I did a few views from this data many (10!) years ago, before we had cool visualization software like Quartz has used.
I used a histogram across apogee and perigee because I wanted to see if there were satellites in eccentric orbits besides the bunch in circular ones, and labelled some interesting ones.
I think the geosynchronous orbit view would benefit from knowing what longitudes they are stationed over. So I made this visual back then.
It’s not interactive but it works.
The sections of earth with the highest numbers of satellites tend to be the most populous. (Click on the chart for a bigger picture) A bunch are stationed at longitudes to serve the United States (105W) and South America (55W and 45W), some over Europe (15E) and the United Kingdom (0), some over the Far East (105E) and a few over Australia (140E). There are satellites at almost every longitude.

