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Revision as of 19:40, 16 May 2008 editGustavusPrimus (talk | contribs)83 editsm Aset Ka: Forgot again my signature, sorry.← Previous edit Revision as of 20:40, 16 May 2008 edit undoSelthius (talk | contribs)4 edits Aset KaNext edit →
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] (]) 19:02, 16 May 2008 (UTC) {{SPA|Hellensmith37}} ] (]) 19:02, 16 May 2008 (UTC) {{SPA|Hellensmith37}}
**All references to Aset Ka used to compile this article are recently published and self-referential. Any objective evaluation of an article on Aset Ka or the Aset Ka bible has to take into account the contradictory claims made by the organization, the lack of published commentary of its publications, lack of any verifiable information detailing its constituency, lack of any evidence for this new order having existed more than a few years ago, and the ] employed to analyze the ludicrous claims made in its source texts. Even though various proponents of the offer have made vague reference to supposedly scholarly works on vampirism, the occult, and ancient Egyptian mythology, I've yet to see any of them provide coverage specifically of the Aset Ka in anything close to a ]. The relative obscurity and newness of the Aset Ka order are reason enough ''not'' to have an encyclopedia article on it, as so far it appears to be little more than a recent curiosity in Portugese occult circles and some online forums. The Aset Ka may well be an interesting topic for some fans of contemporary vampire mythology, but it is far from being a notable organization. ˉˉ<sup>]</sup>] 19:20, 16 May 2008 (UTC) **All references to Aset Ka used to compile this article are recently published and self-referential. Any objective evaluation of an article on Aset Ka or the Aset Ka bible has to take into account the contradictory claims made by the organization, the lack of published commentary of its publications, lack of any verifiable information detailing its constituency, lack of any evidence for this new order having existed more than a few years ago, and the ] employed to analyze the ludicrous claims made in its source texts. Even though various proponents of the offer have made vague reference to supposedly scholarly works on vampirism, the occult, and ancient Egyptian mythology, I've yet to see any of them provide coverage specifically of the Aset Ka in anything close to a ]. The relative obscurity and newness of the Aset Ka order are reason enough ''not'' to have an encyclopedia article on it, as so far it appears to be little more than a recent curiosity in Portugese occult circles and some online forums. The Aset Ka may well be an interesting topic for some fans of contemporary vampire mythology, but it is far from being a notable organization. ˉˉ<sup>]</sup>] 19:20, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
*'''Overturn'''
Once again, I think that, since it's an official organization, there's no point in endorsing deletion. What they claim to be doesn't matter. People, at least, get able to know what they claim to be. About what the age the organization claims to have, all the beliefs that are into this subject: It isn't relevant. We aren't here to judge the religion and their beliefs. We are here to judge the contents of the article, remaking it in a way that it won't say "It is" but "It claims to be". It's just information.
There's a really good article about the Loch Ness Monster.
"The Loch Ness Monster is an alleged animal, identified neither as to a family or species, but claimed to inhabit Scotland's Loch Ness."
You see. We aren't going to judge this knowledge. Some people believe it exists, I personally don't (but what do you care if I do?). But I will never want to delete this knowledge/information. Because people find it useful. Some cryptozoologists, for example, find it useful and interesting. Some students of vampire folklore, egyptology and "real-life" vampirism are interested in knowledge about the Aset Ka. Isn't it fair?
I endorse restore.
] (]) 20:40, 16 May 2008 (UTC)


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Revision as of 20:40, 16 May 2008

< May 14 Deletion review archives: 2008 May May 16 >

15 May 2008

User:Commoncase/Bloodstained Memoirs

User:Commoncase/Bloodstained Memoirs (edit | ] | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)

References Added Commoncase (talk) 22:22, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

  • Dear Members, I have done a lot of work on this article over the last week, and I believe it is now up to standard to be put back in the main Wiki, as simply "Bloodstained Memoirs". I have included references to many, varied third party and reliable news sources, stated reasons for notability, and generally tidies up the article to a more polished standard. There are no instances of Crystal Ball knowledge, as all items stated in the article have been referenced either from the official site, or third party news sites (with interviews from the producer). Commoncase (talk) 18:46, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn. I'm not all together convinced that the references there now constitute reliable sources, but certainly all the WP:CRYSTAL concerns are addressed, and I'm certain reliable sources will be available in the very near future. MrPrada (talk) 04:28, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn and tag it with {{Current}} or with similar tag that indicates that the information may change a lot when the documentary is released --Enric Naval (talk) 05:06, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Put back as a main article. I believe this is a good page and should be put back up as a main article. The references are well known Wrestling related news sites.I can't see where anybody else is expecting references from considering this is a wrestling production? I feel this article meets all criteria. Arthur Cutz (talk) 17:52, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

Aset Ka

Aset Ka (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)

I'm filing this request for GustavusPrimus. She claims the article was incorrectly deleted; the original AfD closed as delete, as it was an unreferenced hoax, however, the article was rewritten with more references and images, but similar information. The article was then speedied under WP:CSD#G4, something the author disagrees with. weburiedoursecretsinthegarden 15:52, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

  • Endorse deletion (as closing admin) The only new source offered in the recent draft is a self-published book on Aset Ka that contains much of the same unreliable and unreferenced material that was used to substantiate the outrageous claims made in the previously deleted article. As such, I consider the original consensus to still apply and have therefore speedied the new version per G4. It is worth noting that no draft of the article ever offered any record of physical evidence for the historicity of the order or any published criticism of the research that led to uncovering its existence.
  • Trusilver put it best in the deletion debate, "It's a hoax, and not even that good of a hoax. Every source I have found on Aset Ka cross references each other in a way that looks legitimate until you see that it's nothing but a house of cards - each source relying on each other for notability except that none of them provide any true references. There is not a single source on the organization older than three years ago which as far as I'm concerned put this clearly in opposition of WP:NOT#OR." ˉˉ╦╩ 16:04, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn "There is not a single source on the organization older than three years ago" - Although this is not true, it is not even a valid argument, because even if the organization is 3 years old, it still is a valid organization. We are not here to discuss its age. The Misplaced Pages article does not endorse any of the order's ideals or belief system, it works only as a reference to an occult tradition. The article offers more than 1 source: It refers TV documentaries and other books. The last book added as reference is an international publication, with an official ISBN number, readily available on Amazon and countless other bookstores worldwide. No matter how much we may disagree from the contents of the book or question the truth of their beliefs, as we can do with any other religion or new age tradition, it still deserves respect as such. And the existence of the tradition is verifiable. It is throughfully documented in an international published book, and addressed in several other books not published and nor endorsed by the organization.
  • The reason for deletion simply that the organization does not exist, being a hoax. And that is easily proven false. The verifiability of the organization's existence is easy to research and prove, only their beliefs are not and are not even the subject of this debate. The Aset Ka is an officially licensed publisher from Portugal, with the tile granted by APEL, the Portuguese government institution responsible to legislate those organizations. They even have their own ISBN prefixes and ISBN gamma intervals that can only be used exclusively by their organization, marked as an "Occult Order" on APEL's databases, which I verified myself with a phone call, which any of you can also make to verify it.
  • The article that was deleted one year ago had several misconceptions in the terms of their theology and even nomenclature, all of that was corrected in the new article. Just the former writer of the old article probably did not cared about it and did not even defended his writings upon deletion request in the last time. The new book added as a reference and source was even already available as of last year, and it was simply did not mentioned, which proves how the former writer was not knowledgeable and misinformed, compared to the new one.
  • On the top of that, 2 images were deleted and marked as copy of previously deleted material (CSD G4), which is clearly inaccurate, since none of those images were ever present on Misplaced Pages, or anything close to it, which can easily be verified by any admin. Also, both images were presented with full information, as well as copyright and under fair use, meeting all of Misplaced Pages requirements and the United States law.
  • So I really hope this review for deletion can be seen with new eyes and more of an open mind, instead of a biased opinion based on the author's claims. GustavusPrimus (talk) 16:31, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
    • Is there any information on the order that is not published by the order itself? Every claim about the order comes from either its website, self-published book about a bible of dubious authenticity, or (apparently) its sole founder/historian. Misplaced Pages articles may not rely entirely on primary sources. BTW, the two images were deleted simply because they appeared in the article. Their copyright information and fair use claims were indeed in order. ˉˉ╦╩ 16:43, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
      • The "bible" is not of dubious authenticity, you are interpreting it wrong. It is never said, in any place, that the "bible" is an old book. It is merely a book name, Asetian Bible. The book is said as written recently, that is even explained on the book's introduction, that is freely available, without the need of buying the book. So there are no false claims in there, the book is merely a work that describes their religion, tradition, beliefs and tenets. It is not supposed to be any ancient work now finally published, and therefore having a "dubious authenticity" as you stated. As for the self-publishing, the book was first even announced as from other independent publisher, but in the end it was published under Aset Ka's name, I believe that it was because of a copyright issue that arose, according to my resources. But personally I don't even believe this is the point, considering all the other arguments that I have used. As for other information available that is not created by the order, there are several things, that if properly researched can be used to validate it, as the TV documentary for example. GustavusPrimus (talk) 16:55, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
        • The bible purports an "Asetian tradition" that clearly does not exist. It discusses lineages and hierarchies and quasi-historical connections to ancient Egypt without any shred of proof. This can be said without even delving into the various nutball claims about vampirism made in the source text and its analysis. Aset Ka appears to be a ready-made movement, except it has no verifiable history or constituency of followers, and it promotes itself as a "secret order" (note the logical inconsistency of that last part). In that sense, it is a hoax. ˉˉ╦╩ 17:31, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
          • Again, very wrong argument, ultimately mistaken and biased. The tradition does exist and is fully explained in the published book. Their reference to Lineages, is explained in the book that it is NOT a hierarchy or ANY historical connection. It is not related with like our concept of a bloodline, or any genetic connection to people in Ancient Egypt. They explain it, that in their tradition, the term refers exclusively to an esoteric concept, a definition that is connected to 3 archetypes! Archetypes! No real connections or any quasi-historical thing, as you referred. So it needs no proof, since there is no claim! All these arguments are being made up upon comments made by vandalism and misinterpretations on the old article. This is what I should call as full misinformation or ignorance on the debated subject. You just stated something that clearly the referenced books state otherwise, so it should be better if the material was consulted before making arguments on it. This is ultimately nefast to Misplaced Pages and knowledge, since arguments are being made with no foundation and by people that don't even know what are they commenting upon. So first read the mentioned work, then comment please. Thank you. GustavusPrimus (talk) 17:42, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Comment: I do not think that I can form a fair opinion of this without seeing the content that was deleted. 69.140.152.55 (talk) 16:47, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn: (Changed !vote to Endorse after seeing the deleted text) Apparently, in the year since the AfD, there's been a TV documentary and books (fully catalogued) published. The only arguments in the AfD were a lack of sources, which made it look like a hoax, but these new sources destroy those arguments...... Dendodge .. Talk 17:12, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
    • Book - singular, self-published. The whole point is that the sources used were much the same in the new draft and shared the same flaws. ˉˉ╦╩ 17:20, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
      • In publishing lango, self-published is a synonymous for vanity publishing, which means that the author is the publisher of the work. Even on the Misplaced Pages definition clearly states that self-publishing is the publishing of a book or other media by the author of those works, instead of third-party publishers. Which is precisely the case. The book was published by the Aset Ka, not by Luis Marques, who is the author. This is NOT a self-published work, but actually a work published by a Portuguese publisher that has released a book written by one of their most respected experts in the Asetian tradition. Again I see no problems in the validity of the organization. The problem here is residing in belief. But belief is not in case. They can believe whatever they desire, as an encyclopedia, we are merely showing information related to their tradition that can be useful as reference to anyone interested in the subject! Plain and simple. GustavusPrimus (talk) 17:35, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
      • Would it be possible for me to see the deleted article text, that could affect my !vote, I am simply going on what I have been told about the subject...... Dendodge .. Talk 17:22, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
    • The documentary was in the version of the article deleted at afd (diff). The only newly-cited source is the Asetian Bible. Endorse. —Cryptic 17:35, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Endorse deletion: Changed from Overturn after seeing the deleted text. All sources are published by the organisation...... Dendodge .. Talk 17:54, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn
    The problem here seems to lie in belief. If this organization actually exists (which it appears to do), it has the right to claim whatever they believe in. The article just needs to give a definition of the concept of the Order, what they claim to be, what they believe in, and other good info to give on the organization. There is no way calling it a "hoax" will be an argument to delete it. We shouldn't focus on the tradition itself, since it's a matter of belief; we should aim to inform the people about what this organization claims to be, their beliefs and tradition. We are not evaluating their traditions.
    This organization, which shows itself behind the name "Order of Aset Ka", officially exists as, at least, a publisher. If they exist as a publisher, they are an organization. Since the organization "Aset Ka" publishes books about itself regarding religion and metaphysics, we are not here to judge their knowledge and the authenticity of their beliefs. Their book is legal, which makes it legal to quote it as a reference. Even it if it's published by the organization.
    People may see this organization as new-age, since it showed itself not long ago. What existed before it appeared doesn't matter. But it's legal to claim that existed for thousands of years, since it's based on belief. They believe they existed for thousands of years, and they justify it through religion and belief: Fine!, they have that right. People don't have to believe it.
    Selthius (talk) 18:15, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Neutral: Changed from Overturn to Endorse to Neutral. After a more thorough examination of the text, the article looks like it would be OK with a bit of cleanup (sorry for being so indecisive)...... Dendodge .. Talk 18:45, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn The article seems to be quite revamped from the version it was deleted last year, made more clear and verifiable. The new book provided as reference is a published work. Verifiable enough. The article complies to Misplaced Pages standards and it is not a hoax. Period. Cristina Torres (talk) 19:33, 15 May 2008 (UTC) This template must be substituted.
  • Endorse deletion The book is WP:SELFPUBlished by a member of Aset ka, see this forum discussion, so it's not an independient source. The book appears to be a fluff job to make the order look important, so it's probably not reliable for notability and for antiguity of the order. If you look at their website, you will see that the whole site is based on the contents of the book. This is either a hoax or an attempt to give a patina of respectability to a recently created non-notable order. The only reliable source that we have is one mention on a TV program, wich probably makes only a passing mention. This article is not verifiable because we have no reliable independient sources to check anything that their book is claiming, and almost fails WP:N because we have only one independient source asserting its notability, and we are not sure of just how much notability it's asserting. Notice that we have absolutely no confirmation that the order actually exists out of the book and the website and there are 99% chances that it's an elaborate hoax by the book's author and a few friend. It isn't even a notable hoax, since it hasn't been covered anywhere as a successful hoax, so we can't base the article on that. --Enric Naval (talk) 05:35, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
    • Overturn 1 "The book appears to be a fluff job to make the order look important" - A fluff job to make the order look important? The book does not even talk about the order, but merely describes a spiritual tradition in terms of beliefs, dogmas, ritual symbolism and theology. I am starting to repeat myself, but I ask again that nonsense comments are not made by people that have not read the book or at least have no clue of what they are talking about. Otherwise clearly misinformed comments like this one would not happen.

2 "The only reliable source that we have is one mention on a TV program, wich probably makes only a passing mention." - One hour is not only a passing mention. So again, these comments would classify as lack of research or direct unilateral speculation.
3 "Notice that we have absolutely no confirmation that the order actually exists out of the book and the website" - This argument was already addressed for several times in this discussion as being wrong. There is no way to contest the existence of the order as an organization, that is even registered officially.
I am sorry if I start sounding too harsh, but it gets really hard to deal when we see so many misinformed arguments and claims out of the lack of research, and constantly see people doing comments running in circles, which is clearly against the purpose of this review. GustavusPrimus (talk) 14:48, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

  • Overturn - perhaps a strange article but certainly not cruft or non-notable. COI issues maybe a concern but with diligent cleanup and proper use of verifiable sources, I can't see an issue with a very strange but interesting article. Restore last sourced version. -- EhsanQ 16:38, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn
    I have seen people using forums as arguments in this discussion, so if that is the case, I would also advise to consult this forum, which has a very long, 5-page, debate on the Aset Ka, with 238 posts and 9,681 unique views, making the Aset Ka thread one of the most read ever in this forum, that alone is one of the biggest occult forums on the web. The thread even surpasses in replies and unique views the sticky thread at the top of the forum, which is viewed by literally everyone. This directly addresses the question of notability, representing the interest of the occult community on the subject. The views field actually speaks for itself, since the forum counts only unique IP addresses, so a scheme of page-reload would not work in here. Check the reference forum here .
    Also, in this threat several people talk as actually researchers on this Aset Ka organization. Not people from the organization, but researching it for long, which adds as another reference as the notability of the order. This takes us to another website, which is an independent forum entirely or at least highly dedicated to discussion of the Asetian tradition and the Aset Ka as an occult order. This forum is now locked for long and used to be part of a bigger website, which was a portal from a group that entitle themselves as Vampire Watchers Group, aiming at the research of vampirism, world traditions and the occult. Their portal used to keep several information and documentation regarding the Aset Ka, as well as vampirism, where this forum used to be a part of. Check the reference forum here .
    The VWG website that was highly active between 2001 and 2006, completely went down in 2007, which they claimed to be a problem in the backups of the old server. A new, but highly small and irrelevant, website was put online in 2007, that also has some comments on the Aset Ka, but nothing really important and seems like it was abandoned soon after for reasons that the VWG refused to make clear, but that is documented on their own forum. Check the reference site here .
    24.85.70.22 (talk) 17:14, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Sustain delete The sources given do not support the article. If the Portuguese TV magazine does, please provide a quotation and translation of the key part. A TV interview is not necessarily an independent source-- if it just consists of someone presumably associate with the site making bald assertions,that is not independent . If restored, stubbify to the only part that has any evidence, which is that the forum exists. DGG (talk) 18:01, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
    • Overturn It is not a TV interview, but a documentary on the subject. No one related with the organization was interviewed. So it is an independent source. Besides as already mentioned, that is only one of the referred sources. However I do agree that the article can be cleaned up and improved, as you said, which I was about to work on when it was deleted. GustavusPrimus (talk) 19:40, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn As the user that posted the new article, made the corrections and has fully rewritten most of the previous poor article's misconceptions, as well as uploaded the 2 new images, including the book cover, copyright licence information and associated ISBN. This new article is clearly being victimized by ideas biased by old research and clearly lack of honest research over the subject. Wether we like it or not, and how much of their Ancient Egyptian religious claims might be arrogant and doubtful, the Order of Aset Ka remains one of the very few references worldwide in what comes to Vampiric Traditions in the complex occult scene. They present probably the only accessible tradition with a predatory spirituality backbone and an Ancient Egyptian theology. Their tradition, theology, tenets, beliefs and spiritual system is detailedly described in a published work, which deserves its credit alone. And this IS verifiable. But not only verifiable, as it is even supported by books, not only published by the Aset Ka, as other publications, some written in English, others written in Portuguese, as the books and papers published by Ordem Peninsular, as well as TV documentaries, and workshops and thesis debated in Portuguese universities that are in no terms related with the Order of Aset Ka, that really does not relate with any outside institutions. The argument used that this new book is not yet mentioned in other published works makes no sense, since it is a recent book, so it could not yet be referenced on that scale. However, the tradition and the Aset Ka as an occult organization was mentioned on other works, as it was already referenced.

Using the argument that the book is self-published over and over is merely a theatric attempt to discredit a valuable work. Self published information is like when someone writes information about himself on a website. But if you want to use the term in what comes to real publications, then self publishing means an author publishing his own work, being his own editor and publisher, which is not the case of the work we are talking about. This work is published by a registered and credentialed Portuguese publisher, which can be verified on the appropriated government institution, not a work published by the author. It is even fully written in the English language, which is a preferable reference source according to Misplaced Pages guidelines. Being one of the few publications in what concerns this very specific field of the occult, which is real life vampirism in spiritual traditions, makes the book Asetian Bible certainly one of the most notable sources and references on the theme. What I think it is causing most confusing and uninformed votes and opinions in this deletion review is actually the fact that most people commenting against the article have in fact no real information, background or scholarship to comment on it. People that are actually in the occult scene, as researchers, especially in the niche that is vampirism and predatory spirituality, would certainly understand the point of the arguments defending Overturn and endorse it, seeing the clear notability of this article in what comes to the niche of information in question, and being nevertheless encyclopedic knowledge.

Ultimately all this discussion sums up to one single thing: is the Aset Ka a real organization or a hoax webpage created by some kid online? This was the reason stated for deletion of the article one year ago. The answer to this is easily verifiable with no doubts. They ARE an organization. They HAVE published work.
If their tradition, claims and beliefs are true or false, is out of subject in this discussion, and concerns only the followers of their tradition. But if the organization exists? To that, the answer is undeniable. So let's stop this whole nonsense debate once and for all, please...
Hellensmith37 (talk) 19:02, 16 May 2008 (UTC) This template must be substituted.

    • All references to Aset Ka used to compile this article are recently published and self-referential. Any objective evaluation of an article on Aset Ka or the Aset Ka bible has to take into account the contradictory claims made by the organization, the lack of published commentary of its publications, lack of any verifiable information detailing its constituency, lack of any evidence for this new order having existed more than a few years ago, and the original research employed to analyze the ludicrous claims made in its source texts. Even though various proponents of the offer have made vague reference to supposedly scholarly works on vampirism, the occult, and ancient Egyptian mythology, I've yet to see any of them provide coverage specifically of the Aset Ka in anything close to a reliable source. The relative obscurity and newness of the Aset Ka order are reason enough not to have an encyclopedia article on it, as so far it appears to be little more than a recent curiosity in Portugese occult circles and some online forums. The Aset Ka may well be an interesting topic for some fans of contemporary vampire mythology, but it is far from being a notable organization. ˉˉ╦╩ 19:20, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn

Once again, I think that, since it's an official organization, there's no point in endorsing deletion. What they claim to be doesn't matter. People, at least, get able to know what they claim to be. About what the age the organization claims to have, all the beliefs that are into this subject: It isn't relevant. We aren't here to judge the religion and their beliefs. We are here to judge the contents of the article, remaking it in a way that it won't say "It is" but "It claims to be". It's just information. There's a really good article about the Loch Ness Monster. "The Loch Ness Monster is an alleged animal, identified neither as to a family or species, but claimed to inhabit Scotland's Loch Ness." You see. We aren't going to judge this knowledge. Some people believe it exists, I personally don't (but what do you care if I do?). But I will never want to delete this knowledge/information. Because people find it useful. Some cryptozoologists, for example, find it useful and interesting. Some students of vampire folklore, egyptology and "real-life" vampirism are interested in knowledge about the Aset Ka. Isn't it fair? I endorse restore. Selthius (talk) 20:40, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

Quantifica

Quantifica (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)

No conflict of interest. Thanks for your answer Stifle. But can you tell me why in what way my article was advertisement? What should I change? I used articles made for competitors and nobody seem to think their articles were advertisement: Gartner, Forrester Research, Informa... Check these out. Bebeagrafe (talk) 08:56, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

Bruce Jacobs

Bruce Jacobs (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)

This article was deleted last year because he was just a "Local radio talk show host in Phoenix". But actually hes also a national sports anchor on Fox Sports Radio. Im guessing the article didn't mention this. A few people in the AFD mentioned this but as the admin put it "I found some sources but don't care enough to provide them" is not a winning argument. As for notability I think hosting a show on a major sports network with 300+ affiliates across the US is notable. Just like the other Fox hosts:Andrew Siciliano, Ben Maller, and J. T. the Brick-- Coasttocoast (talk) 05:18, 15 May 2008 (UTC)

  • Relist. Someone should have at least checked the sources, even if the one editor did not care to provide them. We do not automatically default to delete. MrPrada (talk) 05:33, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Relist. 69.140.152.55 (talk) 05:45, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Endorse deletion unless the sources (plural) are actually found and cited, rather than talked about. Stifle (talk) 10:41, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Relist the article did mention it: "and a syndicated weekend sports talk show on Fox Sports Radio." The article as deleted was extremely promotional in tone, and I'd suggest improving it with a more encyclopedic way -- and with sources DGG (talk) 12:21, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Relist: Seems notable-ish, but relisting would be best...... Dendodge .. Talk 18:57, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Endorse deletion as not notable. That's a source from Fox itself, so that's not independient coverage. Looking at WP:PEOPLE, I can't see that he has made "a widely recognized contribution that is part of the enduring historical record in his or her specific field", and I don't think that being a radio host on a pair of shows qualifies, so he is still non-notable and the deletion was correct. The decision was based on the sources currently available, it's not the closing admin's fault if nobody wants to provide the sources that *could* save the article from deletion. As for now, the only new source given still doesn't assert enoguh notability, so the closure should still stand. --Enric Naval (talk) 06:02, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

Steve Beren

Steve Beren (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)

UNDELETE_REASON Steveberen (talk) 03:44, 15 May 2008 (UTC) I'd like to draw attention to the deletion of this article. The article, which has been on Misplaced Pages since 2006, was previously (back in 2006, I believe) suggested for removal because of non-neutrality. This was early in its existence, and was resolved quickly, and the article remained up through 2006, 2007, and until earlier today. I'm the subject of the article, and the original author, but the accuracy and neutrality of the article was not questioned further. I believe the decision to delete was wrong. There are a multiplicity of factors applying to this biographical article. In the proposed-deletion discussion, some of these were dismissed to one extent or another, in my opinion inappropriately when considered against existing guidelines. Moreover, even if one factor (failed former candidacy) is not notable in and of itself, and even if another factor (former communist/aheist turned motivational speaker and born-again Christian) is not notable in and of itself, the totality of these and several other factors equals sufficient notability. A more careful reading of my part of the proposed-delete discussion would lead to a different conclusion, I believe. Please review carefully and consider the above rationale for undeletion - Steve Beren, 5/14/08, 8:44 pm PDT

  • Overturn. I find the lack of a closing rationale rationale troubling. The main argument seems to have been that he failed WP:POLITICIAN, but as Les Grand pointed out, he met WP:BIO, with numerous verified second and third party sources, such as: Canada Free Press, Conservative Voice, Seattle Times, Seattle Post Intelligencer, New York Times, Seattle Times, Seattle Times, Seattle Post Intelligencer, Seattle Post Intelligencer, Seattle Times, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, NEws Tribune, Seattle Times, Seattle Post Intelligencer, Seattle Times, Seattle Times, Seattle Times, Crosscut Seattle. This is more then enough to meet WP:BIO, even if he has never been a successful candidate. MrPrada (talk) 05:41, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • The New York Times link above is broken, which is problematic, because a full-length New York Times article that has somebody as its primary subject would be prima facie evidence of notability. Also, many of the above sources only display the first part of the story, not enough for a reader to determine the nature of the coverage (unless one were to register on their website); if an article merely describes the campaign or the results of the election, this would only establish notability if the candidate won or came close to winning. Unless I can get more info., I would relist to get a broader consensus. 69.140.152.55 (talk) 06:06, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn and relist per 69.140, but Steve, please bear in mind the autobiography rules. Stifle (talk) 10:42, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Relist but write carefully. The NYT article is a short 491 word article from 1970, about his success in suing for free radio time back when he was running on the Socialist Workers Party ticket for State Assembly in NY, long before he became a conservative Republican in Seattle. Paywall,but still a usable reference. DGG (talk) 12:32, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Relist: The sources seem good enough, asserting notability...... Dendodge .. Talk 18:55, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Relist While some of the sources give trivial coverage, others give actual coverage of the subject . The NYT source seems to assert that he is notable in spite of being a minor candidate. Basically, he presents himself again and again, and gets resources and attention despite failing to be elected. See also DGG's comment on this source. --Enric Naval (talk) 06:11, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Overturn per MrPrada and because the bio subject was a major party's nominee for Congress, not just a contender for the nomination. JamesMLane t c 12:29, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

Kremlin (bar)

Kremlin (bar) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore|cache|AfD)

I'd like to bring to your attention the deletion of an article I created. I created the article Kremlin (bar) was was nominated for deletion after having undergone some revisions (the addition of two other identically-named bars to the article, as far as I remember). This is despite the Kremlin in Northern Ireland being notable as Northern Ireland's first gay bar. Unfortunately I knew very little of its history or anything else about the bar, and I had hoped other editors might be able to expand it from being merely a stub.

Excuse me for not following normal procedure here - I am in between Misplaced Pages user accounts, and I'm not sure what editing powers an IP-assigned editor has in this regard. Please feel free to tidy this up and submit a proper review on my behalf.

The article was deleted on the 31st of January this year, by four votes to one against (not including the nominator). --90.206.36.142 (talk) 03:22, 12 May 2008 (UTC)

originally posted to Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Sexuality and gender ˉˉ╦╩ 01:08, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
That was brought up at the AfD. Unless you've found a source, there's no reason to relist. Cheers. --lifebaka (Talk - Contribs) 23:33, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
  • Endorse deletion lack of reliable sources for the claim that would give it enough notability to be restored. There are lots of similar baseless claims made by pubs: "First pub opened on xxxx", "First pub to do xxxx", etc --Enric Naval (talk) 06:13, 16 May 2008 (UTC)