{"type":"data","nodes":[null,{"type":"data","data":[{"tweet":1},{"edit_info":2,"retweeted":9,"source":10,"entities":11,"display_text_range":23,"favorite_count":25,"in_reply_to_status_id_str":26,"id_str":5,"in_reply_to_user_id":27,"truncated":9,"retweet_count":19,"id":5,"in_reply_to_status_id":26,"created_at":28,"favorited":9,"full_text":29,"lang":30,"in_reply_to_screen_name":31,"in_reply_to_user_id_str":27},{"initial":3},{"editTweetIds":4,"editableUntil":6,"editsRemaining":7,"isEditEligible":8},[5],"1490944723149725698","2022-02-08T07:34:57.069Z","5",true,false,"\u003Ca href=\"https://mobile.twitter.com\" rel=\"nofollow\">Twitter Web App\u003C/a>",{"hashtags":12,"symbols":13,"user_mentions":14,"urls":22},[],[],[15],{"name":16,"screen_name":17,"indices":18,"id_str":21,"id":21},"Jon Schwabish","jschwabish",[19,20],"0","11","483273973",[],[19,24],"289","1","1490942298204819456","177507079","Tue Feb 08 07:04:57 +0000 2022","@jschwabish We can only use the average of all regions, but that's not necessarily the same as the national average, which I'd expect when reading \"average\" on a country map. For instance, the average of all US states unemployment rates in Dec. 21 was 4.1%, but the national rate was 3.9%.","en","driven_by_data"],"uses":{"params":["tweetid"]}}]}
