Wikipedia talk:Trivia
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[edit] Should "Trivia" be a valid sub heading for Wikipedia Articles?
- imported from Wikipedia:Village pump (policy)/Archive 16:35, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
In the course of my browsing today, I chanced upon the Moonlight Sonata article, about Beethoven's Piano Sonata in C#m, which contains (inter alia) the following pieces of information, under the sub heading "Trivia":
- Brazilian heavy metal band Viper made a version of the "Moonlight" Sonata with lyrics in their 1989 album Theatre of Fate.
- The first movement of the "Moonlight" Sonata figures in the first Resident Evil video game
- The videogame "Earthworm Jim 2" uses the complete first movement of the "Moonlight" Sonata as background music
- The videogame Jet Set Willy plays a small portion of the "Moonlight" Sonata during the introduction sequence
- A rendition of the Sonata, performed by Alan Wilder, is included as a B-side on Depeche Mode's single Little 15.
- A variation of this song is also on the first track of Trans-Siberian Orchestra's Beethoven's Last Night album.
- Yannis Ritsos has written a poem called Moonlight Sonata.
- The musical You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown features a song that uses the tune to Moonlight Sonata
- Bass player Stuart Hamm made a version of the "Moonlight" Sonata in his album Radio Free Albemuth using a two-hand tapping technique. He performed his rendition of the Sonata at a live concert with guitarist Joe Satriani in 2002 ("Joe Satriani - Live In San Francisco").
This is utter dreck which I have deleted with satisfaction, but it raises in my mind a bigger question: why does Wikipedia tolerate a "Trivia" subheading in articles at all? By definition, trivia is unimportant, non notable material. Is there not be a guideline saying "please don't include pointless trivia"? If there isn't, shouldn't there be? ElectricRay 00:27, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- I see "Trivia" or "Other information" sections as a group of small but interesting pieces of information that have not yet been expanded into complete sections. I don't think "completed" articles should necessarily have them, but they're a handy mechanism for corraling away little bits of info that need future expansion. Deco 00:32, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- ...or just make a new page Moonlight Sonata in market-driven culture, pack plastic recycling bags with the content and eject it into deep space, retaining a subheading Main article: Moonlight Sonata in market-driven culture and the wording "The Moonlight Sonata's familiarity has generated many trivial references in market-driven culture." --Wetman 00:36, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- I can't tell, Ray, whether your objection is to the content, or just the heading. If the latter, I agree; just change it to something more suitable, such as Quotations in popular culture. If it's the content, address it on that article's talk page (or boldly remove it); our policies already address such things. Still, the fact that the theme is recognizable enough (even in our post-musically-literate society) to be so often used in pop culture is a significant piece of information about this composition, even if the entire list is overkill. —Wahoofive (talk) 01:05, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
Eww Eww Eww. Incorporate the info into the article somehow or I will come after you with a vengeance for making such headings. Even a different heading such as Uses... or Mentions in Popular Culture as is said above. If they're not all related to each other, then find a way to incorporate the info into the article. (Have you noticed yet that I hate these trivia sections?) — Ilyanep (Talk) 01:14, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
Similar things were discussed at wikipedia talk:trivia - I'll move this discussion there too, when it's finished. --Francis Schonken 07:57, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
I hate these. I hate them. I HATE THEM. Look at the last 50 edits to Marduk (as of this post): almost all of them are additions of such valuable gems as "In Namco's PS2 game Tekken 4, one of the playable characters is named Craig Marduk" and "In the anime series Neon Genesis Evangelion, the Evangelion pilots are chosen by a mysterious organization called the "Marduk Institute." The Institute is actually a front for SEELE, who are in possession of secret dead sea scrolls that fortell the fate of humanity and the end of the world.". Drivel, written by teenage boys, which has only the slightest tangential relevance to the topic of the article.
Look at the article right now. The crap now fills half of it—in spite of User:A Man In Black's valiant (but doomed) excision of the previous junk not three months ago—and it's only going to grow.
Okay, finished ranting. User:Wetman's suggested solution is the right one; the kiddies can scribble to their heart's content, and people who want to read about classical music or Mesopotamian mythology aren't distracted by poorly-written irrelevancies. —Charles P._(Mirv) 08:23, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
Wetman's suggested solution is an excellent one, but for the fact that those opposed to "elitism" (etc.) would object to it. Yes, this trivia is dreary, as are "References in popular culture", which I've seen somewhere. How about the solution of a link from the (very shaky) article on Citizen Kane to "List of references to Citizen Kane in other work"? Failing that, a "Trivia" section is a good idea, given that WP is editable by all, and that thousands of earnest teenagers (of all ages) take this stuff seriously and will insist on sticking it somewhere. Better that it's labeled "trivia" than for it to muck up substantive sections of an article. And of course if some item within it is not trivial, people are free to move this item elsewhere, while leaving all the "Simpsons" references (etc etc etc) as they are. -- Hoary 08:53, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
All very good suggestions. Wetman, I have done as you suggested on the Marduk article - see now References to Marduk in Popular Culture and when I get a moment I will do the same for LVB. Hoary, I sort of see your point, but think there's a fine distinction between elitism and plain irrelevance - it would be equally irrelevant to the topic of Mesopotamian mythological figure - and deserving of jettison to the black expanses of deep space - that there was a character named Marduk in the Book of Kells.ElectricRay 09:13, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- I couldn't agree more with
DecoElectricRay; I can't really go along with Wetman's idea, though. It would solve part of the problem, but another part of the problem is that trivia sections trivialise Wikipedia; making separate articles for them will do pretty much the same. Just delete them all. If something's trivial, then it doesn't belong in the article; if it belongs in the article, then it can't be trivial, and should fit into the appropriate place in the main text. - How about starting up "Trivipedia" for all the teenagers out there who add this rubbish? --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 22:24, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- Funny that you say you couldn't agree more with me, yet I disagree very strongly with you. I think it's fine to have these sections around and that they will, in time, develop into more integrated and expanded content. I might remove them from a published or stable version, but not from any working article. Your generalization about teenagers and proposed project are also offensive to the well-meaning contributors who add this content. Deco 22:47, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
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- I was too hasty in tracing the writer of the original comment (aided by the absence of a space between comments). I've corrected it. Oh, and it wasn't my generalisation, though I repeated it, and pretty well stand by it. There are too many train-spotters here, and people who know (and care) about nothing other than the trivia of celebrities and popular culture. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 15:59, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
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- and its comments like that which keep wikipedia as the pile of shit it currently is (and is generally perceived as). those "well-meaning contributors" are dumb-ass schoolboys who play videogames all day, indulging them simply creates more cruft articles about Klingon etc that makes wikipedia = trivipedia already. gotta be harsh. KILL ALL CRUFT.
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- Although these trivia sections should be thoroughly cleaned of cruft (and wontedly have far too many references to cover songs and other knock-offs generally unrelated to the topic), they provide a helpful way to give the reader bits of additional, characterizing information which might otherwise bog down the article's main narrative. I'm strongly in favour of trivia sections in biographical, film and music articles. I mean, what better way to fluidly let the reader know Frances Farmer let the studio shave her eyebrows off in 1936 but had rebelliously grown them back... and untrimmed... by 1937. This would seem, uhm, trivial to mention in the main text but adds context, depth and interest to the subject. Wyss 23:55, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
- Cruft should be stamped out. If something has had a genuine impact on popular culture, a sub-article should be created if not a sub-section (see, i.e. Nuclear weapons in popular culture, which grew out of just such a crufty-subsection). --Fastfission 20:09, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
I've been having the same sorts of problems all over the place. Lilith, Chimera, Dragon, Dracula, Behemoth, Jack the Ripper, Werewolf, etc. etc. keep getting filled up with all sorts of trivial references to video games, anime, roleplaying game supplements, one off mentions in tv shows, incidental one off lyriucs in songs, etc. I remove this dreck constantly every day. One of the major problems is that it's difficult to have real consensus to remove them because so many kiddies all get together to try to claim that info is vitally important. "Castlevania is the most well known and important video game series of them all, so I am going to list all the details here." etc. About the only way I've been able to have any lasting sanity is to create Werewolves in fiction, Jack the Ripper fiction, liberally move the crap to disambiguation pages and then just give up on trying to keep the cruft out of that offshoot article. It's like segregation or something. Whenever someone puts crap in the main one I suggest the offshoot, and then the offshoot is total crap but oh well. I personally think Trivia headings should just not be used, and that it's very, very clear that trivial mentions... some character named after some mythical character, one off appearances in comic books, D&D or other RPG adapting something, Magic the Gathering card, Pokemon character, etc... do not belong in the main articles unless those articles are specifically about that fictioncruft and not the main topic. We desperately need stronger policy on this, and maybe, I don't know, something to make it more clear that this is supposed to be an ENCYCLOPEDIA and not just long fanlists of every silly trivial fictional reference you can think of. DreamGuy 22:01, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
- I think that trivia helps pique the reader's interest. As for relevance, the word encyclopedia comes from the Greek words enkyklios paideia, meaning "general education," or "well-rounded education." Thus, in Wikipedia--the largest encyclopedia ever created--any knowledge can be included. Merriam-Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged defines an encyclopedia as "a work that treats comprehensively all the various branches of knowledge and that is usually composed of individual articles arranged alphabetically". Stroll by a library reference section and you will find encyclopedias of agriculture, of computing, of slang, and so on. The inclusion of trivia shows just how much encyclopedic Wikipedia is. Besides, deleting trivia will turn off many contributors from adding other information to Wikipedia and possibly turn to vandalism. Further, many of the users who add trivia are younger. If we alienate them, we destroy our future.
--Primetime 22:43, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
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- There are plenty of young people adding real encyclopedic content here. Alienating the bad contributors to keep the good contributors is a GOOD thing. Some people just are not cut out to write encyclopedias. This shouldn't be controversial, it just is. If their only contributions are to say that some pokemon character kind of looks like Pazuzu if you squint real hard, let the alienation proceed unfettered so we don't destroy our future by having the clueless kiddies running the show while knowledgable editors get alienated. I know I don't like having to play janitor to a bunch of people whose only experience in the world is videogames and anime who think articles on other topics can be improved with the latest kewl thing they saw. I'm here to write an encyclopedia. DreamGuy 17:42, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
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- If you want a trivia encyclopaedia, there's a far bigger one than Wikipedia - it's called Google. If some method of differentiation between trivia and useful information can't be imposed, we may as well give up on wikipedia and just use Google. It's a line call whether that's a better idea already. Now it's a sociological fact that anime heads will keep adding this stuff - it's not irrelevant to them - so the answer is to give them their outlet - a "references in popular culture" page which is referenced by, but doesn't form part of, a main article achieves that very neatly. Xbox nuts are not alienated, the page isn't disrupted - that sounds to me like a workable compromise. That's certainly the approach I'm going to take from now on. ElectricRay 23:17, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
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- That sounds like it would make them very difficult to find. I don't think trivia authors would be too keen on that idea. I admit, though, that it is better than just deleting the information. --Primetime 08:56, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
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- maybe i didn't explain it properly: there would be a link on the page from the main article - very easy to find. see, for example, Marduk. ElectricRay 09:35, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
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Shouldn't we distinguish between trivia that actually relate to the subject of the article, and trivia connected with persons or entities that just happen to have the same name? Many of the points in Marduk in popular culture don't relate to Marduk (that is the subject of the Marduk article) at all, they relate to fictional characters that just happen to have the same name, so they should surely go to a disambiguation page? --rossb 15:35, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
- Many are expressing views I agree with, in effect, trivia's fine if it relates directly and helpfully to the subject, but the trivia sections are often used for content which is no better than link spam. Perhaps references in popular culture "see also" pages would give the cruft (cartoon characters who play Beethoven and so on) a home. Wyss 15:50, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
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- except that trivia is, by definition, trivial. If it's worthy of inclusion, is it "trivia"? ElectricRay 18:16, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
- rossb, that was exactly what I was coming here to say. There is a distinction between material that really is important enough to a topic and just hasn't been integrated yet and that which isn't important to the topic. For example the WWII article doesn't need a trivia section remarking that it was referenced in X anime show. That's an extreme example, but not far off what is going on. Pop culture trivia or other things that aren't demonstrably important to the given topic should not be on the page, they should instead be in that pop culture topic's specific page. That makes it really easy to include important information in the right place. - Taxman Talk 16:34, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
- By the way, we're having a specific and contested discussion of this at Talk:George Frideric Handel. -Sesquialtera II 17:27, 29 January 2006 (UTC)
Here's my take, illustrated with two examples (though these are not editing suggestions for the LvB article):
"Helpful trivia":
- During the advanced stages of his deafness, while composing Beethoven aided his hearing by placing the end of a wooden pencil directly on the soundboard of his piano, then pressed his forehead directly on the other end and struck the keys. Sympathetic vibration transmitted the sounds of the notes through the bones of his skull directly to his inner hear.
"Unhelpful trivia"
- A retrogade chord progression based on Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata was used as the basis for a Beatles song by John Lennon. Wyss 14:27, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
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- Trivia as a category does not belong. It means "unimportant" and suggests a waste of time. If soemthing is important then say so. Rjensen 16:48, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
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- I do disagree with your interpretation of the working definition of trivia, however I continue to assert that there is a difference between informative trivia and spam-like cruft. Wyss 17:00, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
I don't think that trivia sections should be blamed on teenage boys. For example, the Richard Stallman article has a sizeable trivia section, and I doubt that many teenagers are really into him, as the oldest current teenagers were only born in the late 1980s (the youngest about 1992-1993). Also, most teenagers have probably never heard of Amiga. Adding trivia is probably more related to interest in the topic than age or sex. -- Kjkolb 17:34, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
One quarter of Gorilla article is taken by "popular culture" references, most of them bellow even trivial value. I suggest to always create leaf article when the amount of trivias reaches certain level. Since it is practically impossible to get rid of trivia at least they can be moved away from more serious encyclopedic stuff. Pavel Vozenilek 03:53, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
- Call the section Other notable facts and include only "helpful trivia". Delete the 'cruft and "useless trivia" or splice it out into a side article referenced by the main one. MPS 04:28, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
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- The problem is that it may be hard to distinguish notable from cruft: most of the trivias come from very current American pop culture/games but some established memes or references from other cultures may be valuable. Having leaf page would be Second Best solution - main articles will stay clean, kids will have safe place to play and possible edit wars over trivia won't pollute the main article (this is real pain). Trivial pages may be linked together so checking them all at once would be easy. Pavel Vozenilek 14:48, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Is this sort of thing really so bad? I'm glad to see evidence that Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata still has an influence on popular culture. Plenty of Wikipedia editors heard their first notes of Wagner by watching Apocalypse Now. Popular references to Joan of Arc didn't get dumped from the page. They inspired me to translate lists of sculptures and paintings from French. The video games, manga, and television shows now have their own section at the bottom of a branching page about artistic representations of Joan of Arc. If this gets young people interested in history, if it leads them to George Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare, then I'm all for it. Durova 23:12, 10 February 2006 (UTC)
Using the initial trivia that so bothered ElectricRay, I came up with this to keep the trivia in while boiling it down.
—Lady Aleena talk/contribs 22:37, 17 June 2006 (UTC)
The Moonlight Sonata can be heard in popular culture. The musicians Alan Wilder and Stuart Hamm, the band Viper, and the Trans-Siberian Orchestra used it in their compositions. The music can also be heard in the video games Resident Evil, Earthworm Jim 2, and Jet Set Willy. A poem was writen about the music by Yannis Ritsos. It can also be heard in You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown musical.
- Very nice. Encouraging folks to make the connections, group and copy edit. --Jake 22:32, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Continued
I dislike the heading "Trivia" as I assume that anything listed under such a heading will be, by definition "trivial". I'd prefer a "references in popular culture" or some such heading which is more descriptive. If the list is fairly short I guess it's ok, and if it gets too long, it can and should be moved to its own article. The thing that annoys me with so-called trivia is the fancruft, which is so hard to define. Everything from pop singer X's "favourite color is blue, he loves cats and lives with his Mom and 3 sisters", which should be deleted on sight, to obscure references that barely qualify as "popular culture" references and which are difficult to discern from more credible references simply because they are so obscure. In general I think that most facts about the subject should be worked into the article. If they can't be worked into the article, I suspect that they are superfluous - remembering that Wikipedia should be providing, strong, thorough overviews of subjects, rather than obsessively detailed analysis. We should not be about covering subjects in exhaustive detail, nor should we be encouraging the indiscriminate use of lists. Rossrs 13:58, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks for your input. I inserted a new section header above your comment, since the preceding discussion is over 2 months old, and imported here from wikipedia:village pump (policy)
- Note however,
- I wrote a few days ago in the wikipedia:criticism guideline proposal:
Don't make articles entirely devoted to trivia regarding a topic that has or should have its own wikipedia article: this follows from discussions e.g. at wikipedia talk:trivia: putting trivia in a separate article is generally not seen as a good way to tackle trivia issues.
- See e.g. also Talk:Salome for some recent trivia-related discussion. Don't know whether I was too severe there, so comments are always welcomed;
- Recently I came across Hitler in popular culture. I have no problem with that as a separate article, and maybe this is something in the vein of what you meant. Seen from the wikipedia:criticism proposal, the only problem with that article is that it is not properly linked from the Adolf Hitler article (well, the link is on the page, at the bottom, in small script, in a template... but not linked from a section that gives an overview of "reception history"-related matter). I'll try to remedy that, I'll see if I can come up with something viable, once I find some time to put myself to it (well, delicate stuff I suppose, don't want to be too hasty with such things).
- I wrote a few days ago in the wikipedia:criticism guideline proposal:
- --Francis Schonken 15:29, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
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- I agree that moving text to hide a problem is no solution. I think basically, delete it if it shouldn't be there. If keeping the information is justified, keep it, but in line with normal practice if it grows to an unwieldy length, branch it off to a new article, and link to it within the original article. Hitler in popular culture is exactly the type of thing I meant. Perfect example. Another example is List of references to Anne Frank in popular culture which I broke off from Anne Frank because most of the new information being added to the article was in this section, and it was engulfing the original article. Plus I thought much of the content was trivial. I don't think your comments at Talk:Salome were excessive by the way. A similar discussion is taking place at Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Films ([1]) where I have made a similar comment. (fairly long windedly, but in my opinion, trivia is being added to numerous articles with abandon, while substantial gaps in encyclopedic information is being left unattended. As the trivia often gets added at the expense of legitimate, sourced information, this bothers me.) Rossrs 15:59, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
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- Moving text to hide a problem is one thing, but moving text to solve a problem is different. The problem with "delete it if it shouldn't be there" is that maybe it should be somewhere else. A daughter article for references in popular culture would often be a good idea.
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- More generally, I don't think there should ever be a "Trivia" subheading. Tidbits like Frances Farmer's eyebrows can be in "Other information" or "Miscellany" or some such, or a more specific descriptive subheading if one is available. Even if, fairly evaluated, some of it actually is trivia, I think it looks bad for us to call it that. JamesMLane t c 08:11, 18 April 2006 (UTC)
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- You are correct. My comment should have read "delete it if it shouldn't be on Wikipedia". Example: go to Eric McCormack and see what time of day his child was born. I don't honestly see anywhere on Wikipedia, where that information is required. Keep that he has a child, but delete what time the child was born. On the other hand, there is a lot of stuff I'd cringe to see in the Anne Frank article (and would remove immediately) but is fine on List of references to Anne Frank in popular culture. I'm not generally in support of deleting just because it doesn't fit in that article, but I can see that my comments could be interpreted that way. It depends how jarring the information is. If it doesn't fit in the article, however, I would not necessarily start a new article just to make a place for it, unless it warranted it. "Trivia" is a horrible, non-encyclopedic heading that equates to "trivial", but regardless of what the heading is called, "miscellany" etc will often attract the same type of content. Rossrs 09:25, 18 April 2006 (UTC)
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I'm very happy to find this discussion page on Trivia, because I don't think a Trivia section should be in the body of an article. I actually like the idea of a Trivia section on the Talk page, where editors can put "raw content" that can then be considered for inclusion in the actual article. As well, an organized section of "References to Anne Frank in Popular Culture" with BRIEF bullets on said pop culture references could be useful. More views: Trivia sections in Wikipedia
- Articles on films, television shows, and celebrities often have a section at the end called "TRIVIA", in which editors list unimportant, obscure details related (sometimes distantly) to the topic.
- For example, in the Bill Clinton (former US president) article, there are 22 bullets of trivia, including information that he had "a male chocolate-colored Labrador Retriever named "Buddy" and a cat named "Socks"", that a television ad once depicted "Clinton and a voodoo doll", and that he makes a "thumb gesture".
- It can be argued that the inclusion of trivia goes against the core Wikipedia principles. Wikipedia is supposed to be an encyclopedia, "not an indiscriminate collection of information", "not a collection of ...trivia" or "A DUMPING GROUND FOR RANDOM INFORMATION" (all quotations from Wikipedia principles or policy pages, but emphasis added by editor).
- As well, Wikipedia's neutral point of view policy requires editors to cite "... verifiable, authoritative sources whenever possible"; the policy pages state that "WIKIPEDIA IS NOT FOR UNCITABLE MATERIAL". It can be argued that trivia-type information often is not derived from authoritative sources (e.g., other encyclopedias, almanacs, respected publications, etc.). (also posted this on the Village Pump policy page on Aug 17, 2006)NatMor 15:21, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] What to do
Suggested suggestions:
- Don't call a section "Trivia" - it implies that un-encyclopaedia worthy material can be entered there.
- Alternative names may depend on content. "In popular culture" - "Miscellanea" - "Personal background" - "Notes" are all possibilities.
- Only include information that belongs in an encyclopaedia.
- If you see information that really is "trivia" be bold remove it.
- If a section ("trivia" or otherwise) has grown so large as to over-balance an article, consider:
- Removing real trivia
- Splitting into sections
- Working the information into the article
- Creating a sub-article
- Any combination of the above.
Rich Farmbrough 14:18 8 June 2006 (UTC).
- Nice idea. Elaborated a bit, and put it on the project page. Please improve as you think fit. --Francis Schonken 15:56, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Essay in action
Today I put this into action with the article on ER (TV series). I made two edits which decimated the trivia section of that article by moving the information from the trivia section into other sections of the text. If you wish, you may use that article as an example. There is still a trivia section in the article, however, it is greatly reduced from appoximately 20 items down to 5. (Cross posted Wikipedia talk:Avoid trivia sections in articles).
—Lady Aleena talk/contribs 21:08, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] air exists
"for example: "Air exists" is incredibly important, but that assertion has no interest"
The above sentence and the related explanation surrounding it doesn't seem right to me. We don't put in "air exists" in an article - NOT because its not "interesting", but because it is not useful to tell readers this - they know it already. Interest has nothing to do with it - some may not find ratios of nitrogen oxygen and lead interesting, but its definately useful information. Fresheneesz 03:27, 25 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Specific guidelines for notability
I added a section called, Specific guidelines for notability. Please feel free to comment or modify to taste. -Harmil 18:00, 6 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Wikipedia:Avoid trivia sections in articles
The other is an accepted guideline that supports this one, and they should also perhaps be merged. —Centrx→talk • 16:54, 9 September 2006 (UTC)
- completely agree [2] --Francis Schonken 17:57, 9 September 2006 (UTC)
- Also agree, though some refactoring of this page would need to occur (so as not to contradict/detract from guideline).--cj | talk 16:50, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
- Absolutely. >Radiant< 20:01, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Whoever does the merge needs to be very careful that the accepted guideline doesn't have content added to it that was not agreed to. violet/riga (t) 20:04, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] WikiTrivia
To me, the best solution to the trivia problem is just to create a wiki devoted entirely to it. WikiQuote makes good use of the quotes that don't belong in Wikipedia articles; WikiTrivia would do the same for all the mildy to very interesting pieces of trivia. We could then link to the corresponding WikiTrivia article. Readers would have access to the information, and the integrity of Wikipedia as a source of important knowledge remains intact.
If anyone else would be interested in creating such a project, let me know. --Chris Griswold (☎☓) 07:34, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
- I've proposed this before (half-jokingly, but it would be a good idea) and we could also move 90% of lists there. Some people just prefer (or only have attention spans capable of) getting information from neat 1-3 sentence bulletted points. It'd be a win win situation. --W.marsh 19:20, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
- Support I think a number of interestring but non-notable in Wikipedia facts would be better placed in a separate project to compliment Wikipedia, as WikiQuote and Wiktionary do. --tgheretford (talk) 12:08, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] I love the trivia sections
Well, not exactly, but here's what I'm seeing. Unlike Google, wikipedia has the ability and even the tendency to consolidate trivial information into new analysis. It is a kind of research tool that no one else has. If I am interested in the influence of the Moonlight Sonata on popular culture, how the hell am I going to find all the downstream references? I can't. But on wikipedia, people are bringing the references straight to me. All right, they're greasy and mis-spelled. But we can fix that, as ______ has demonstrated above.
Rather than spend our energy trying to eliminate the creation of trivia sections, or (even more hopelessly) trying to encourage the trivia providers to make organic contributions to the article, we could simply use the trivia sections as raw material for the articles. Because there is a great deal of material there. This is not to say that some of isn't dreck, but when you read that nine different metal bands have referred to the same 19th-century hydrologist (or whatever), you do, in fact, have an insight that no other reference material is going to provide. Ethan Mitchell 19:10, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
- How do you know that it's not common for bands to refer to 19th-century scientists, it just hasn't been added to the other articles? How do you know it's not more common for rock bands or science fiction books to mention the person, but it just hasn't been added? The data isn't useful if you don't have more complete information, which is what the article is supposed to provide; otherwise, it's just mildly interesting, trivially. —Centrx→talk • 04:27, 22 September 2006 (UTC)
- Ethan, I think what you're missing is that some people don't have anything more to contribute to the project, so they come up with jihads now and again to go and "clean up" what is already here. My suggestion is to let them do it. The people that get this bug up their collective posteriors are generally the type who will fight to the death to protect "the project" as they see it. My own personal feeling is that it should first be filled with information, and when it is not found lacking, the information therein should be cleansed.
- This whole "proposed policy" is stupid on its face. You can't define "interestingness" objectively. I just, for example, expanded an article on sodium alginate. I can think of few stupider articles to have in the encyclopedia. And yet, it is "important" because we all probably consume a lot of it, and maybe, possibly, somebody will come looking here for an idea of what it is.
- So anyways, Ethan, leave it be. People are going to go nuclear on it whenever they please, and threaten you with RFAR for being "divisive" or "polemical" [sic] if you disagree with them. ... aa:talk 14:51, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Trivia Sections in Film Articles?
I believe that pieces of information that are relevant, and are featured in the film belong on the page, even in a section labelled trivia. e.g. "The character of Bill is an author of a book called "The Glowing", which is a reference to the Stephen King novel The Shining." If I was researching the film in question, it would be interesting to know this fact. Perhaps the label of trivia is incorrect, but it is still a term used, particularly in IMDB. Of course, some articles go too far e.g. List of trivia from Pulp Fiction but some of the content does belong on the main page, even if it is trivia.
- I'm running into a similar issue in Futurama episode articles. I think that the various items listed under "Cultural references" (as we label them) are useful information and helpful to someone who is watching the show and saying "Where did that come from?" These references make up a large part of the comedy in the show and I think are helpful to viewers who haven't seen the original media but I haven't come up with a good way to integrate them as prose into the article. Of course this has lead to most of those pages getting the toomuchtrivia tag. Anyone have suggestions on how to handle this, I want to make the articles better! Stardust8212 20:09, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Maybe a seperate article such as List of cultural references from Futurama? That way the main article remains concise, and the people who are looking for the references can easily find them from the main page. Just a suggestion, of course!Desdinova 21:53, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- Why is this information encyclopedic at all? It may be "useful" or "interesting", but this is not a theme-encyclopedia (as, say, memory alpha is). It's an encyclopedia. Why do we need the minutiae, nuts and bolts from futurama? We don't even have that much information on the bible. Perhaps you should take a look at something like the Accelerando technical companion. It's essentially what you're talking about. ... aa:talk 17:22, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not here to argue whether the minutiae of Futurama belong on Wikipedia, and if you think there isn't enough information on the bible then maybe that is something that needs to be fixed. My point is the information is there already and I think it would be great if the information could be organized in a way that is useful, interesting and compliant with this proposed guideline. Maybe your solution would be to simply delete all of it but I think there has to be a better way and since the subject was being discussed I thought I'd join in. The technical companion does look similar to what we already have distributed throughout the episode pages but are you suggesting that the information (Cultural references aka "trivia") belongs somewhere besides wikipedia (like a wikibooks for television and movies?) or in a similar article on wikipedia similar to what Desdinova suggested above? Something like that did previously exist but was voted for deletion, iirc. Sorry, I seem to be pulling away from the film topic, I originally only meant to add that the same problems existed in television episode articles. Stardust8212 20:14, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- Why is this information encyclopedic at all? It may be "useful" or "interesting", but this is not a theme-encyclopedia (as, say, memory alpha is). It's an encyclopedia. Why do we need the minutiae, nuts and bolts from futurama? We don't even have that much information on the bible. Perhaps you should take a look at something like the Accelerando technical companion. It's essentially what you're talking about. ... aa:talk 17:22, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- Maybe a seperate article such as List of cultural references from Futurama? That way the main article remains concise, and the people who are looking for the references can easily find them from the main page. Just a suggestion, of course!Desdinova 21:53, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
I have to agree with the OP and think that when it comes to film and television in particular, trivia sections should be the exception to the rule. People love finding out all sorts of interesting tidbits related to this film or other - why else do you think commentaries and the trivia sections on DVDs are so popular? Yes, some can get grouped into sections such as "References in Popular Culture" or "Pop Culture References," but some remain simply interesting little bits of info.RoyBatty42 02:12, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- I'm with you ... to a point. IMDb has scads of trivia on films, and anyone can post. Here, the article is about the movie (or series), and I've seen some movie pages in which the level of trivia is both mind-boggling and truly ad nauseam. "The band Violent Sneezes recorded a song called 'Burning a Virgin Scotsman,' which is a reference to this film." I mean, come on. I think the Trivia sections ought to be limited to the film or series itself. NOT everything about everything that can be related to the film. Just like the External Links sections, editors need to keep them brief and on-topic. Just my 2wo cents. David Spalding (☎ ✉ ✍) 02:23, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
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- Actually, anyone can SUBMIT to IMDB but all submissions must be approved by their staff and they seem to have fired most of their staff about 2 years ago. I quit submitting items to them because none of it was getting posted anymore. If you look at the trivia for many of their entries, from what I've seen much of it isn't that recent.
- I think it also depends on the size of the article. Something like Star Wars must have a huge amount of trivia and pop culture references that could not only be subdivided into their own articles, but also by medium. Yet if you read the wiki guide about trivia, it actually encourages it as a start point for information that can then be merged into the main article, a section of it or another article altogether. Some, even moderators, seem to have forgotten this and go on their jihads against any and all trivia sections. RoyBatty42 18:18, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
Thing is, some cannot be grouped with "References to/in pop culture" such as the behind the scenes info (guess I just suggested the soon to be popular "Behind The Scenes" sections for all TV & Film entries). And when those get too unwieldy for the main article they can be shifted off to seperate articles.RoyBatty42 19:09, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Is it really trivia?
I concur with the sentiment that trivia, per se, is unimportant, non-notable, non-encyclopedic information and does not belong in a separate "trivia" section of any article. In almost every case, the trivia can be merged with the rest of the article. In many cases, the "trivia" is information that properly belongs elsewhere in the article. In other cases, the "trivia" is not trivial at all but could form the basis of a subheading or expansion of an aspect of the article. It seems that it is often just easier to make a list of facts and lump it under a "trivia" heading. Any information that would remain after merging the "trivia" is, in fact, trivia and really does not need to be in the article. Agent 86 22:02, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
- That is a good point. Sticking random facts in a 'trivia' section can be indicative of editor laziness. In most cases, those facts either have a place in the prose on the page, or are irrelevant. >Radiant<
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- I concur completely. In a nutshell, if it is not trivia, it belongs in the article. If it does not merit mention in the article proper, it does not belong in the article at all. One puppy's opinion. KillerChihuahua?!? 23:49, 11 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Wikitrivia proposal
I have begun to put together a proposal for Wikitrivia, and I would appreciate any input you can give me. Chris Griswold (☎☓) 14:35, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] www.wikiquickfacts.com would be the perfect destination for Trivia knowledge
Hi, I just created a site called WikiQuickFacts. It is supposed to consist only of short articles like flashcards format we used when we study for exams. I wrote a Google Gadget and desktop apps to deliver these short articles to users' computer.
I think this site is the perfect area where Wikipedians can put these trivia, short articles.
What do you think?
Patrick
- Useful facts and specific trivia are not the same thing, and while I think your site is a good idea, I do not think it serves the purpose we need. --Chris Griswold (☎☓) 04:47, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Trivia sections for television
This is sorta in response to the entry above (Trivia Sections in Film Articles?) that dealt with TV trivia (Futurama) instead - for a really good example of how trivia that can pile up quickly for TV shows can be handled, check out how it was handled for List of Arrested Development episodes. The show racked up more pop culture references in each episode than most shows do in entire seasons. It also had it's own continuing series of show specific jokes (like Buster never saying someone's name, only "Hey, brother/nephew/mom/etc") or in-jokes.
So all of it was shifted to the individual episode entries, following rather elaborate plot summaries.RoyBatty42 19:09, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Using talk pages for trivia
I think there's some merit to first dumping trivia onto the talk pages so they can be sourced, cleaned up and grouped. However, I do have one small concern if this is the to be remedy for newbies dumping questionable trivia - they are confusing to find. I can remember when I first started coming to wikipedia and keep seeing references to "use the talk pages." Only there weren't any as far as I could see. Hitting the only thing that said "talk" was the tab reading "my talk."
This might seem laughable, but if you want them to take the extra steps to put their trivia on the "discussion" page it's something to consider. Or perhaps if this is such a big concern (some on wiki sure seem to have a bug up their asses about it), a new tab should be added to the basic template for "New Info" or at least change "Discussion" to "Talk." It can be very confusing when even the official wiki guides continually refer to them as "talk" pages instead of "discussion."
[edit] Incorrect assumption about WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE
I noticed the essay says that WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE includes categories of information that are excluded because of "lack of importance" or "trivia". This appears to be a misreading of that section of policy. The reasons stated for most or those types of information have little to do with whether or not something is trivia. In fact, the word trivia does not appear at all in WP:NOT!
Rather, the Indiscriminate Collection section describes types of information that it explains as being excluded either for stylistic reason (eg FAQs are better written in prose form), liability reasons (Wiki is not a How-To guide and can't be expected to give advice on how to do things), and veriability reasons (It's impossible to verify things you made up in school).
So to say that WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE deals with trivia is an incorrect and common misconception. I'd recommend also taking a look at a discussion on this topic at the WP:NOT talk page at [3]. Thanks! Dugwiki 17:21, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
- No, trivia is an indiscriminate collection of information. WP:NOT does not need to specifically enumerate every possible case of indiscriminate information. Also, your misreading of the remainder of the section is inaccurate. All of those listed there are because Wikipedia is an encyclopedia. How-to's are forbidden regardless of whether they contain legal or medical advice; pages describing how to tune a guitar or how to cook turkey are also not allowed. WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE specifically states that something 100% verifiable can still not be appropriate for Wikipedia, so it has nothing to do with verifiability. Etc. —Centrx→talk • 18:32, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
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- Sorry, but I disagree with your assessment and would refer you to the discussion of this issue I mentioned above at [4]. Notice that nowhere in WP:NOT are words like "trivia" or "cruft" mentioned, let alone in the WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE. In fact, this section specifically says that "While there is a continuing debate about the encyclopedic merits of several classes of entries, current consensus is that Wikipedia articles are not simply:...." That sentence implies that this section of policy is specifically enumerating certain classes of entries which have consensus as being troublesome types of information, and that the section should not be read to refer to other types of information which may or may not have consensus on how to handle them.
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- So while you might feel that trivia should be included in this section of policy, the fact of the matter is that it is not included. That's not to say that articles which are trivial can't be eliminated for other reasons, such as a lack of verifiability or suitable reference or possibly a lack of notability. But WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE can not be used to justify deleting "trivia" when that specific policy makes absolutely no mention of trivia at all. Dugwiki 17:34, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- There need not be a specific enumeration of every single thing that qualifies as indiscriminate information for it to be indiscriminate. Although, see also Wikipedia:Five pillars. "Wikipedia is not a trivia collection", which is to some extent exactly what WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE is referring to. —Centrx→talk • 16:04, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
- You're misreading what WP:NOT:IINFO actually covers. It is not attempting to define "indiscriminate information". It is, rather, trying to define some specific types of information that Wikipedia does discriminate against. The stated reasons for the discrimination have nothing to do with the "trivia" phrase in the Five Pillars, though, and you'll notice that the word "trivia" doesn't appear anywhere in WP:NOT. I think the confusion might stem from the common-day use of the phrase "indiscriminate" to mean random or trivial. In this case, though, it refers instead to "information which can be discriminated against" or "inappropriate information". Dugwiki 17:30, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
- No, it gives examples of indiscriminate information, but those do not include all possible kinds of indiscriminate information, and trivia and random information is only a kind of especially indiscriminate information. Indiscriminate includes trivia, and trivia is the least discriminate kind of "facts". —Centrx→talk • 00:57, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
- Again, you are misreading this section. In the introductory paragraph it specifies that "While there is a continuing debate about the encyclopedic merits of several classes of entries, current consensus is that Wikipedia articles are not simply:...." That sentence makes no sense unless you take it to mean that it is laying out areas which have editorial consensus. How to handle trivia clearly is not one of those areas, which is presumably why it has not (yet) been included in WP:NOT. As a further example, consider that an attempt to add a bullet point regarding almanac style information to this section likewise failed after only one day of inclusion due to lack of consensus.
- So while you are taking the word "indisicriminate" to mean "trivial" or "random", that is not how this section uses it. It is instead talking about "that which can be discriminated against", or in other words "that which is not appropriate due to existing policies". Dugwiki 18:54, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
- No, it gives examples of indiscriminate information, but those do not include all possible kinds of indiscriminate information, and trivia and random information is only a kind of especially indiscriminate information. Indiscriminate includes trivia, and trivia is the least discriminate kind of "facts". —Centrx→talk • 00:57, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
- You're misreading what WP:NOT:IINFO actually covers. It is not attempting to define "indiscriminate information". It is, rather, trying to define some specific types of information that Wikipedia does discriminate against. The stated reasons for the discrimination have nothing to do with the "trivia" phrase in the Five Pillars, though, and you'll notice that the word "trivia" doesn't appear anywhere in WP:NOT. I think the confusion might stem from the common-day use of the phrase "indiscriminate" to mean random or trivial. In this case, though, it refers instead to "information which can be discriminated against" or "inappropriate information". Dugwiki 17:30, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
- There need not be a specific enumeration of every single thing that qualifies as indiscriminate information for it to be indiscriminate. Although, see also Wikipedia:Five pillars. "Wikipedia is not a trivia collection", which is to some extent exactly what WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE is referring to. —Centrx→talk • 16:04, 8 February 2007 (UTC)
- So while you might feel that trivia should be included in this section of policy, the fact of the matter is that it is not included. That's not to say that articles which are trivial can't be eliminated for other reasons, such as a lack of verifiability or suitable reference or possibly a lack of notability. But WP:NOT#INDISCRIMINATE can not be used to justify deleting "trivia" when that specific policy makes absolutely no mention of trivia at all. Dugwiki 17:34, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
- I interpret that the adjective 'indiscriminate' is applied on 'collection' and not 'information'. Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate (thoughtless) collection of articles on the classes listed at WP:NOT#IINFO, but that doesn't mean the information itself is indiscriminate (if you take 'indiscriminate' to mean trivial). In other words, Wikipedia cannot contain all facts in the world; it must pick and choose discriminately. I agree that in WP:TRIVIA, "for lack of interest and/or importance" should be changed because it is not the overall reason. Take the first class at WP:NOT#IINFO, lists of FAQs. By definition, a list of FAQs is a discriminate collection of (interesting and important) information, containing only those questions that are repetitively asked. But a FAQ item cannot be included until it is rephrased into neutral prose. Analogously:
- By default, every haphazard list is an indiscriminate collection of information. This includes lists titled "Trivia".
- If such a list is transformed into well-written paragraphs (that synthesize) the information, then it is now a discriminate collection of information. Whether these newly-formed paragraphs themselves are suitable for inclusion into a Wikipedia article is another debate.
- So just citing WP:NOT#IINFO in an AfD is not enough; if you cite it you have only said that Wikipedia should not contain everything possible, but you have not said why the particular information is not fit for inclusion. Unless you mean that the list itself is an indiscriminate collection of information, which is a problem that can be rectified regardless of the notability of the list contents (you would be saying that Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of indiscriminate collections of information). A listed item inside a trivia section is not automatically indiscriminate, and the items inside such a list must be considered individually. Deletionists should not be able to argue with "this information is indiscriminate" - what does that even mean? Are they talking about the grouping of said information, or the information itself? Okay, it's most likely the latter, but the distinction should be kept in mind.
- (I am not well-versed in Wikipedia policy, and I'm trying to formulate reasoning for Wikipedia:"In popular culture" articles and related topics.) Pomte 06:48, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
- I think that's a good way of putting it, Pomte. The gist of this section is that "not everything that's true should be in Wikipedia", and then it lays out some specific types of information that might be true but shouldn't be included in Wikipedia articles. If a trivia-specific policy is ever added to Wikipedia, I'm pretty sure WP:NOT#IINFO is where you would want to place it. The problem is that there isn't enough consensus yet on what exactly trivia is or how to handle it to add a trivia section to policy, which is why WP:NOT#IINFO doesn't include it, at least not yet. So referring to WP:NOT#IINFO for trivia sections is jumping the gun a little bit. If and when a trivia policy is crafted, that's the a likely place for it to show up, but so far it's not in there due to lack of demonstrated consensus. Dugwiki 17:44, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Lots of thoughts on trivia
I've written a bit of a personal essay at User:Mangojuice/Trivia. Much of what I've written duplicates things that are written here. I didn't want to be so bold as to effectively replace this entire essay with my version, so I'm bringing my personal essay to the attention of the other editors of this page here. Any thoughts? I feel that some parts of this essay are bad... why does it spend so much time describing whether an article topic is important, for instance? And the suggestions are relatively open-ended and don't give the best guidance. Ultimately I'd like to merge thoughts I've had that are accepted and wanted into the text of this page. Mangojuicetalk 05:00, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
- I like your part on connective trivia. I just read this page for the first time and haven't participated in any discussion here, so I don't know if others would object to merging in that part, but I would be for it. - Peregrine Fisher 04:29, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
- I applaud your rewritten version of this page, it really sums up the whole trivia problem well, and gives solid suggestions for dealing with trivia. — Krimpet (talk/review) 18:14, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Fear of Interpretation
It struck me that the basic problem with these "trivia" sections is the inability of editors to avoid the list format. This in turn is a problem that arises from an exaggerated fear of drifting into original research. This is what makes trivia sections "trivial", and makes editors turn out disjointed lists instead of coherent text.
For example, in the AfD nominated article Pterodactyls in popular culture, you have a section of "Films" that contains stuff like:
- The horror film Pterodactyl.
- One Million Years BC
- The Land That Time Forgot
- Petrie in The Land Before Time films is called by most a pterodactyl, though he may be a pteranodon, and so is Pterri on Pee Wee's Playhouse.
- Rodan, a 160ft long pteradon attacks japan.
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park and Jurassic Park III, both of which are sequels to Jurassic Park (Which did not feature pterosaurs)
Would it be so terrible to replace this list with a section that read:
- Pterosaurs are sometimes used as monsters in motion pictures. In One Million Years BC, pterosaurs anachronistically menace humans in a fictional prehistory; while The Land That Time Forgot uses The Lost World motifs to show humans encountering a place where prehistoric life survives. In Pterodactyl, a cache of living pterosaur eggs is discovered by scientists, while Rodan uses a pterosaur as a body model for a standard kaiju monster wreaking havoc in Japan. The Jurassic Park franchise resorted to recombinant DNA to bring pterosaurs back to life and threaten human beings.
I think this is obviously preferable. Some might object because it is "unreferenced" and to the extent that it (pretty minimally) interprets the plots of the works discussed, "original research." But since all of these films discussed have articles of their own, the place for references is in their articles in chief; for this passage Wikilinks are good enough. The "original research" objection raises epistemological questions; but I think that the sort of minimal interpretation needed to give this text a topic sentence and provide a synopsis of the relevant portions of the plot is both desirable and inevitable. It is in any case better than losing information.
Turn the lists into texts, and boldly summarize and point out what's relevant or interesting. That would be my recommendation. - Smerdis of Tlön 20:08, 20 March 2007 (UTC)