User talk:160.39.240.61
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Please don't add your personal points of view to articles, as you did to Roger Clemens and Garrison Keillor. See WP:POV. NawlinWiki 01:15, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
Why not? Why is my opinion less important than some hack writer's article whom I could link to? This is wikipedia, not Encyclopedia Brittanica. You think people are going to quote this and be taken seriously????
Keillor is duplicitous. Clemens is coward, bad in the playoffs, and does invent phantom injuries. Deal with it.
You're an idiot.
This is your last warning. The next time you vandalize a page, you will be blocked from editing Wikipedia. for incivilty and (yet again) breaking the rule. also making a mean comment. I have NO tolerance for this irrelevant behavior, your next offence will be a ban. Dure (T) (E) (C) 03:30, 25 June 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Jane Fonda
Please don't insert your personal opinions into articles. User:Zoe|(talk) 04:54, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
Personal opinions? Many have questioned her motives. And the 1988 interview and 2005 interviews did come during protests over her movies.
- "many have questioned her motives" is not a valid entry into the article. If you want to include links to notable people or newspapers which have questioned her motives, that's an acceptable edit. User:Zoe|(talk) 22:15, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Please cite
Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia! We welcome and appreciate your contributions, such as Jennifer Love Hewitt, but we regretfully cannot accept original research. Please find and add a reliable citation to your recent edit so we can verify your work. Uncited information may be removed at any time. Thanks for your efforts, and happy editing! --Yamla 18:43, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Freddy vs Jason
I reverted your edit to Freddy vs Jason. First, that isn't the place to put that type of information. You placed it in the plot summary. Secondy, some of that is a misconception. You are applying your opinion to events. Jason doesn't have a "fear" of water outside the dream world. The only reason he has it in the dreamworld is because Freddy has the ability to bring out that fear. In reality he has no fear of water, it's his subconscious that does because of the event as boy. Freddy doesn't have a fear of fire. His look of fright in the cabin was at the fact that he just realized he was in the "real world" as he heard Jason walking up behind him. His fright was that of a person that just realized he has no powers to be able to stop Jason, as he did in the dream world. Also, "mirrors" are not a fear either. He's used mirrors to his advantage in many films. The reason the mirror worked on him in Nightmare 4 is because Alice was reciting an old dream master poem, about the evil seeing itself. Bignole 12:39, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown
I removed the paragraph you added which claimed that Charles Schulz objected to the casting of a black actor as Schroeder in the 1999 Broadway production, since no source has been provided for that. I never heard of Schulz saying anything of that sort, and it would have been inconsistent with the overall need for suspension of disbelief in regard to the casting of the play, such as adults playing children and a human playing a dog. (Besides, the same production included an Asian-American actor as Linus.) --Metropolitan90 06:02, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
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