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:Articles for deletion/Kristi Yamaoka (2nd nomination) - Knowledge

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571:
run of the dizzying array of articles that come down over the wire every day. Every one of the media outlets that ran articles on Kristi Yamaoka thought it was newsworthy enough to be in their particular media outlet's output. It doesn't matter if it is a replica of a news wire article. The fact of the matter is hundreds of media outlets found the incident and the outcomes of it to be sufficiently news worthy. Trying to minimize the impact of this by saying the articles are replicates of each other entirely misses the point. Should we never include notable events in Knowledge when such events only have one reporter handy to write a story first hand? --
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arguments for keeping this article are unfounded, but what I do think is somewhat irrational is using conflated google counts spawned by massive reproduction of a few wire stories to show encyclopedic value. Hence, in July, when those have disappeared, the issue can be addressed without this distortion. Per the point about disruption, I don't think renominating this for deletion when some distance has been established can be considered disruptive - that is simply acknowledging the bias of WP inclusion choices. We can disagree on this, surely, without deciding that one or another course of action is simply disruptive.
497:. Hence, there was no vote to strip, delete or merge anything. I also don't believe that anything was resolved. Furthermore, the comparison with SS is not even germane given the massive difference in news coverage. To my knowledge, the Saugeen Stripper, unlike Ms. Yamaoka, was never a guest on the Today show or featured on primetime news or the recipient of a call from President Bush. The SS also did not have an impact on organized sports. Instead of clouding the issue or playing with crystal balls, you should thus recognize that the keep voters here are perfectly "rational". -- 459:
too strong to allow for rational consensus to form while the item is still relatively fresh. The conflation of news coverage with notability is regrettable but understandable. Cf the Saugeen Stripper, which was roundly declared to be of immense encyclopedic value (ok that's an exaggeration) until the meme wore off and AFD was able happily to merge it back to obscurity where it belongs. Hasta julio.
484:
article was generally resolved, so my language may be flippant but the point is germane. And that was when the material was still rather fresh. By July, no-one will care and this can be dealt with without the interference of news-established notability obscuring the issue (which is not to say it would necessarily be deleted - that's just my prediction).
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The argument that a handful of wire stories being replicated across a number of media outlets is an irrational basis for notability is, I think, missing the point. Each media outlet, from your local newspaper through to the biggest names in the business, make editorial decisions on what news items to
804:
Suppose we have one "temporarily famous" person like this a week. That’s only 52 articles a year. In ten years there would be 520 people added to Knowledge. There are 80286 entries in the Living people category. If every “person of the week” had been added to Knowledge since its inception they would
711:
This individual quintessentially embodies a concept of continuing to do one's job under adversity beyond all expectations. Is there any better example of this concept to date in western culture? This could serve as the ultimate example of this phenomenon for generations to come. At this time, the
120:
I believe in the last AfD I was criticized for crystal-ballism in predicting that she would be forgotten by now. Her 15 minutes are now, officially, over and she is not notable. We may see an occasional "Where is she now" article on a slow news day, but that's it. (May soon be time to drop the entry
726:
clearly states "Persons achieving renown or notoriety for their involvement in newsworthy events". Given all of the press attention, appearance on a number of TV shows, a call from the President of the United States, and ONGOING press coverage, the article clearly passes this requirement. The above
458:
If the nominator cares enough, set a reminder to bring this back in July and I predict you will get a total of four to six votes, all to delete or merge. This is obviously unencyclopedic ephemera, but the bias for including recent news events on WP under the guise of encyclopedic content is simply
309:
a blanket justification to include any old thing that comes to mind - if policies were meant to be exercised in a vacuum, there would be 47 million articles on absilutely anything on here, and there aren't. It was apparent then and it is apparent now that Kristi Yamaoka is only notable for falling
290:
Well, you could discuss making it an event article on the talk page, as a solution if you wish (e.g. a name change). I'm not recommending it, but it's a valid option, worth discussion. Deletion, as an option, has already been ruled out. We can not allow noms who fail, to simply keep trying until
90:
Kristi Yamaoka is nn, and that is even more evident since no substantial biographical improvements have been made to the article in any fashion since the last AfD on March 9 - not even a birthdate. There are also no news articles directly about her in Google News dating after the 11th of March.
483:
Well, you are welcome to disagree with my personal view of course and you don't have to be sorry. But re the SS, by WP edit war standards it was more like a minor skirmish, the issue was resolved through a merge which stands as of now, and the 46-20 AfD vote to strip (sorry) the SS of a separate
304:
Because it's still valid - the article still fails the tests; it did three days after the fact, and it does now two weeks later. The basic issue with this not being AfDed is that people are (and were) confusing short-term popular consciousness (fifteen minutes of fame) with long-term notability
560:
Well, let's keep some perspective here. I think editors could well make a case that this is not a major event or a major subject, but given the tools typically used to determine relevance, the items listed by jjay to establish notability can distort encycopedic value. That is not to say that
305:(enough to be in an encyclopedia for all time, as it were). The claim before was that it would be expanded, but this has not happened in over two weeks, as evidenced by the history, and therefore is not likely to be expanded in future. The excuse that WP is not paper is 787:
states in its first sentence that an article should not be immediately renominated unless there is a good reason for people to change their minds. The last AfD on this was 6 delete to 7 keep. In the 12 days since then, there's not anything to make this bio
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on her head on video and waving her arms, not for any individual accomplishments. If nationwide news were a prerequisite, every disaster on record would need to be here on WP, which is why WP is neither a current events log nor a newspaper.
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With a no consensus vote, and a look at the history shows no substantial changes to the article since the 9th, which is almost three weeks ago. The issue is not when it wasa AfDed, but when this bcame non-notable.
280:
article, this is a bio stub. Evereyone keeps conflating the event with the person: while the event may be notable, the person is not, which is a valid reason, and what I was trying to show the last time too.
861:- people will search for this. Maybe deletable in a couple of years when/if it becomes clear that she has been forgotten, but right now this is a notable personality/event in U.S. college athletics. ( 712:
correct decision is the one already made, which is to keep. WP is the place people should expect to be able to come and find information about transformative events and people such as this.
547:
Thanks. My feelings on that were expressed with my initial comment. A failed prod followed by a failed AfD and now a second failed AfD should be an indication that it is time to move on. --
494: 536:. Eusebeus suggested that the nom should wait till July, and renominate, to get a more favorable voter turn-out. I feel that type of approach would be disruptive. -- 262:, and no reason given this time (that wasn't rejected last time). Even without a prior AFD, I would vote keep, given the coverage, and the effect of the event. -- 259: 669:. She fell on her head, she showed school spirit, the end. Her fifteen minutes of fame are long gone, and this isn't the Short-Attention-Span Knowledge. -- 319:
Just as a point of clarification, the previous AfD was not closed as "Keep". It was closed as "No consensus" which has, I believe, somewhat less weight.
181:
She's last month's news. I doubt anyone is going to devote much effort to improving the article now. What you see is what there is, and is likely to be.
472:
Sorry, but that is false. The SS AfDs resulted in No Consensus. The merge set off a very nasty edit war. I hope that is not what you are suggesting. --
510:
I think if there were a 3rd nomination, by a previously involved party, that would have to be seen as being intentionally disruptive to Knowledge. --
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constitute less then .5% of the articles on living contemporary people. Ms. Yamaoka is probably closer to a person of the month on top of that.
425:. The massive media attention to Ms. Yamaoka's injuries led to changes in the great sport of cheerleading. That's why we need this article. -- 739:
Show of late. This article passes WP:BIO. If it doesn't, then a broad range of articles will need to be put up for AfD. For a sampling, see
596:"Just because someone doesn't fall into one of these categories doesn't mean an article on the person should automatically be deleted." 369: 202: 943: 918: 906: 882: 866: 853: 838: 822: 809: 796: 701: 689: 677: 661: 649: 637: 604: 591: 575: 565: 551: 540: 527: 514: 501: 488: 476: 463: 450: 429: 409: 397: 374: 350: 332: 323: 314: 299: 285: 266: 250: 238: 226: 207: 185: 163: 125: 112: 99: 78: 23: 625: 295:", you're admitting you're just repeating yourself. What is the practical purpose of arguing the same thing, all over again? -- 172: 17: 328:
History of article creation has shown that once a legit article is created, exapansion follows. I'm watching for sixty days.
358:, barely notable enough. Maybe everything that will ever be written on her is already there, and that's just fine with me. 850: 630: 960: 784: 422: 43: 959:
Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a
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Contributing to mankind is not a criteria for inclusion in Knowledge. What contributions to mankind did
901: 776: 394: 133:, as she did cause Missouri to ban the "tossing or launching of cheerleaders". She also appeared on the 391: 383: 780: 620: 588: 835: 439: 386: 448: 359: 192: 727:
statement that there is no news of her since March 11th is false as she's been mentioned in the
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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below.
818:
Probably person of the year or decade for cheerleaders. She is certainly one of my heros. --
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http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Kristi+Yamaoka%22&hl=en&lr=&start=270&sa=N
834:. Worth keeping back then, still worth it now. Quick re-nomination suggests bad faith. - 736: 732: 645:
not so much for her herself, but because what directly resulted in what happened to her.
615: 928: 772: 740: 601: 533: 138: 84: 932: 764: 752: 744: 723: 562: 537: 511: 485: 460: 444: 421:. Obsessively renominating the same articles is highly disruptive and a violation of 406: 347: 320: 296: 263: 182: 122: 92: 61: 792:
notable, in fact rather the opposite. Currently, this AfD is 5 delete to 18 keep. --
493:
Not to belabor the point, but the AfD you keep referring to closed as no consensus-
246:
It needs a lot of work, but sometimes DOBs and other concrete info are hard to find.
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And what's wrong with that? Isn't Knowledge littered with "last month's news"?
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Given that Wikapedia is not paper I don’t see why we can’t keep her article.
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This article furthermore fails all of the standard and alternative tests in
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This survived AfD less than two weeks before it was renominated!?!
523:
Um, could you clarify? Which article are we talking about now? --
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Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Kristi Yamaoka (second nomination)
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The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate.
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per Fan (my cat, who is named "Saluki", will be mad, though).
657:, that it made the news means it has already been "noted". — 785:
Knowledge:Deletion_policy#Limitations_on_renomination
419:
survived an AfD nom by the same user just 12 days ago
110:
Brian G. Crawford, the so-called "Nancy Grace of AfD"
46:). No further edits should be made to this page. 495:Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Saugeen Stripper 2 963:). No further edits should be made to this page. 291:they get what they want. When you're point is " 293:...what I was trying to show the last time too. 8: 612:for this notable victim of cheerleading. - 914:Famous but no contribution to mankind. -- 761:Jeremy Glick (September 11 attack victim) 939:and several others (as above) make? -- 7: 217:as per TBC. That's a good point. -- 258:Based on the result of the recent 31: 405:. Unencyclopedic in the extreme. 382:, asserts a bit of notability. -- 156: 144:, many of which are relevant. -- 121:on the guy Cheney shot, also.) 18:Knowledge:Articles for deletion 141:. Google shows 81,000 results 108:Knowledge is not a newspaper. 1: 51:The result of the debate was 980: 883:19:00, 30 March 2006 (UTC) 867:12:37, 30 March 2006 (UTC) 854:17:10, 29 March 2006 (UTC) 839:21:56, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 823:21:04, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 810:21:00, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 797:15:27, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 702:14:35, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 690:07:47, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 678:01:11, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 662:01:07, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 650:18:16, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 638:18:13, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 605:17:37, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 592:16:31, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 576:15:27, 28 March 2006 (UTC) 566:22:21, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 552:18:08, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 541:17:50, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 528:17:36, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 515:17:33, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 502:16:29, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 489:15:55, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 477:14:56, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 464:14:44, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 451:14:26, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 430:13:19, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 410:11:37, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 398:10:09, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 375:08:35, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 351:04:49, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 333:07:22, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 324:07:05, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 315:17:12, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 300:06:07, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 286:05:08, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 267:03:24, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 251:03:08, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 239:02:37, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 227:02:31, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 208:16:10, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 186:01:27, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 164:00:36, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 126:00:33, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 113:00:19, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 100:00:07, 27 March 2006 (UTC) 944:19:41, 1 April 2006 (UTC) 919:04:56, 1 April 2006 (UTC) 907:01:58, 1 April 2006 (UTC) 423:Knowledge:Deletion policy 79:03:26, 2 April 2006 (UTC) 956:Please do not modify it. 276:However, this is not an 39:Please do not modify it. 781:Pamela Rogers Turner 532:I was referring to 95:for living people. 876:Cheerleader#Safety 848:Christopher Parham 777:Karen Louise Ellis 635: 729:Chicago Sun-Times 617:the.crazy.russian 614: 162: 77: 22:(Redirected from 971: 958: 904: 899: 896: 893: 735:and been on the 636: 633: 628: 623: 618: 447: 442: 389: 372: 367: 362: 205: 200: 195: 161: 160: 154: 151: 148: 75: 69: 64: 59: 55: 41: 27: 979: 978: 974: 973: 972: 970: 969: 968: 967: 961:deletion review 954: 902: 897: 894: 891: 783:. Furthermore, 737:Ellen Degeneres 733:The Independent 631: 626: 621: 616: 613: 589:Maxamegalon2000 440: 438: 387: 370: 365: 360: 203: 198: 193: 152: 149: 146: 88: 73: 67: 62: 57: 44:deletion review 37: 29: 28: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 977: 975: 966: 965: 949: 948: 947: 946: 929:Kenneth Pinyan 922: 921: 909: 885: 869: 856: 841: 836:Colin Kimbrell 828: 827: 826: 825: 813: 812: 799: 773:Jason McElwain 741:Kenneth Pinyan 717: 705: 704: 693: 692: 680: 664: 652: 640: 607: 594: 581: 580: 579: 578: 558: 557: 556: 555: 554: 545: 544: 543: 534:Kristi Yamaoka 518: 517: 507: 506: 505: 504: 480: 479: 467: 466: 453: 432: 412: 400: 377: 353: 340: 339: 338: 337: 336: 335: 326: 317: 270: 269: 253: 241: 229: 211: 210: 176: 175: 166: 139:Best Week Ever 128: 115: 87: 85:Kristi Yamaoka 82: 49: 48: 32: 30: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 976: 964: 962: 957: 951: 950: 945: 942: 938: 934: 933:Carlie Brucia 930: 926: 925: 924: 923: 920: 917: 913: 910: 908: 905: 900: 889: 886: 884: 881: 877: 873: 870: 868: 864: 860: 857: 855: 852: 849: 846:, per above. 845: 842: 840: 837: 833: 830: 829: 824: 821: 817: 816: 815: 814: 811: 808: 803: 800: 798: 795: 791: 786: 782: 778: 774: 770: 766: 765:Randal McCloy 762: 758: 754: 753:Kayla Rolland 750: 746: 745:Carlie Brucia 742: 738: 734: 730: 725: 721: 718: 716:28 March 2006 715: 710: 707: 706: 703: 700: 695: 694: 691: 688: 684: 681: 679: 676: 672: 668: 665: 663: 660: 656: 653: 651: 648: 644: 641: 639: 634: 629: 624: 619: 611: 608: 606: 603: 599: 595: 593: 590: 586: 583: 582: 577: 574: 569: 568: 567: 564: 559: 553: 550: 546: 542: 539: 535: 531: 530: 529: 526: 522: 521: 520: 519: 516: 513: 509: 508: 503: 500: 496: 492: 491: 490: 487: 482: 481: 478: 475: 471: 470: 469: 468: 465: 462: 457: 454: 452: 449: 446: 443: 436: 433: 431: 428: 424: 420: 416: 413: 411: 408: 404: 401: 399: 396: 393: 390: 385: 381: 378: 376: 373: 368: 363: 357: 354: 352: 349: 345: 342: 341: 334: 331: 327: 325: 322: 318: 316: 313: 308: 303: 302: 301: 298: 294: 289: 288: 287: 284: 279: 275: 272: 271: 268: 265: 261: 257: 254: 252: 249: 245: 242: 240: 237: 233: 230: 228: 224: 220: 216: 213: 212: 209: 206: 201: 196: 190: 189: 188: 187: 184: 180: 174: 170: 167: 165: 159: 155: 143: 140: 136: 132: 129: 127: 124: 119: 116: 114: 111: 107: 104: 103: 102: 101: 98: 94: 86: 83: 81: 80: 76: 70: 65: 60: 54: 47: 45: 40: 34: 33: 25: 19: 955: 952: 911: 887: 878:and delete. 871: 858: 843: 831: 801: 789: 757:Mathias Rust 719: 708: 682: 666: 654: 642: 610:Lots of keep 609: 597: 584: 455: 437:per JJay. -- 434: 418: 414: 402: 379: 355: 343: 306: 292: 277: 273: 255: 243: 231: 214: 178: 177: 168: 130: 117: 105: 89: 52: 50: 38: 35: 937:Brian Wells 916:Masssiveego 880:Thatcher131 769:Roger Olian 749:Brian Wells 709:Strong Keep 683:Strong Keep 415:Speedy Keep 600:per Jay. 417:. Article 137:and VH1's 135:Today Show 602:RGTraynor 585:Weak keep 380:Weak keep 356:Weak keep 260:first AFD 244:Weak Keep 215:Weak keep 169:Weak keep 131:Weak keep 587:per TBC 563:Eusebeus 486:Eusebeus 461:Eusebeus 407:Marskell 274:Comment: 171:. Only [ 802:Comment 714:cmsb705 699:MSJapan 456:Comment 445:iva1979 321:Fan1967 312:MSJapan 283:MSJapan 219:Deville 183:Fan1967 179:Comment 123:Fan1967 106:Delete. 97:MSJapan 912:Delete 851:(talk) 807:Seano1 724:WP:BIO 671:Calton 667:Delete 403:Delete 366:master 344:Delete 236:Seano1 199:master 118:Delete 93:WP:BIO 941:Durin 872:Merge 863:ESkog 794:Durin 659:Pengo 647:Stev0 573:Durin 395:e Ong 361:Grand 278:event 194:Grand 16:< 888:Keep 859:Keep 844:Keep 832:Keep 820:JJay 790:less 731:and 720:Keep 687:Jcuk 675:Talk 655:Keep 643:Keep 598:Keep 549:JJay 525:JJay 499:JJay 474:JJay 435:Keep 427:JJay 256:Keep 232:Keep 223:Talk 74:talk 58:psch 53:Keep 874:to 632:(E) 627:(C) 622:(T) 538:Rob 512:Rob 384:Ter 348:Joe 330:TKE 307:not 297:Rob 264:Rob 248:TKE 935:, 931:, 865:) 779:, 775:, 771:, 767:, 763:, 759:, 755:, 751:, 747:, 743:, 722:: 673:| 392:nc 371:ka 225:) 204:ka 71:| 68:mp 903:ε 898:e 895:o 892:M 441:S 388:e 221:( 153:C 150:B 147:T 63:e 26:)

Index

Knowledge:Articles for deletion
Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Kristi Yamaoka (second nomination)
deletion review
psch
e
mp
talk
03:26, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
Kristi Yamaoka
WP:BIO
MSJapan
00:07, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Brian G. Crawford, the so-called "Nancy Grace of AfD"
00:19, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Fan1967
00:33, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Today Show
Best Week Ever

TBC

00:36, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Kristi+Yamaoka%22&hl=en&lr=&start=270&sa=N
Fan1967
01:27, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Grand
master
ka
16:10, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Deville

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