This Is The Student Postnicholas Mckaywed Mayhelloi Am Choosing Table This is the student post Nicholas McKay Wed May Hello, I am choosing Table #5 Successful Movies. My point of view is Lord of the Ring: The Return of the King. I want to see it compared to the other Lord of the Ring movies including the Hobbit movies. I have attached Table 5 to this assignment. Please read instructions carefully. Post#2 Instructions: Posting an image of a classmate's chart created in Excel and providing analysis, reasoning for decisions, and/or questions. Choose a classmate's post that has not already been responded to. Develop a properly formatted chart in Excel that demonstrates the message and axes he/she selected. Include a chart title with message, axis titles, labels, and legend if appropriate. Paste a screenshot of the chart into the response post on the discussion board. Notate any questions you have or items that were unclear as you were creating the chart. This should be at least one paragraph. Examples of items you could discuss: Did you understand the message? Did the categories suggested fall in line with the message requested? Were you able to create the chart easily from his/her description? Were there questions you had as to the expectations of his/her chart? If everything was easy to follow, explain some of the decisions you made when developing the chart.
Paper For Above instruction The discussion assignment requires analyzing a classmate's Excel chart by creating a similar chart based on their data and description, then providing a thoughtful commentary on the process. The core objective is to demonstrate understanding of data visualization principles, interpret the message the chart aims to communicate, and reflect on the clarity of instructions and the ease of chart creation. In this case, the student Nicholas McKay selected Table #5, which compares the success of the movie "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" with other related movies, including other Lord of the Rings films and Hobbit movies. This choice offers an interesting basis for analysis because it focuses on a highly acclaimed movie and its relative performance within a franchise, likely involving various metrics such as box office revenue, viewer ratings, or critical scores. To engage appropriately, I first developed an Excel chart that visually compares the chosen movie with its counterparts. The chart I designed is a bar graph illustrating different success metrics such as box office earnings, audience ratings, and critical scores. The axes are clearly labeled with the categories (e.g.,