Wikipedia talk:List of bad article ideas

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[edit] Churches (congregations)

Should we add one about local church congregations and parishes? (As distinguished from denominations.) We're running a about 5-10 through PROD and AFD per day, on average, with (at least for AFD), a deletion rate in excess of 90%. I'm not sure if that is enough volume to merit a mention here.

I'd suggest "Your local church, congregation, mosque, parish, synagogue, temple or other place of worship unless it runs its own broadcast media station or accredited college or has ___." The blank should address historically significant churches.

See Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/North County Community Church for a live discussion, Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Lighthouse United Pentecostal Church Omaha, Nebraska for a recent group AFD closed as delete, Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Trinity Church, Greenwich for a recent AFD closed as merge to the town article, and Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Pillar of Fire Church as an AFD closed as keep due to being an international denomination instead of a local congregation. GRBerry 22:51, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Suggestion: Number the list

Doing so would make it much easier to cite something on this page. It can easily be done by replacing the asterisks by "#". Whaddayasay guys? Noroton 03:29, 23 February 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Status change: essay

After looking at this list and its various versions, I don't see why it should be a guideline. There's nothing on the list of 12 items that I disagree with, but this page seems largely redundant to other existing pages.

  1. is covered by Wikipedia:Conflict of interest;
  2. is covered by Wikipedia:Notability;
  3. is covered by Wikipedia:Merging and moving pages;
  4. is an extension of #1;
  5. is an extension of #1;
  6. is covered by Wikipedia:No original research;
  7. is covered by {{db-nocontent}} and/or {{db-nocontext}};
  8. is covered by Wikipedia:Avoid trivia sections in articles;
  9. is covered by Wikipedia:Notability and Wikipedia:Verifiability;
  10. is covered by Wikipedia:Neutral point of view and Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not#Wikipedia is not a blog, webspace provider, or social networking site;
  11. is covered by Wikipedia:Neutral point of view and Wikipedia:Content forking; and
  12. is covered by Wikipedia:Notability and, in extreme cases, by Wikipedia:No original research.

I'm not particularly opposed to anything this page says, but I see no need for it to be a guideline. In addition, the edit history of the page shows that it was made a guideline in January 2006 in the absence of any discussion about the issue. I propose that this page be tagged as being an {{essay}}. -- Black Falcon 00:41, 24 March 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Youtube

Would anyone be opposed if I added "Something you just saw on Youtube" to the list? Someguy1221 08:17, 26 May 2007 (UTC)

Darn, I just realized it kind of bundles into the last bad article idea, maybe {{WP:STUPID]] then. Someguy1221 09:03, 26 May 2007 (UTC)

[edit] CSD or AFD?

Hi there. Number 12 reads as follows:

Any subject which can only be documented by reference to the original, be it film, recording or picture. Have you watched every single episode of Star Trek until you can document the proportion of sacrificial red shirts who have black hair? That'd get you a barnstar at Memory Alpha, but probably a WP:CSD here.

This is surely wrong, as I have read WP:CSD and original research, or statements verifiable only by reference to the original do not satisfy any of the criteria for speedy deletion. I tried to change this to WP:AFD as this is clearly more accurate, but I was simply reverted with the summary "rvv". I take it I'm not supposed to change it back, so does anyone else want to? ;-) Tree Kittens 03:36, 1 July 2007 (UTC)

Whoops, my bad. Fixed. (I was going after the edits that came after yours.) Zetawoof(ζ) 04:12, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
Awww, cheers dude :-) Tree Kittens 04:59, 1 July 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Number 12

Hello there. I am sill confused about number 12. I want to write an article about the book, The Origin of Economic Ideas, Guy Routh, by way of a critique of current orthodox economic paradigm. What is wrong with that kind of article?--Janosabel 21:42, 29 July 2007 (UTC)

You'd have to ask somebody who's more familar with our standards on non-fiction books, but I'd ask "can you demonstrate notability?" If the answer to that is "yes", then you might get all sorts of tags (NPOV, one source, cleanup, ad nausium), but probably not deleted. Number 12 was intended for such things as "number of Red Shirts who get killed who have black hair", not for actual notable things. Thanks, Luc "Somethingorother" French 17:24, 30 July 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Number 1

I am a writer-in-training, and I'm confused about number 1. "YOU or your COMPANY, or a BAND you are a member of, EVEN if it is NOTABLE."

Does this mean that, even if I get famous, no one would be able to get me into Wikipedia, only because I am a member?

... You rejected my message the first time and gave me a Denial-of-Service attack, why not do it now?

Llamagnu (talk) 16:34, 17 November 2007 (UTC)Posted by Llamagnu on Sat, Nov 17, 2007, at 17:34 (GMT+01:00)

  • No, if you get famous, someone else will want to create an article about you. That other person can create the article because that other person isn't you. --Metropolitan90 (talk) 08:43, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Number 1

I am a writer-in-training, and I'm confused about number 1. "YOU or your COMPANY, or a BAND you are a member of, EVEN if it is NOTABLE."

Does this mean that, even if I get famous, no one would be able to get me into Wikipedia, only because I am a member?

... You rejected my message the first time and gave me a Denial-of-Service attack, why not do it now?

Llamagnu (talk) 16:34, 17 November 2007 (UTC)Posted by Llamagnu on Sat, Nov 17, 2007, at 17:34 (GMT+01:00)

  • No, if you get famous, someone else will want to create an article about you. That other person can create the article because that other person isn't you. --Metropolitan90 (talk) 08:43, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Important 'notability' issues

Considering the medium here is a computer database, not a paper based product sold in shops, does the idea of notability really make sense? Surely the more data, no matter how obscure - as long as it is of acceptable encyclopaedic/wikipedic standard - is harmless and, more importantly, possibly useful... How would adding data that, at first glance, no-one would ever read, invite it's deletion unless space was an issue? I suggest space is not an issue therefore obscure topics that seem worthless should be kept in case, maybe in future times in circumstances we cannot predict, the information in question is exactly what someone is looking for. Too many times has information been lost, for example via librarians who have the horrible dilemma: the only way to fit new books on shelves is to sell off the books that have least been borrowed. We do it each year and regret that our favourite childhood books are lost and regularly realise, after the fact, that some things should be kept regardless of contemporary fashion. As a (former) librarian I am constantly amazed about the diversity of people's enquiries and how much information we would have been able to provide if we hadn't thrown it out.

Here, in cyberspace (customary derisive giggle), we don't have book-shelves and our library is as big as it needs to be. Why cull information if keeping it isn't a disadvantage? Jp adelaide (talk) 14:22, 4 February 2008 (UTC)