President Donald Trump is known among many, for better or for worse, for his rapid-fire Twitter fingers.

Since well before his election in 2016 and subsequent inauguration, Trump has been letting loose on just about anyone who gets in his path on the social media platform. But after he was sworn into office, his tweets took on new significance: In June 2017, the White House declared that the president's tweets are official statements, meaning all of those 140-character notes are burned into the governmental record. The messages sent since this time — considered to be official presidential statements — have included incendiary opinions, racist retweets, and bullying, so Teen Vogue took a look at his first year in office through tweets to see what exactly he's been talking about for the past 365 days.

As it turns out, "fake news," the Clintons, and Russia are not just his favorite things to talk about in speeches and at rallies, but on the internet, too. In the below data visualization, Teen Vogue compiled Trump's tweets from the past year, representing them through different sized dots. The dots, arranged according to when they were tweeted out, get bigger the more people liked and retweeted them. Hover over or tap the dots to see which tweets correspond with which dots.

In the analysis, Teen Vogue found Trump's most popular tweet was one showing a video of him wrestling with the CNN logo, earning nearly 1 million likes and retweets.

His second most popular tweets was the one in which Trump insisted he would "NEVER" call Kim Jong Un "short and fat," even though the North Korean dictator called Trump "old." That tweet got nearly 900,000 likes and retweets.

In total, Trump tweeted about "fake news" 174 times, the Clintons 83 times, Obama 136 times, and Russia 115 times. And, this doesn't even count his retweets. While Trump's third most popular tweets is also about North Korea (you know, the one about having a "bigger" nuclear button than Kim Jong Un), his fourth most popular tweet struck a more positive tone.

"Peaceful protests are a hallmark of our democracy. Even if I don't always agree I recognize the rights of people to express their views," he wrote following last year's Women's March.

Trump's first year of presidential tweets was a doozy, and if the first few weeks of 2018 are any indication of what's to come, this year may follow suit. He's already taken to Twitter to address the government shut down, the border wall, and, of course, the "fake news".

The data for this infographic was sourced from here

Related: Twitter Won’t Take Action Against Donald Trump for North Korea Tweets