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*'''Comment (response)''' The nominator is the one who started the Afd by saying that he was "tired" of discussing the issue. So he is stating his motives himself, it's not me questioning the motives. They are clear. And under the guidelines for ] a nominator cannot submit an article if his motivation is to end an edit war. It's clear that was his motivation. Again, if you look at the talk page of the article he says just a few days before nominating the article that it wasn't his intent. The amount of sources did not change in that time, just his lack of patience. I think there have been some good and some iffy reasoning going on here. What I think would be a good solution is that since the article is relatively new and it is not the type of article that would qualify for speedy deletion, that instead we give the article time to breathe and time for more sources to be added at a later date. There is no rush to get rid of this article, as clearly there is a backlog of other articles with no references at all that have more serious notability or sourcing issues. In fact if you look at the Misplaced Pages notability project, the backlog goes back as far as 2007. That's a lot of articles. I think the problem here is that these tags are being thrown on every article willy nilly without giving the articles and the editors time to build them. If a tag sits on an article for 4 years, then clearly if someone hasn't proven notability by that point, I would understand an Afd. But to throw an article out when it has been recently created without allowing time for it to build, seems rash. As for the sources, there are several sources for the article which are not primary (the official web page) but which are secondary sources, i.e. media outlets not associated with the production. There are not any articles which the primary "focus" is the film, and that doesn't seem to be the criteria for notablity. I'm sure with a lot of cult films and films that are "upcoming" there might not be enough information for a full article, but an article might make mention of a film. Seems that would be valid. Again, I think the right response would be to '''keep''' the article and keep the tag for more sources to be added. - ] (]) 04:40, 2 March 2012 (UTC) | *'''Comment (response)''' The nominator is the one who started the Afd by saying that he was "tired" of discussing the issue. So he is stating his motives himself, it's not me questioning the motives. They are clear. And under the guidelines for ] a nominator cannot submit an article if his motivation is to end an edit war. It's clear that was his motivation. Again, if you look at the talk page of the article he says just a few days before nominating the article that it wasn't his intent. The amount of sources did not change in that time, just his lack of patience. I think there have been some good and some iffy reasoning going on here. What I think would be a good solution is that since the article is relatively new and it is not the type of article that would qualify for speedy deletion, that instead we give the article time to breathe and time for more sources to be added at a later date. There is no rush to get rid of this article, as clearly there is a backlog of other articles with no references at all that have more serious notability or sourcing issues. In fact if you look at the Misplaced Pages notability project, the backlog goes back as far as 2007. That's a lot of articles. I think the problem here is that these tags are being thrown on every article willy nilly without giving the articles and the editors time to build them. If a tag sits on an article for 4 years, then clearly if someone hasn't proven notability by that point, I would understand an Afd. But to throw an article out when it has been recently created without allowing time for it to build, seems rash. As for the sources, there are several sources for the article which are not primary (the official web page) but which are secondary sources, i.e. media outlets not associated with the production. There are not any articles which the primary "focus" is the film, and that doesn't seem to be the criteria for notablity. I'm sure with a lot of cult films and films that are "upcoming" there might not be enough information for a full article, but an article might make mention of a film. Seems that would be valid. Again, I think the right response would be to '''keep''' the article and keep the tag for more sources to be added. - ] (]) 04:40, 2 March 2012 (UTC) | ||
:*Please, you need to understand that the editors involved in this are acting in good faith and per Misplaced Pages's guidelines. This is not even a "speedy" deletion, as you've described it above; those are not discussed, but simply deleted (if an article fits the requirements). This is a full-on deletion discussion, and the trend is clear based on the comments so far. You're hoping to establish notability, but your efforts to date are in fact supporting the opinion that the film does not have the notability for a stand-alone article. Who knows, perhaps after its release it will go on to receive critical acclaim (or notoriety) from high-level critics, and (perhaps) then begin to warrant an article. At present, however, your sources simply support that it ''exists'' which is not sufficient. --''']'''''<small><sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></small>'' 05:49, 2 March 2012 (UTC) | :*Please, you need to understand that the editors involved in this are acting in good faith and per Misplaced Pages's guidelines. This is not even a "speedy" deletion, as you've described it above; those are not discussed, but simply deleted (if an article fits the requirements). This is a full-on deletion discussion, and the trend is clear based on the comments so far. You're hoping to establish notability, but your efforts to date are in fact supporting the opinion that the film does not have the notability for a stand-alone article. Who knows, perhaps after its release it will go on to receive critical acclaim (or notoriety) from high-level critics, and (perhaps) then begin to warrant an article. At present, however, your sources simply support that it ''exists'' which is not sufficient. --''']'''''<small><sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></small>'' 05:49, 2 March 2012 (UTC) | ||
* '''Delete'''. As it stands, this article does not demonstrate notability, which is a bit surprising given its pedigree. But really, if that's the best sources that are available it shouldn't be on Misplaced Pages. All the cites are either primary sources, or are citing tangential information that isn't about the film. Perhaps once released it with gather some notability and secondary sources, but right now this isn't deserving of anything more than a mention on the ] article. --<font color="purple">]</font> <sup>]</sup> 18:00, 2 March 2012 (UTC) |
Revision as of 18:00, 2 March 2012
It Must be Nice
- Note: This debate has been included in the Article Rescue Squadron's list of content for rescue consideration. Catpowerzzz (talk) 00:42, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- It Must be Nice (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log)
- (Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL)
Tired of arguing about this one. I've trimmed the links to blogs and unreliable sources, (and the creator keeps reverting) but in the end, this is exactly what wp:crystalball is meant for. No reliable sources are talking about this, and I have no idea if they will for this short. Dennis Brown (talk) 12:40, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
- Comment. This was a frivolous and vexatious nomination for deletion as you can tell by the submitter's comment "tired of arguing". "Tired of arguing" is not a reason for deletion of material, but shows vexation as a chief motivator for his submission. The user Dennis Brown who submitted it for deletion did so out of malice, merely to end a discussion and/or perceived edit war. This is not the proper forum for that. The article could be improved as all articles can be in the future, and he made comments to that effect prior to submitting it for deletion. He also made statements on the Talk page of the article prior to submitting the article that said "if he wanted to submit it to Afd" he would have (when he first came upon it). He only submitted it LATER out of a vexation with the discussion and/or perceived edit war when he did not feel it was all going his way. I think this article qualifies for a WP:SPEEDYKEEP. I suggest that the user withdraw this article from consideration. See the comment below, "Dennis Brown was wrong to remove those new references for the given reason, so I have reinstated them. He is absolutely wrong to claim that an article must be "frozen" at the state it started AfD. by Boing! said Zebedee which confirms that Dennis Brown tried to claim the article was "frozen" and that no changes could be made, including adding the sources that he was requesting. He had deleted all sources and content from the article prior to submission in a vexatious way to make the article "stub-like" and appear to be without sources. He then misinformed this user that I couldn't change the article or put back the references that he had deleted. That seems to be malicious and not in good faith. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 23:26, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- I had misunderstood Dennis Brown's edit summary - he had not intended to suggest an article should be frozen for AfD -- Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 14:03, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Delete per nom. Can always be reposted if and when reliable sources cover it. 99.136.255.180 (talk) 13:11, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
- Regretful Delete. I can only see primary sources used here. The others that have been removed appeared to be largely irrelevant, about the people rather than the film itself, or blogs etc. I've done a bit of searching and I can't find any reliable third party coverage of the film itself. Once released, if it gets suitable coverage, it would be eligible for its own article. -- Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 13:19, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
- Delete or redirect to Chris Innis. There's just not enough coverage of this film right now to warrant having an article. Notability is not inherited by having notable people act or direct in the film and most of the sources I do find are primary or trivial, neither of which can be used to show notability for an article. This is just a clear case of WP:TOOSOON and WP:CRYSTALBALL. When the film gets released it might achieve enough notability to have an article, but it doesn't have that right now and to be honest, it might never achieve that. Shorts don't always manage to get noticed even with an amazing cast and director. This might be well served as a redirect to the director's page and if the original editor wants to userfy it until it can pass notability guidelines for movies, I have no problem with that.Tokyogirl79 (talk) 14:17, 26 February 2012 (UTC)tokyogirl79
- Delete. WP:NRVE, and with the lack of sources here we unfortunately cannot meet this standard. This short film may well turn out to be WP:N, but it is impossible to tell at this time. Some of the cast and crew certainly are WP:N, but WP:NOTINHERITED. WP:NFF provides important guidance here as well: "films that have not been confirmed by reliable sources to have commenced principal photography should not have their own articles" and "films that have already begun shooting, but have not yet been publicly released (theatres or video), should generally not have their own articles unless the production itself is notable per the notability guidelines". I don't know what phase of production this short film is in, but WP:RELIABLESOURCES are required to meet the aforementioned criteria. Merging a sentence into Chris Innis may be appropriate; per WP:FUTURE: "until such time that more encyclopedic knowledge about the product can be verified, product announcements should be merged to a larger topic (such as an article about the creator(s), a series of products, or a previous product) if applicable". -- Sailing to Byzantium (msg), 14:38, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
- Keep. This request for deletion is in violation of WP:FIVE, "Good faith" has not been assumed by the other editors. Rules in Misplaced Pages are not carved in stone per WP:SIMPLE. Still, this article does not meet one single criteria for speedy deletion WP:SD. Regarding notability: this article has followed all the rules of notability for film articles. The filmmaker is notable per WP:BASIC, and WP:ENT, being a recent Academy Award and BAFTA (British Academy Award) winner (with multiple published secondary sources verifying that) and the film stars another Academy Award nominee, a very famous actress Karen Black as well as other notable actors who have significant roles in multiple notable films, television shows and/or like John LaZar who has a large "cult following" per WP:ENT. The article also meets the requirements for inclusion and notability for film articles WP:MOVIE under "other evidence of notability" as follows: "The film features significant involvement by a notable person". The film notability requires that there are at least two independent sources to substantiate the article - and this article supplies THREE independent sources (one additional source). Two of the sources are interviews done by independent media outlets at the International Press Academy's own Satellite Awards. This is an awards show to honor the best films of the year, a show put on by the press, for the press and covered by the press. That is about as reliable as it gets as a source. The third cited reference is an article with "cult" actor John LaZar notable as per WP:ENT. It is a high bar to set for a film that has not been released, but this film has met that bar and surpassed it. The threshold for inclusion of a film article for a "future film" is that the film must be past the stage of "principal photography" per WP:NFF and have been confirmed by reliable sources and meets the notability requirements, which it does as above. The evidence that the film is out of the stage of production is the official web site of the film which shows photos of the film during principal photography and on the "news and updates" section of the web site, states: "The film has completed principal photography and is currently in post-production" here: The Official Web site. Furthermore, there are numerous short films that have not been scrutinized to the degree this one has, which has to beg the question of the motivation of those who have nominated it for deletion and/or who have repeatedly deleted content from it. Here are a few examples: This example only has one reference cited, which is "IMDB." Here is another one which only uses its official web site and the imdb as sources and and one obscure film festival with not very well known actors and director. And here is yet another example that has no reliable sources and which has not remotely been given the scrutiny this article has. WP:HOUND states that it is unacceptable for an editor to disrupt another user's enjoyment of editing for "no overriding reason," as there is clearly not grounds for this aggressive nomination for deletion. The above suggestion by Sailing to Byzantium that it be merged into Chris Innis is also not acceptable, as merging would create too large of an article there. This article is notable enough to warrant a stand alone page and if the editors who ganged up to delete it would stop deleting content about the "cinematography" and other pertinent content, the article would be more fleshed out (and would not appear stub-like just so that they could nominate it for deletion by making it appear that it has no substance). Oh and by the way, none of the above users has been a part of the discussion of the film nor contributed to the article aside from the one who has nominated it for deletion. He claims he is "tired" about discussing it but nobody made him do that -- he took it upon himself to agressively delete this material. Again, you have to question the motivation. Thanks for your consideration. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 17:31, 28 February 2012 (UTC)
- Comment. Nobody is ganging up on the article. This is how AfD works and just because people are not agreeing with your opinion does not automatically mean that we're acting in bad faith or that we have an agenda against this movie. People look at the article and then try to find enough reliable sources to show that the film meets WP:NFILM or WP:NFF. In this instance the movie met neither requirement and we can't keep an article that doesn't pass these guidelines. If you truly feel that any of us are acting in bad faith, please feel free to take it up at the Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents board. Tokyogirl79 (talk) 06:34, 29 February 2012 (UTC)tokyogirl79
- Comment (Response). Dennis Brown has deleted all of the sources that you are requesting. When I told him to put back the sources that he deleted, he refused stating that, "that's the way it was when it was submitted" for consideration for deletion. No, that's the way it was when HE decided to submit it. If you want to see the independent sources that were cited, which were not just the official web site, please revert back the article to my last edit or the one before that. If I do it, he or Ckatz are just going to revert it. I told Dennis Brown on the talk page that it would be obfuscating if he were to continue to strip the article of its sources and/or external links during an Afd deliberation in order for him to create the misconception that there were no independent sources. He (and Ckatz's) apparent goal was to game the system by presenting a stub-like article with no sources to you guys for consideration. That's what I mean by not using good faith and being dangerously close to WP:GAME if not a text book example of it. Look, the bottom line is that even aside from the independent sources we have (2 media interviews and one print article in a magazine) and then the official web site, we have met notability because the filmmaker is a recent Oscar winner. If the bar for notability is going to be set so high as to exclude Oscar winners, then I think Misplaced Pages needs some new "rules." But of course, it has become the "Lord of the Flies" Misplaced Pages and is no longer the Misplaced Pages of the people. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 21:04, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- Response. Dennis Brown was wrong to remove those new references for the given reason, so I have reinstated them. He is absolutely wrong to claim that an article must be "frozen" at the state it started AfD. In fact, editors are encouraged to improve an article during an AfD discussion, and any new sources added should be reviewed before the AfD is closed. -- Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 21:24, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- OK, I've had a look at the new references...
- "Official web site - It Must be Nice short film" - not independent.
- "Mingle Media archived Interview" - interview with the director is a primary source, does not establish notability
- "Nyne Magazine, UK, Interview with John LaZar" - interview with a star is a primary source, does not establish notability
- "Amanda Fuller Talks..." - interview with a star is a primary source, does not establish notability
- So, sorry, but I really don't think any of those helps to establish notability. -- Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 21:35, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- I have reverted back. Those had been deleted by myself and an admin a few times (the history shows this). The original rational is valid, that they are not reliable sources. I did not say you can't add sources to an article in AFD, which would be absurd, since I do it all the time. In fact, I wasn't treating it any differently than any other article, regardless of AFD status. Why I am being accused of this, I have no idea, but again, the histories clearly show otherwise. I did comment on his rationale, but it didn't overcome the previous rationale, that they fail RS. Dennis Brown (talk) 22:24, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- Response (to Response) Thanks for looking at that and for noting that Dennis Brown was wrong to suggest that the article is frozen at the place he last reverted it. Notability is established also by the Misplaced Pages internal links. The main filmmaker has recently won an Academy Award. The stars of the film are notable and award-winning. One is a cult film star John LaZar and per WP:ENT that also qualifies for inclusion. Notability has been established on multiple levels even aside from the sources. Academy Award winning filmmaker period end of story. Cult film actor. Double down. Academy Award and Grammy award nominated actress. Triple threat. Director of Photography was DP on numerous recent high profile films as well as having been a camera operator with David Lynch, Tim Burton, and others. Four. Star actress, Amanda Fuller, is recurring player on this season's hit t.v. series Grey's Anatomy. Five. Six, Clu Gulager is an actor who has starred in just about every tv show EVER. He was featured in The Last Picture Show which is also a cult film. Seriously, how many levels of "notability" does a film have to hit to be considered worthy of inclusion? This is not just some Youtube video off the street. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 22:02, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- OK, sorry if I misunderstood Dennis Brown's edit summary. But I really do think it is better not to remove sources added during this AfD discussion, and instead let people actually review them. It will do no harm at all to have a few non-RS sources for the duration of the discussion, and at least it should counter the "They're censoring me to make sure it gets deleted" argument -- Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 10:00, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Comment: Catpowerzzz, you have put quite a bit of work into writing that message. Unfortunately, however, much of what you write either misses the point of Misplaced Pages's notability criteria, or falls down in other ways. For a couple of reasons I don't intend to make detailed answers to all of your points, but to illustrate here are a few points. You say "Good faith has not been assumed by the other editors", but I don't see where or how. Everything that I have seen about this (both on this page and elsewhere) is consistent with the view that everyone thinks you are acting in perfectly good faith, but have sincerely misunderstood how Misplaced Pages works. You say that "The film features significant involvement by a notable person", and suggest that this means it is notable per Misplaced Pages:Notability (films). However, there are reasons why that argument is not as conclusive as you appear to think. Firstly, you quote part of a sentence out of context, and omit such details as "one of the most important roles in the making of the film", "and is a major part of his/her career", and "An article on the film should be created only if there is enough information on it that it would clutter up the biography page of that person if it was mentioned there." In the article you describe Karen Black's role as a "cameo", which scarcely suggests that it is either "one of the most important roles in the making of the film" or "a major part of ... her career". Secondly, Misplaced Pages:Notability (films) does not say that any film which satisfies that criterion is notable: rather, it says that a film that does not satisfy the notability criteria mentioned earlier in that page may still possibly be notable, and it lists a number of features that can be taken into consideration in assessing such cases. That is a long way short of saying "if a film satisfies any one of the following criteria then it is automatically notable". You say that "this article supplies THREE independent sources", but unfortunately you have not understood what "independent" means in this context. All three of the sources are pages at http://www.chrisinnis.com, and Chris Innis is the director and producer of the film, so the sources are not independent. You mention a couple of other articles on films that you think are less well sourced than this one. Unfortunately, you are perfectly right: among the three million and more articles on English Misplaced Pages there are many which are unsuitable, and which should be deleted. However, this does not automatically mean that we need to question "the motivation of those who have nominated it for deletion", as you suggest. It is very likely that the nominator has simply not seen those articles: nobody can read all of Misplaced Pages. You may like to read WP:OTHERSTUFF. You have referred to the need to assume good faith: I suggest that you should assume good faith on the part of the nominator. I have no doubt that you have come to Misplaced Pages in good faith to write what you thought would be a constructive contribution, and I have every sympathy with the sense of frustration that you no doubt feel when you find the work you have done heading for deletion. However, that does not mean that those who have taken actions you dislike are acting in bad faith, or that people are "ganging up" on you or on the article. JamesBWatson (talk) 10:43, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- Comment (Response): The film meets notability requirements on more than one level. Not just by the sources, which as you see in my (above) response to Tokyogirl's comment. As I mentioned to Tokyogirl, Dennis Brown and Ckatz did not present the article for deletion until after they had stripped the article down to a stub and removed all of the outside independent sources both from the references column and from external links. That means that they know the article is worthy of keeping, they just needed to present it as if it wasn't. The film meets the notability requirements on multiple levels, not just with Academy Award nominee Karen Black's involvement. The filmmaker is a recent Oscar winner. That is the main person making the film. That is notabilty number one. The actors are all known actors, not just Karen Black. John LaZar is a cult film actor who starred in two films by cult film director Russ Meyer, one which was written by Roger Ebert. He has a large cult following. Mike Myers fashioned his character in Austin Powers on John La Zar and his character "Z-man" from Beyond the Valley of the Dolls. So that meets WP:ENT notability. To say that something needs to be "a major" part of someone's career is a subjective judgement. How do you know if it is a major part of someone's career? To them it might be. The reality is that the requirements for Film Notability for upcoming films does not set the bar at a film having to be a "major" part of someone's career because there is no way to forecast that. Yet "upcoming films" is an important part of Misplaced Pages and the sources/articles that come out when a film is in production are going to be fewer and less detailed than those that come out after a film comes out. That's why the Misplaced Pages film guidelines for notability states that the film must have two sources and be past "principal photography". Dennis Brown can strip all of the sources out of the article to try to sneak this into a notability/deletion, but it doesn't get around the fact that it meets notability requirements even without those sources and because it is an 'upcoming' film the bar is not set the same for inclusion as Misplaced Pages's other film articles. Misplaced Pages's guidelines state that content is not to be deleted just because it isn't sourced anyway (and again, this WAS sourced and sourced by a requisite three independent sources which were deleted by the person who submitted this). The article does not meet the criteria for deletion anyway. It is not "nonsense", it is not "a hoax". If something is of value, then it is a "keep." - Catpowerzzz (talk) 21:45, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- Unfortunately you have missed the point of much of what I tried to say. I will once again not spend the inordinate amount of time it would take to explain in detail what all your errors and misunderstandings are, but I will just mention one thing. You refer repeatedly to what you call "upcoming" films, and the essential point of what you say about them seems to be that you think these "upcoming" films have a lower standard of notability required than other subjects. (For example, you say "the bar is not set the same for inclusion as Misplaced Pages's other film articles".) However, this is simply not so. The only place that I know of where there is any mention of notability specifically for films that have not yet been released (which is what I assume you mean by "upcoming") is the section of Misplaced Pages:Notability (films) entitled Future films, incomplete films, and undistributed films. Reading that, not only do I see nothing whatsoever that suggests that for "an 'upcoming' film the bar is not set the same for inclusion as Misplaced Pages's other film articles", but on the contrary, what I see is a careful attempt to make it clear that such films do have the same notability standards as other subjects. There are several things which seem to me to be saying this, for example "films that have already begun shooting, but have not yet been publicly released (theatres or video), should generally not have their own articles unless the production itself is notable per the notability guidelines". There we have an explicit statement that such unreleased films are not to be considered notable unless the production "is notable per the notability guidelines": i.e. that it has to satisfy the same notability guidelines as any other Misplaced Pages article. JamesBWatson (talk) 09:25, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Delete per nom, and per convention for this sort of work at this stage of its life. There is no indication that the film itself is particularly notable, or that it will become so. If it does in the future, we can certainly reconsider, but as of now that is uncertain. From viewing the clip with the producer, she appears uncertain as to where or when the film will appear. Catpowerzzz needs to understand that deletion of the article is not a comment on the quality of the film, but merely recognition that it is not suited for a Misplaced Pages article. He/she also needs to understand that the other editors involved have been acting in good faith, and that they have been reviewing the material presented in a fair and transparent manner. --Ckatzspy 20:47, 28 February 2012 (UTC)
- comment. This article does meet the conventions for an "upcoming" film. Ckatz commented that he doesn't know if the "film itself" will be notable. One can't know if ANY "upcoming" film itself will be notable. A notable filmmaker and/or cast member making or starring in a film is enough to qualify for inclusion and to presume the film too will be notable in and of itself. The bar is also set at a different level for sources of information on "upcoming films" because there may be less primary sourced news (i.e. finished film reviews) available, which is to say that upcoming films only need two independent sources confirming that they are in production or post-production, and evidence that the film is past the stage of "principal photography" to be included. Misplaced Pages guidelines also state that content shouldn't automatically be dismissed or deleted unless there is a reasonable expectation to suspect that the information given by those sources is UNTRUE; You must presume it is true. The general guideline is to presume good faith and be inclusive and not to delete good content. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 22:36, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- delete per nom, no RS references, no indications of notability. propose WP:SNOW. Gaijin42 14:14, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
- comment: - is the above another comment from Ckatz or an unsigned request? Just saying... - Catpowerzzz (talk)
- It is clearly an unsigned post, as even the most basic scan of the article history will confirm. You would be better off trying to address the valid concerns listed above, rather than muckraking. Your claim that editors were "gaming the system" is equally ludicrous. Please avoid spurious claims that serve only to demonstrate a lack of respect for the collaborative process. --Ckatzspy 00:00, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- If the "spurious" claim fits, then wear it. Or not. Forgive me if I thought it was you or somebody you know, because there is a remote possibility it wasn't somebody you know. In any event, this whole discussion is a ruse. Submitting articles for deletion to harass or vex because a user is "tired" of discussing it (or any other personal reason) is wrong and qualifies that user to be blocked. Academy Award-winning is notable by film notability guidelines. There is no higher level of excellence in the film world. End of story. It may make you mad. I can understand that. If all I got was barnstars, I would be mad about real world awards too. But barnstars are invisible, Academy Awards are not. They are real. They are given only to the top filmmakers. As for the extreme scrutiny the sources have been given, even content that is not sourced or poorly sourced can be (and is) a part of Misplaced Pages and should only be deleted according to Misplaced Pages's guidelines if it is untrue, gibberish or a hoax. That is not the case here. The content has been repeatedly deleted as well as the sources, even when the sources were put in the "external links" portion of the article. This user has tried to revise the article and lose words such as "successful" which you might have objected to as "advertising" and no amount of editing was enough to satisfy you or Dennis Brown. That's because you had another goal in mind. Cutting the article down to a stub and then deletion. However the user Dennis Brown might be tripped up by his words on the talk page prior to deletion where he states that his goal was to keep the article and to encourage others to contribute to it. Dennis Brown states, "As for the tags, it was tagged to encourage others to find more references, not to get it deleted. If I wanted to send it to AFD I would have. Once the movie comes out, there is a chance that better references will come along, and the tag is there to tell people they need to be added.". That tells me that he knows the article is worthy of keeping and that he only submitted it later because he didn't want to be reasonable and find a consensus between his side and mine. It seems that the intent of his later request for deletion was merely out of revenge or to end an argument that the user was getting "tired" of. That is not a good reason to submit something for deletion. I think we should take Dennis Brown at what he first stated that he didn't want to "get it deleted" but wanted "to encourage others" to contribute to it. An article has to exist, however, for others to be able to contribute to it at a later date. This just does not meet the level of scrutiny you or your friend Dennis Brown are giving it. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 01:26, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- OK, just one last attempt to clarify things for you. I hope this will be more successful than previous attempts. (1) I see no evidence anywhere that the nomination was made in order "to harass or vex". Dennis Brown did not say that he was nominating simply because he was tired. He said that "this is exactly what wp:crystalball is meant for", and that "No reliable sources are talking about this". He also made a remark about being tired of arguing about it, but no reasonable person reading the nomination could think he was saying that the nomination was made purely for that reason. (Incidentally, I reckon that the closing admin for this AfD, by the time he/she gets this far, will have a pretty good idea why Dennis was tired of arguing about it.) (2) The fact that Dennis posted comments before this AfD indicating that he was trying "to encourage others to find more references, not to get it deleted" does not in any way detract from the validity of the AfD nomination. He thought there might be valid sources, and invited others to find some. However, they didn't, and eventually he decided that there probably aren't any, so he went ahead with an AfD after all. That is a perfectly reasonable thing to do, and in fact much better than taking it to AfD right away, without giving a chance for notability to be demonstrated. It does not mean that "he knows the article is worthy of keeping and that he only submitted it later because he didn't want to be reasonable". Saying that an article may be "worthy of keeping", and giving others the opportunity to show that it is, is not at all the same thing as saying that it is "worthy of keeping". Finally, I suggest you look carefully at everything everyone else has said about this, both here, on the article's talk page, on user talk pages, on the discussion at WP:Article Rescue Squadron/Rescue list that you started as a bit of forum shopping when you saw that this AfD wasn't going the way you wanted. I suggest you ask yourself "Is there anyone at all other than me who has shown that they think there is any merit in the notion that Dennis Brown and others are in a malicious conspiracy to get at me, and this AfD nomination has been made just out of spite?" And if, having asked yourself that, you decide that there is just one person out of step with everyone else, you may like to reconsider your conspiracy theory. JamesBWatson (talk) 09:25, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- It is clearly an unsigned post, as even the most basic scan of the article history will confirm. You would be better off trying to address the valid concerns listed above, rather than muckraking. Your claim that editors were "gaming the system" is equally ludicrous. Please avoid spurious claims that serve only to demonstrate a lack of respect for the collaborative process. --Ckatzspy 00:00, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Move and redirect to Chris Innis. There's just not enough coverage of this film right now to warrant having its own article, once its released and there is independent reviews it can be undeleted for you.Theworm777 (talk) 02:05, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Comment Catpowerzzz has now increased the number of "references" in the article from three to 12. However, three are still the same non-indepenendent sources at http://chrisinnis.com as mentioned above, and the other nine are pages that don't even mention "It Must be Nice ". JamesBWatson (talk) 09:32, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Comment Persistent questioning of nominator's motives here is immaterial, and is an attempt to personalize this discussion and alter its focus. That there may be COI concerns in the article's creation and continued linking to non-independent sources appears more relevant. The article's issues are evident to multiple passers-by. 99.136.255.180 (talk) 13:20, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
- Comment (response) The nominator is the one who started the Afd by saying that he was "tired" of discussing the issue. So he is stating his motives himself, it's not me questioning the motives. They are clear. And under the guidelines for WP:SPEEDYKEEP a nominator cannot submit an article if his motivation is to end an edit war. It's clear that was his motivation. Again, if you look at the talk page of the article he says just a few days before nominating the article that it wasn't his intent. The amount of sources did not change in that time, just his lack of patience. I think there have been some good and some iffy reasoning going on here. What I think would be a good solution is that since the article is relatively new and it is not the type of article that would qualify for speedy deletion, that instead we give the article time to breathe and time for more sources to be added at a later date. There is no rush to get rid of this article, as clearly there is a backlog of other articles with no references at all that have more serious notability or sourcing issues. In fact if you look at the Misplaced Pages notability project, the backlog goes back as far as 2007. That's a lot of articles. I think the problem here is that these tags are being thrown on every article willy nilly without giving the articles and the editors time to build them. If a tag sits on an article for 4 years, then clearly if someone hasn't proven notability by that point, I would understand an Afd. But to throw an article out when it has been recently created without allowing time for it to build, seems rash. As for the sources, there are several sources for the article which are not primary (the official web page) but which are secondary sources, i.e. media outlets not associated with the production. There are not any articles which the primary "focus" is the film, and that doesn't seem to be the criteria for notablity. I'm sure with a lot of cult films and films that are "upcoming" there might not be enough information for a full article, but an article might make mention of a film. Seems that would be valid. Again, I think the right response would be to keep the article and keep the tag for more sources to be added. - Catpowerzzz (talk) 04:40, 2 March 2012 (UTC)
- Please, you need to understand that the editors involved in this are acting in good faith and per Misplaced Pages's guidelines. This is not even a "speedy" deletion, as you've described it above; those are not discussed, but simply deleted (if an article fits the requirements). This is a full-on deletion discussion, and the trend is clear based on the comments so far. You're hoping to establish notability, but your efforts to date are in fact supporting the opinion that the film does not have the notability for a stand-alone article. Who knows, perhaps after its release it will go on to receive critical acclaim (or notoriety) from high-level critics, and (perhaps) then begin to warrant an article. At present, however, your sources simply support that it exists which is not sufficient. --Ckatzspy 05:49, 2 March 2012 (UTC)
- Delete. As it stands, this article does not demonstrate notability, which is a bit surprising given its pedigree. But really, if that's the best sources that are available it shouldn't be on Misplaced Pages. All the cites are either primary sources, or are citing tangential information that isn't about the film. Perhaps once released it with gather some notability and secondary sources, but right now this isn't deserving of anything more than a mention on the Chris Innis article. --Escape Orbit 18:00, 2 March 2012 (UTC)