Revision as of 05:42, 14 March 2009 editCrazypaco (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers26,387 edits →Towel Power← Previous edit |
Revision as of 05:45, 14 March 2009 edit undoCrazypaco (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers26,387 edits →Towel PowerNext edit → |
Line 10: |
Line 10: |
|
|
|
|
|
::::I fixed up the article to exclude an unrelated event. Saying this started from a one-time forgotten event is stretching it, as much as saying Canada invented Thanksgiving, just because there was a one-time Thanksgiving service generations earlier than the US. That Thanksgiving feast in colonial Canadian history was for immigrants celebrating the survival of their first Canadian winter. Really, everybody I talk to calls Towel Power just that, and they know nothing of the other event. The "earlier" event seems to have only become important AFTER Vancouver created the Towel Power tradition. And I guarantee nobody was thinking of gridiron in 1982 back when the tradition began. Unless you can come up with newspaper articles from Vancouver from 1982 that mentioned this other "earlier" event, leave the unrelated event out of this article. Now, here is the YouTube story about how the tradition started. It was a protest against the officiating of the game. It had *nothing* to do with what may have been a one-time gridiron event. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=feomG_Jv-VU ] (]) 02:50, 14 March 2009 (UTC) |
|
::::I fixed up the article to exclude an unrelated event. Saying this started from a one-time forgotten event is stretching it, as much as saying Canada invented Thanksgiving, just because there was a one-time Thanksgiving service generations earlier than the US. That Thanksgiving feast in colonial Canadian history was for immigrants celebrating the survival of their first Canadian winter. Really, everybody I talk to calls Towel Power just that, and they know nothing of the other event. The "earlier" event seems to have only become important AFTER Vancouver created the Towel Power tradition. And I guarantee nobody was thinking of gridiron in 1982 back when the tradition began. Unless you can come up with newspaper articles from Vancouver from 1982 that mentioned this other "earlier" event, leave the unrelated event out of this article. Now, here is the YouTube story about how the tradition started. It was a protest against the officiating of the game. It had *nothing* to do with what may have been a one-time gridiron event. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=feomG_Jv-VU ] (]) 02:50, 14 March 2009 (UTC) |
|
::::::We've been through this before, the Pittsburgh tradition was not a one time event. It came before and took off immediately and exists to this day. This has thoroughly been documented in many reliable third party sources, and well, is just the truth. Whether or not the Vancouver copied it or not, the Terrible Towel is the first, most predominant, and most widely recognized towel waving tradition. "Everyone you call" is not a resource. Resources are the NY Times, ESPN, CNN, on and on. Please refer to the ] article, which is well referenced, if you want to further explore this. If you want to swap YouTube links, go or . |
|
::::::We've been through this before, the Pittsburgh tradition was not a one time event. It came before, took off immediately, and exists to this day. This has thoroughly been documented in many reliable third party sources, and well, is just the truth. Whether or not the Vancouver copied it or not, the Terrible Towel is the first, most predominant, and most widely recognized towel waving tradition. "Everyone you call" is not a resource. Resources are the NY Times, ESPN, CNN, on and on. Please refer to the ] article, which is well referenced, if you want to further explore this, or simple just Google "Terrible Towel" which has almost 1 million hits. If you want to swap YouTube links, go or . |
|
::::::As long as the line: "''It can also refer to the general waving of towels at stadiums and arenas in other sports in order to give a morale boost to the home team''" exists in this article, it portends, at least in part, to be an article about general towel waving at sports events and therefore must reference the Terrible Towel tradition. Remove that line in the in the article opening, making it strictly about Vancouver's tradition, and I won't have a problem with removing the Terrible Towel wording there. ] (]) 05:19, 14 March 2009 (UTC) |
|
::::::As long as the line: "''It can also refer to the general waving of towels at stadiums and arenas in other sports in order to give a morale boost to the home team''" exists in this article, it portends, at least in part, to be an article about general towel waving at sports events and therefore absolutely <u>must</u> reference the Terrible Towel tradition. Remove that line in the in the article opening, making it strictly about Vancouver's tradition, and I won't have a problem with removing the Terrible Towel wording there. ] (]) 05:19, 14 March 2009 (UTC) |
This article can not describe "Towel Power" as general towel waving that started in Vancouver. "Towel Power" is not a general term employed by others to describe the towel waving and there was no citation to support that. "Towel Power" is a specific term only used by the Canucks to describe their towel waving tradition. Towel waving was invented by Myron Cope for a Pittsburgh Steelers playoff game in 1975. Dubbed the Terrible Towel, it regularly appeared at all Steeler playoff games in the 70s and quickly grew into a tradition at all games prior to its use in Vancouver.