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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Lifestyle
Rita Liu, Alvin Chang and Francisco Navas

‘Air rage’ and personality tests: our favorite illustrations of 2021

Two people sitting across a table with tarot cards

Artists around the world helped us illustrate some of the biggest stories of the year, from eroding coastlines to the rise of teletherapy. The art for these stories were painted on canvas, drawn on digital tablet and even cut out of paper for a collage. Thank you to all the illustrators who worked with us this year.

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Can recycled glass help restore Louisiana’s eroding coastline?

The state’s coastline is eroding – but some ecologists think they have the solution: by recycling New Orleans’ many glass bottles into sand.

Illustrator: Luis Mazón

Louisiana beach

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Revealed: The true extent of America’s food monopolies, and who pays the price

A joint investigation by the Guardian and Food and Water Watch found that only a handful of brands control 80% of the total market share of many grocery store items that shoppers regularly buy, creating a system that exploits workers and farmers while falsely giving consumers the illusion of variety and choice.

Illustrator: Julia Louise Pereira

Illustrations of many food items

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How mercury sneaks into the most vulnerable communities in US and Canada

This lush comic by Julia Louise Pereira shows how mercury is steadily poisoning the lakes and rivers that Indigenous communities and communities of color have historically relied on.

Illustrator: Julia Louise Pereira

Comic of fish skeleton infected with mercury

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‘Nobody ever put hands on me before’: flight attendants on the air rage epidemic

Since our gradual return to society after Covid-related lockdowns, flight attendants have experienced a severe uptick in passenger tantrums.

Illustrator: Ulises Mendicutty

An airline passenger melting down as other passenger shut their years

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The dirty dozen: meet America’s top climate villains

This article dispels that myth that Americans are personally responsible for the climate crisis, when really a handful of “climate villains” have allowed fossil fuel companies to destroy the planet.

Illustrator: Jason Goad

A wealthy man in a suit smoking in front of a burning earth

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What personality are you? How the Myers-Briggs test took over the world

Personality tests are whimsical and sometimes delightful, despite their many flaws. But what happens when the results are used to make real-life decisions? This is a story about how the Myers-Briggs – called “astrology for businessmen” – took over the personality test world.

Illustrator: Ricardo Cavolo

Two people sitting across a table with tarot cards

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A teenager was a suicide risk – and then the pandemic happened

Pandemic shutdowns caused many people’s mental health to deteriorate, giving rise to teletherapy. But the physical and psychological distance were an especially big challenge for people who were already at high risk for suicide.

Illustrator: Maria Medem

A man talking with a therapist who turns into a laptop computer – and eventually into nothing.

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Would you live with your boss 24/7? These people do

Does living with your boss sound like a nightmare scenario? It’s the reality for employees of the US startup Fiveable.

Illustrator: Kike Congrains

Eyeballs surrounding a man in an office.

• This article was amended on 24 December 2021 to correct the spelling of Ricardo Cavolo’s surname in the credits of his illustrations.

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