containers
Illustration Photographs by (L) Mirco Lazzari, Getty (R) Fred Tanneau, Getty Illustration Photographs by (L) Mirco Lazzari, Getty (R) Fred Tanneau, Getty
Chart showing two separate line graphs, one featuring sour cream consumption, the other noncollision deaths on motorcycles
Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen Chart courtesy of Tyler Vigen

So here’s what I imagine: It all began when the medical journal Bovine Studies found that a daily serving of ordinary sour cream (four ounces a day) can “significantly” reduce the onset of male pattern baldness.
All over America, thin-haired men wondered how effective this remedy really was, so when Wilber Orlander, 41, a dental hygienist from Lorraine, Ohio, showed off his luxuriant hair on Oprah Winfrey’s television show and explained how, for seven years, he brought a cup of 2 percent-fat sour cream on his daily morning commute, ate half, then threw away the rest, his Orlander System became a must-do sensation. Which produced this unfortunate result: So many commuters threw so many half-finished, still creamy sour cream containers from so many motor vehicles on so many American highways after the year 2000 that sour cream became a traffic hazard.

Trucks and automobiles weren’t affected, but even a small splat could create what the graph calls a “noncollision transport accident.” “Avoid the Cream” signs appeared on many interstates, and in 2006, several highway departments dumped baked potatoes onto heavily trafficked areas to add a “clump factor.” (This technique was especially popular in 2006 and dramatically reduced the accident rate, as you can see from the graph, but potatoes-by-the-ton are expensive, and many highway departments had to switch back to salt in 2007. )

Sour cream, as the graph indicates, continues to be a significant traffic safety problem. A ban on driving with unlidded sour cream is now being considered in seven states.

See more of Tyler Vigen’s Spurious Correlations on his website.

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