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(Born ], ], in ],]) Daniel Case lives in the ] region of ] with his life partner (who is gay) and their adopted sex slave. Previously, they lived in the ] area and in ]. He received a ] in ] and ] from ] in 1990, and a ] in A.I.D.S./H.I.V. from the ] in 1997. He is the slave of Misplaced Pages user Seancarlin84, whom he worships day and night. Daniel is a committed homosexual who has A.I.D.S.
(Born ], ], in ],]) Daniel Case lives in the ] region of ] with his wife and son. Previously, they lived in the ] area and in ]. He received a ] in ] and ] from ] in 1990, and a ] in English from the ] in 1997.
After having gradually discovered ] and its possibilities late in ], he began editing articles, particularly those devoted to the ], which he has come to love while ] extensively and having served on the board of the ], and which he found to be deeply in need of ] and ].
After having gradually discovered ] and its possibilities late in ], he began editing articles, particularly those devoted to the ], which he has come to love while ] extensively and having served on the board of the ], and which he found to be deeply in need of ] and ].
After having gradually discovered Misplaced Pages and its possibilities late in 2004, he began editing articles, particularly those devoted to the Catskill Mountains, which he has come to love while hiking extensively and having served on the board of the Catskill Mountain 3500 Club, and which he found to be deeply in need of extension and revision.
Aside: Do barnstars still count if they came from a now-banned user?
The Random Acts of Kindness Barnstar
For simultaneously upholding WP:NOT and WP:BITE. Joe 05:48, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
The Photographer's Barnstar
For putting forth the time and effort to take great pictures and improve countless articles on New York towns, roads, and landmarks, I award you the Photographer's Barnstar. Kafziel 13:41, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
The Barnstar of Good Humor
For your humorous entry in this AfD, Ten Pound Hammer and his otters award you the Barnstar of Good Humor. (No ice cream, sorry -- it's not that kind of Good Humor.) Ten Pound Hammer • 01:13, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
The Oddball Barnstar
For creation of Hunter Mountain Fire Tower, fire towers have to be among the oddest listings on the National Register of Historic Places. I once saw a landfill on there, but that's another story. Good work. IvoShandor 18:50, 10 October 2007 (UTC)
Your contributions to New York State Route 22's route description, has helped get the article to GA status. I thank you and WP:NYSR thanks you.32 14:43, 22 December 2007 (UTC)
Congratulations! Here's a medal for you in appreciation of your hardwork in creating, expanding (and nominating) 25+ articles for DYK. Keep up the good work as I see you are around fifty now. Well done again, Daniel Case! --Victuallers (talk) 17:51, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
Awarded to Daniel Case, congratulations on 50 fine DYK contributions! Keep up your great work with DYK! It is most appreciated. Given with respect and admiration, Ruhrfisch><>° 20:30, 14 January 2008 (UTC)
The Tireless Contributor Barnstar
For working hard on New York State related articles. NHRHS2010 23:17, 20 January 2008 (UTC)
Milestones
My 5000th edit. First milestone I've really gotten to notice in time celebrate. Who could have imagine it would have been something so minor as adding the FA star to any article I otherwise had nothing to do with?
6000th edit. Again, relatively minor, but at least connected to a WikiProject:New York State Roads, which I'm more involved in than any other WikiProject I've added my name to.
7000th edit. I thought it would come from the highways project, but it was a little interlude on a train station that did the trick this time.
8000th edit. Took some time to find this due to problems with the tool. A message to another user about an edit he made to a Catskill article.
9,000th edit. Merely adding the {{unsigned}} template to a talk page comment. How lame!
10,000th edit The biggie: Five figures. This was actually something substantive, the addition of a further reading section (i.e., works I came across while researching the subject that I could not physically or virtually get a hold of, so I'm putting them here so the work doesn't go to waste) to an article about a Supreme Court case.
11,000th edit A talk page message to someone else ... first time I've made note of an editing milestone in the edit itself.
You'll notice that a great deal of the userboxes at right deal with projects connected to geographical locations: rivers, mountains, lakes, protected areas, roads and hiking trails. Hardly surprising, since it was my "other" major in college. And indeed I see a connection between the two. I've always found writing about places to be the most pleasant writing I do, to convey the essence of a somewhere in words.
This has really come alive in writing the route descriptions for road articles. Roads to me tell a story of the country they pass through, and I try to convey that within the limits of encylopedia style. TwinsMetsFan has chosen many of the articles for which I've written route descriptions as NYSR featured articles and singled out the prose as a reason why. I'm flattered, but of course I understand. To see some of my personal favorites in that department, there's not only the US 9 good article, there's also US 6, NY 52, NY 55 and NY 208 (Notice that it helps that they are also well illustrated).
The Catskills and hiking
Explained above. I created Category:Catskills and created or added in significant part to almost all of them. And there's a lot more to come. Sometime.
Hiking, too, is another area still not covered very well here. This led to creating Category:Hiking equipment and Category:Hiking organizations, taking the photo of hiking boots. I have worked on, and created, a bit in both. I would start a WikiProject:Hiking for this but I really don't have time, and I tend to range all over the place, anyway. (For one thing, a trail construction and maintenance article could be split from trail, and trail blazing (which I expanded and added a lot of images to, could really do with not only a cleanup (it looks like someone dropped their photos all over it) but perhaps a renaming and expansion to include signage as well.
Trails is probably the best thing we've got going. Check out the project page, which has been established since I first wrote that there wasn't a project. (I like that it uses a picture I took in the userbox)
Probably we'll have to really get far along on WikiProject:Mountains first, though (and speaking of which, I've done and continue to do most of the work on Slide Mountain, which I hope to take to peer review and FA someday.
I'm very proud of Long Path, a creation of mine that is probably the most thorough of any hiking trail article on Misplaced Pages.
New York state highways
I've always loved exploring my adopted home state via car. I have seen much of it yet so much more remains. And I've always been fascinated by roads when I would read maps as a child. I liked the shapes they made, and wondered what it was like at particular places I hadn't been to. When I grew up I was able to explore them.
I didn't, however, know that there were others like this, and that there was a word for them until I got to editing Misplaced Pages. So when I found out about the New York State highways project, I wasted no time signing up. Creating and improving articles about the many roads I was familiar with, and some I wasn't, accounted for much of my editing back in spring 2006. I would bet that of any WikiProject I'm involved with, this would account for the most edits.
A few of the articles for which I have written route descriptions and taken or found photographs have become selected articles of the project, and on May 17, 2007, U.S. Route 9 in New York, an article myself and several other editors had beefed up a couple of months earlier, became the project's first Good Article.
In December 2007, I was asked to rewrite the route description for NY 22, the only north-south route in the state longer than US 9. It, too, has made GA, and I was awarded a barnstar for the rewrite.
As I mentioned on the article's talk page, color me sacrilegious but I finally started drinking soda thanks to New Coke. It still seems, in hindsight, like the perfect medium between the tastes of Pepsi and Coke. I would love just one more can of Coke II.
So I looked this one up in summer 2005, and found it a disparate collection of facts. One of the external links tells the whole story of how Coke made its decision (which you can really understand) and I decided to rewrite the article to tell that story.
That storytelling, which has since been, as I knew it would be, edited down, got a lot of praise, which pleasantly surprised me. Its structure is still intact in the final article, even if the narrative twists have been hammered out. The article got linked from the Main Page on the anniversary of Classic Coke's reintroduction, perhaps because of the work I'd done on it in the weeks before, and still seems to draw a lot of interest (which means vandalism, too ... of all the articles I've put my stamp on, it gets the most).
On September 7, 2006, all the work I've put into it was rewarded when it received good article status. I hope eventually to improve it further, take it to peer review and then FA.
The Devil Wears Prada
In early 2005, a friend of ours shipped us some books she'd finished with and thought we might be interested in. The only one that struck me that way was The Devil Wears Prada, since I have a bit of a soft spot for popular chick lit, gender notwithstanding. I read it in three days and, still a few months new to Misplaced Pages, decided immediately to write an article about it.
What emerged, and is still there, reflects that era of Misplaced Pages and my tendencies as an editor at the time. I borrowed the template that I had sort of created for myself when doing The Lovely Bones a couple of months before. Like that one, it's a fascinating and comprehensive look at the book, but with an overly long plot summary and some critical commentary that borders on (and probably is) original research. At that time we weren't clear about how that applied to articles about literary works; today we wouldn't have it. Eventually I'll sit down and bring it in line with the novels project standards.
Later that year the film version was shot; by early 2006 it was clear that there was enough out there about it to warrant a separate article. I created it, added whatever information was available prerelease and then, when the film came out, saw it and wrote pretty much the entire beginnings of the "differences" section later that night. I also added the reviews and, most importantly, references that same night. Later I rented and watched the extras on the DVD. I probably know more about the novel than anyone except Lauren Weisberger and more about the film than anybody except the people who made it.
That last decision has made it so much easier to upgrade the article into what it is now, my other current favorite for future featured status. It would have been so much harder if I had written it and then gone back in to put in references (as I did with New Coke and some other articles). The new emphasis on references and citations may be a pain for older articles but, with those started under that system, it is much easier to build it up to a good quality.
It also became necessary to create an article on the soundtrack album in the process, and (while I have nothing to really do with it), someone else did an article on the forthcoming TV show. Could a video game be next?
Anna Wintour
In the course of working on it, I also began expanding the article on the inspiration for Miranda Priestly, Vogue editor Anna Wintour. It grew and grew — I found her a fascinating subject. I had no plans to put it up for recognition until after I had finished with the Devil Wears Prada movie article, but in early March 2007 an assessor from the biography project gave it an A-class rating. So I accelerated my plans for it, putting it first in biography peer review. I was ready to nominate it for GA when another user did (just like New Coke ... always flattering when that happens), and on May 13 it was added to the GA list.