You could, if you haven’t done so already, listen to the mayor of Detroit talk and talk and talk for an hour and try to make Taylor Swift-style audience-reaction memes from the people in the audience. (OK, yeah, you should probably do the former. Don’t do the latter.) Or, you could take a quick look at some of the key data on where Detroit is, and where Detroit is going.

In short, as we’ve always known: This city is broken, and it has been for a long time. High unemployment rates and large amounts of blight are among the top issues that have held this city in a chokehold for decades. Oh, and yeah: Crime, too. Slowly — and let’s emphasize slowly, here — those numbers are starting to change.

Below are some key figures taken from Tuesday’s speech:

8.6 percent — the current unemployment rate in Detroit, down from 20 percent in 2014 but still the highest nationwide

35,000 — the number of people lifted out of poverty in the last five years, but the city still has the highest poverty rate nationwide

25 — the number of automotive plants built in Metro Detroit, but not Detroit proper, between 1945-1957

One — the number of automotive plants projected to be built in the coming weeks if a complex process of acquiring land is completed for Fiat Chrysler, the first new plant in Detroit in decades

7,000 — the number of residents displaced after General Motors opened the Poletown plant in 1985

Zero — the number of residents that will not be displaced if FCA successfully opens a new plant in the Mack Complex

150,000 — the number of workers Detroit lost between 2000 and 2010

2,600 — the number of Detroit residents trained last year at three Detroit at Work training centers

5,000 — the number of jobs projected to be added after the FCA deal

$4.5 million — if approved, the amount being requested from the City of Detroit’s annual budget to increase training opportunities at Detroit at Work

781 — the number of new healthcare employees that have come through Detroit at Work

317 - the number of new information technology employees that have come through Detroit at Work

652 — the number of new truck drivers and other CDL holders that have come through Detroit at Work

531 — the number of new construction workers that have come through Detroit at Work

A lot — the number of workers needed to fill skilled trade job opportunities in Detroit

Four — the number of major unions that have agreed to triple the number of Detroit residents in skilled trades opportunities

One — the number of people that have achieved the milestone of being the first black female master plumber in America that happen to be from Detroit

53 — the number of Motor City Match winners fully operating businesses across Detroit

42 — the number of Motor City Match winners currently under construction

46 — the number of Motor City Match winners coming soon

80 percent — the number of Motor City Match businesses owned by women or people of color

25 — the number of housing projects on line or currently in the works from minority developers

1,700 — the number of new housing units from the aforementioned 25 projects

340 — the number of affordable units in the aforementioned 1,700

500+ — the number of residents living in affordable housing last year whose rates have been preserved through at least 2031

3,000 — the number of affordable housing units preserved or added in Detroit since 2014

153 — the number of new permanent supportive housing units in the city

200 — the number of new apartments being built above a new Meijer store coming to East Jefferson

$30 million — the investment made in a new carpenters’ union facility on the west side of Detroit

500 — the number of returning citizens placed into jobs in Detroit in 2018

200 — the number of returning citizens from the above 500 working at Sakthi Automotive in Southwest Detroit

170 — the number of residents who have had criminal records expunged at City-sponsored expungement fairs

Two — the number of new attorneys needed to work on expungements for Detroiters full time

76,000 — the number of Detroiters who had their drivers’ responsibility fees forgiven in 2018

$120 million — the amount of the aforementioned fees that were waived

A lot — how much Detroiters are paying in car insurance

A lot less — how much Detroiters could be paying in car insurance if statewide legislation to reduce rates across Michigan pushes through

8,200 — the number of Detroit youths employed through Grow Detroit Young Talent

$20 million — the amount of money raised for vo/tech classes in Detroit

$0 — the amount of tuition paid for Detroit college student who pursue higher education with Detroit Promise

1,421 — the number of Detroit students currently enrolled in Detroit Promise

A lot more — the number of Detroit students actually eligible for Detroit Promise

40,000 — the number of abandoned houses in Detroit in 2014

17,000 — the number of abandoned houses torn down so far from the 40,000

More than 20,000 — the number of total demolitions by the end of this year

16,000 — the number of homes boarded up in the last two years

171 — the number of homes sold through the Land Bank in 2014

Nearly 5,500 — the number of homes sold through the Land Bank by the end of 2018

880 — the number of firefighters dually trained as medical first responders in recent years

32 percent — the drop-off in homicides from 2012 to 2015

40 percent — the drop-off in non-fatal shootings from 2012 to 2015

Number 3 — Detroit’s nationwide ranking in homicide rates

500 — the number of police academy graduates in 2017 and 2018

94 — the current enrollment number in the police academy

$10 million — the requested budget increase to hire and train new police officers

500 — the number of Green Light cameras in the City currently

1,000 — the number of Green Light cameras predicted to be installed by the end of 2020