Taxpayers for Common Sense lists the amount of earmarks in the HR 3550 (Highway Bill) by state (through April 1).
As you might expect, the larger, more populous states generally top the list. Tennessee fares relatively well, ranking 13th ($220,900,000 for 83 earmarks).
The state that really sticks out is Alaska, which ranks 4th among states in earmarks ($590,200,000 for 30 earmarks). Compare this to similarly-situated states (large area, small population) like Wyoming ($10,000,000 for 5 earmarks) and South Dakota ($0–representative in jail). Is it a coincidence that the chair of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure is Don Young, (R-AK)?
Oink, oink.