For 1: if it was just a binary "where is rising and where is falling" it would honestly be more informative. Shading darker or lighter in the way they did is genuinely misleading. What states look worst? That corner of Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Wyoming looks pretty bad. But it's actually got less of an increase per capita than most of the less shaded states. Oregon is in the list of examples, the increase is 4 per 100,000. That's a third of the increase per capita that California has, but they look the same, and they both look less hit than those other 3 states despite being hit harder. Those 4 specific states have the fewest covid deaths per capita in the contiguous US, but that map makes them look like they're the same as Arizona right now.
Like, look at Hawaii. It's the deepest red possible. And yet, in that article, NPR says "Some states, such as Hawaii, have declined to just a dozen new cases per day, while others are growing." How does that make sense? It's because Hawaii was down to 1-3 cases per day a few weeks ago, and now they're at 10-15 per day. That's like a 500% increase over 2 weeks, that they tactically decided to exclude from their list of states with rising numbers.
Long story short: they really should have shaded based on the "per 100,000" column.