New investigation from @trbrtc.bsky.social and @johnismay.bsky.social on an American PrSM (missile) being used against an Iranian sports hall and school. These missiles were filmed being fired from a HIMARS in Bahrain weeks ago.
Gift Link: www.nytimes.com/2026/03/29/w...
Posts by Pablo Robles
How the Iran War Has Rippled Across the World. An illustrated story by
@pablorobles.bsky.social and Agnes Chang. 🎁 Gift link: www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
NEW via @nytimes.com's @pablorobles.bsky.social & Agnes Chang:
"How the #Iran War Has Rippled Across the World"
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
I made some illustrations for a project about how the Iran War has affected the world in surprising ways, from deflated balloons to higher sugar prices. www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
A map of nighttime lights in Cuba, March 6, 2026.
Blackouts are getting worse in Cuba, some days the entire island is plunged into near total darkness. Here's the story tinyurl.com/47srb7ff by my colleagues @pablorobles.bsky.social @wallacetim.bsky.social and Simon Romero | gift link 🎁
Blackouts are getting worse in Cuba. On some days, the entire island is plunged into near total darkness. The electricity crisis has laid bare the risks of depending so heavily on foreign oil while trying to maintain a centrally planned socialist economic system.
Most of my work this year was just trying to make sense of the mess behind the scenes. I’m sharing the ‘ugly’ process and the detective work behind my latest projects. See you next year and happy holidays! open.substack.com/pub/pablorob...
Amazing story by Jeffrey Gettleman, Hari Kumar, Agnes Chang, and @pablorobles.bsky.social is presented as a special section in today's print edition of the NYT. www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Early signs suggest that Hong Kong’s worst fire in decades was the result of negligence, poor decisions and circumstance. Here is how the design of the buildings and the construction materials used may have contributed to its spread. nyti.ms/4pkOQVV
I’ve spent years collecting tools, datasets, maps, and other interesting links I’ve come across through my work and passion. I’m organizing everything into one place: If you’d like to get it when it’s out, you can subscribe here: pablorobles.substack.com/about
This weekend we published a project on the devastating impact of malnutrition on children’s bodies in Gaza.
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
What Malnutrition Does to Children’s Bodies
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Lately I’ve been working on illustrations for all kinds of projects from how tariffs hit U.S. households, to the steps of building an atomic bomb in Iran, to quick visuals for smaller stories.
How Elon Musk Is Remaking Grok in His Image
www.nytimes.com/2025/09/02/t...
NJ Transit is much worse than all other commuter rails in the NYC area. @agordon.me and @suryamattu.com collected and analyzed many weeks of transit feeds to quantify how bad (and it includes angry emojis).
www.bloomberg.com/graphics/202...
Kim Jong-un, the leader of North Korea, introduced his daughter to the world in 2022. Our Seoul bureau chief analyzed North Korean state propaganda for signs that Kim Ju-ae is being primed to possibly one day become her father's successor. Read more: www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Latest project: How North Korea Promotes Kim’s ‘Dear Daughter’ as a Worthy Heir
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Map of trees in Portland, Oregon, highlighting the high proportion of maples.
Trees species distribution in Portland, Oregon, shown as a series of proportionally sized fuzzy-edged circles, filled with discrete points. The city has 24% maples, 10% cherries or plums, 5% dogwood, and 62% other species.
Interesting alternative to a pie chart (using fuzzy circles filled with points) to show tree species distribution—highlighted by a fantastic transition from map to graph. By @janicekchen.bsky.social
wapo.st/45qiGkk
📊🗺️
Animated some dust moving across the atlantic for this story with @amyjeangraff.bsky.social: www.nytimes.com/2025/06/04/w...
NEW: Under Trump, the National Science Foundation is awarding grants at the slowest pace in decades. We took a detailed look at every area of science affected by the funding lag. Here's a gift link: www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Israel has rapidly accelerated its destruction of Rafah in April and May. It's hard to understand the magnitude of this, even when spending time analyzing recent satellite imagery. From me, Samuel Granados, Aaron Boxerman, and @rileymellen.bsky.social
Gift link:
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
This project highlights the ways that social networks can create information bubbles, via our colleague @stuartathompson.bsky.social
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Latest project: Your Home Without China — We highlight how much of our everyday life depends on goods imported from China, and what could happen as new U.S.-China tariffs take effect. We used illustration to make the topic feel more accessible and relatable.
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
It’s hard to imagine an American home without Chinese products. Many essentials are imported almost entirely from China — and with new tariffs, they’re likely to become more expensive. We analyzed import data to show where Americans may see product shortages, fewer choices and price increases.
From our friends in NYT Graphics:
"We analyzed import data to show where Americans may see product shortages, fewer choices and price increases."
www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
Measles is one of the most contagious disease known to us — and it has been making a comeback in the U.S. Here's how vaccination stops the spread.
NEW: We simulated a disease outbreak to show how vaccines can stop the spread of a contagious disease. With @fparis.bsky.social @upshot.nytimes.com (Paywall-free gift link) 🎁
Rainfall from this past weekend: www.nytimes.com/2025/04/07/w...