Wikipedia:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Authors

This is a collection of discussions on the deletion of articles related to Authors. It is one of many deletion lists coordinated by WikiProject Deletion sorting. Anyone can help maintain the list on this page.

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Archived discussions (starting from September 2007) may be found at:
Purge page cache watch

For the general policy on the inclusion of individual people in Wikipedia, see WP:BIO.


Authors

[edit]
Dinu Andrei Popescu (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Created by a single-purpose account, who's attempted to create this article since 2021. Article clearly lacks coverage from reliable sources, and some appear to be either self-published or from unreliable sites. Subject fails WP:NJOURNALIST. CycloneYoris talk! 01:09, 27 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Liam Borchers (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Not really clear to me how notable: sources include a few local news sites about his books, but the books themselves don't seem to be notable; orphan article and may have been created or edited in return for undisclosed payments, so page does not really contribute to the wiki in any meaningful way while possibly contravening its terms of use Toffeenix (talk) 05:12, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Bishnu Mohapatra (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Doesn't appear to pass WP:NACADEMIC (university appears to be fairly minor?). I'm nominating in part because this article was created and largely written by a sockpuppeter, and I suspect WP:COI. See Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/ThePerfectYellow grapesurgeon (seefooddiet) (talk) 00:03, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Sidharth Mishra (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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WP:NJOURNALIST and WP:NACADEMIC doesn't appear to pass either. Coverage in article is all passing. WP:COI suspected as well; see Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/ThePerfectYellow grapesurgeon (seefooddiet) (talk) 00:24, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Alex Taek-Gwang Lee (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Article doesn't give evidence of WP:NACADEMIC passing. Also reads a bit like MOS:PUFFERY; possible COI. grapesurgeon (seefooddiet) (talk) 22:20, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Update: the user who created this article was confirmed a sockpuppet of the previous person who created this article. They've been blocked. Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/ThePerfectYellow grapesurgeon (seefooddiet) (talk) 17:05, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Prashant Madanmohan Leander (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Vanity page, created by a single-purpose account who recreated this page several times in draft space. See: Draft:Prashant Madanmohan and Draft:Xternal, which indicates that author is either a paid editor or likely has a conflict of interest. A WP:BEFORE search doesn't show sufficient coverage from reliable sources, and there's little indication that subject warrants a standalone article. CycloneYoris talk! 07:33, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Keep Thehugolion (talk) 13:43, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Keep Thehugolion (talk) 13:44, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Extended content

Keep Thehugolion (talk) 13:44, 23 June 2025 (UTC) Oppose deletion — Subject meets notability criteria under WP:GNG, WP:ANYBIO, and WP:CREATIVE[reply]

1. Significant coverage in reliable, independent sources (GNG): Contrary to the nomination, the article cites multiple reliable, third-party sources with non-trivial coverage:

These sources reflect broad, non-trivial coverage across national and international outlets, satisfying WP:GNG.

2. Meets WP:ANYBIO: Recognized honors The subject was awarded notable distinctions:

  • "Arvestaget" title from the Republic of Armenia for cultural contributions (with photo and embassy references).
  • Guest speaker at the Armenian Genocide commemoration in New Delhi (2024), a high-profile diplomatic event.
  • Reminiscier Fellowship 2025 by Global Cultural Council.

These are significant, non-self-bestowed recognitions that meet the threshold for WP:ANYBIO.

3. Creative and scholarly output (WP:CREATIVE, WP:AUTHOR): Dr. Leander has authored:

  • The God of Deserted Memories – launched at a 7-day literary exhibition with diplomatic support.
  • The Monk With A Stethoscope – a widely distributed philosophical memoir.
  • Books on Armenian heritage supported by cultural centers and embassies.
  • A biography of impressionist artist Lems Nersisyan.

This meets WP:CREATIVE and WP:AUTHOR based on quality, distribution, and recognition.

4. Additional contributions and presence:

  • Founder of Cognishift.org and the Indo-Armenian-French Art & Literary Confluence (attended by 500+ people and supported by Lalit Kala Akademi, Ministry of Culture).
  • Citations and publications on ResearchGate and Google Scholar.
  • Referenced by both Indian and Armenian official and diplomatic entities.

5. Draft history and intent: Yes, the article had earlier drafts. However, the current article reflects significant effort to meet notability, with references from high-quality sources and no promotional tone. Previous draft iterations should not be held against a now-verified and well-sourced article.

Conclusion: This subject clearly meets Wikipedia notability criteria for authors, cultural figures, and honorees. The article can be improved, but deletion is unwarranted.

Recommendation: Keep and improve.

LLM cruft collapsed, ducplicate !votes struck. Geschichte (talk) 14:12, 23 June 2025 (UTC) [reply]

Extended content

Additional point — Mainstream Indian media coverage strengthens WP:GNG

The subject has been covered by Indulge Express, the arts and culture vertical of The New Indian Express, a major national newspaper in India. This feature article highlights his Indo-French-Armenian literary work and his cultural event at Lalit Kala Akademi:

Indulge Express article – May 10, 2025

This is a **significant source** from **mainstream Indian media** and is both **independent** and **non-trivial**, thereby satisfying the core requirements of WP:GNG. It reinforces the fact that the subject’s work has attracted attention in recognized national publications with editorial oversight.

This is in addition to other sources like The Times of India, ThePrint, and Business Standard, confirming that the article meets general notability criteria through multiple independent, reputable media sources. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Thehugolion (talkcontribs) 14:22, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Additional point — Recognized by Armenian Ministry of Culture and conferred the "Arvestaget" title

In 2024, the subject was formally recognized by Armenian cultural institutions and awarded the honorary title of "Arvestaget" by the Republic of Armenia for his contributions to the preservation and promotion of Armenian culture, literature, and memory.

This recognition was:

  • Conferred with the support of the Armenian Ministry of Culture
  • Publicly documented with photographs and permanent links (see references in article)
  • Issued in conjunction with his cross-cultural literary work and diplomatic events organized in Armenia and India

This satisfies WP:ANYBIO which includes individuals who have received significant national or international honors from recognized cultural or governmental bodies. It also strengthens his profile as a notable figure in Indo-Armenian literary diplomacy and heritage work.

Such recognition from a national ministry of culture is notable, rare, and equivalent in value to inclusion in state-level halls of fame or cultural orders often cited in other AfD keep arguments. Thehugolion — Preceding undated comment added 14:36, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Additional Notability Basis — National Honors and Cross-Cultural Recognition from Armenia’s Ministry of Culture

The subject was conferred the honorary title of “Arvestaget” by the **Republic of Armenia** in 2024 for his cultural, literary, and philosophical contributions to Armenian heritage and Indo-Armenian relations. The title was formally conferred with the **backing of the Armenian Ministry of Culture and the Avetik Isahakyan Central Cultural Center**, a national-level institution. This distinction is documented through official references and photographs cited in the article.

Such **official cultural recognition from a national government** directly satisfies WP:ANYBIO under WP:NBOOK criteria under: _"The person has received a well-known and significant honor at a national or international level."_ WP:AUTHOR criteria 2 and 4 , book being part of exhibition in India's premier Government National Academy of Art - Lalit Kala Akademi with International attendence- Armenia and France. This parallels arguments used successfully in other biographies (e.g., state-wide halls of fame, high-profile fellowships), and carries special weight given the cross-cultural nature of the award involving three nations (India–Armenia–France).

The recognition was linked to the subject's books and artistic collaborations that have been independently covered in national and international press (Republic of Armenia government centre Avetik Isahakyan Centre,Indian Embassy website, Times of India, ThePrint, Business Standard, Indulge Express).

Combined with national press coverage and scholarly output, this title substantiates a strong claim for notability. Keep --Thehugolion (talk) 15:19, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Astrid Gynnild (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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This is just an awfully self-referential article, created by a WP:SPA, lacking any independent sources, and reading like a resume. BD2412 T 01:33, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Bhanu Srivastav (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD · Stats)
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Non-notable author. All sources about him are thinly disguised self-published advertorials which promote his so-called "inspiring story." Most of these sources share one common feature apart from the blatant promotion: an AI-generated image of someone holding his book. The article creator is a WP:SPA who is WP:!HERE with the sole purpose of promoting this individual, his book and an event he claims to have managed. Yuvaank (talk) 21:12, 22 June 2025 (UTC) I am also nominating the following related page which uses the same spam sources:[reply]

Deified: The Legacy of Yesterday (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
Text generated by a large language model (LLM) or similar tool has been collapsed per Wikipedia guidelines requiring comments to originate with a human. LLM-generated arguments should be excluded from assessments of consensus.
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.

Disclosure: I represent the subject per WP:COI.

1. Notability Conclusively Established (WP:BIO) Independent significant coverage exists across three distinct notability pathways in India's most authoritative editorial outlets:

WP:AUTHOR (Literary significance):India Today (17 May 2024): Thematic analysis of *Deified*'s exploration of marital oppression ("Sanvi’s fight for freedom") • Financial Express (10 Apr 2024): Narrative critique dissecting societal pressures

WP:ENTREPRENEUR (Career documentation):Times of India (11 Mar 2025): Career profile detailing departure from banking to found AI venture INFINITY • Outlook India (22 Jun 2024): Business reporting on viral resignation

WP:CHARITY (Philanthropic impact):Outlook India (29 May 2024): Verified documentation of royalty donations to Childline India

Policy compliance: Exceeds WP:SIGCOV threshold with 20+ paragraphs of substantive coverage across four national publications.

2. Source Reliability: Unassailable (WP:RS) Editorial control: All sources are staff-written in outlets with: • Times of India (Est. 1838; 4M+ circulation; editorial standards) • Financial Express (Est. 1961; financial authority) • India Today (Top English magazine with 40+ editorial staff) • Outlook (National Magazine Award winner)

No paid content: No advertorials or press releases used Weak sources excluded: Zee News, DNA India, Republic intentionally omitted

3. Preemptive Neutrality Enforcement ✓ All promotional language removed ✓ Zero unsourced claims ✓ Exclusive use of Tier-1 sources ✓ Edits open for community oversight per WP:COIEDIT

4. Corroborating Evidence Academic recognition: University of Munich research paper analyzing *Deified*'s social themes (Scholar) • Literary corpus: 4+ books indexed on Google BooksMedia footprint: 18+ articles in Google News

5. Closing Legal Imperative Deletion would violate several core Wikipedia principles: • WP:PRESERVE – verifiable content should not be deleted • WP:BEFORE – improvement is preferred over deletion • WP:BLP – ensures accurate representation of living people • WP:CRED – all sources meet highest editorial standards

The coverage in Times of India (1838–), India Today (1975–), Outlook (award-winning), and Financial Express (est. 1961) provides irrefutable evidence of notability per WP:GNG. I urge !vote Keep and invite collaborative improvements.

-- surya7t (talk) Surya7t (talk) 10:31, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Text generated by a large language model (LLM) or similar tool has been collapsed per Wikipedia guidelines requiring comments to originate with a human. LLM-generated arguments should be excluded from assessments of consensus.
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.

@Duffbeerforme, Bearian, and Alpha3031: Final Policy Defense: !vote Keep per WP:GNG, WP:PRESERVE, and WP:BEFORE Disclosure: I represent the subject per WP:COI. The article has been fully sanitized to comply with all policies:

1. "Addressing Advertising" Concern (duffbeerforme) • The article contains zero promotional language - current version proves no "visionary/inspiring" exists • Cites only editorial journalism from India's top outlets:

 - India Today: Literary analysis of marital oppression themes  
 - Times of India: Career documentation  

Labeling this "advertising" violates WP:ASPERSIONS. I challenge you to identify one non-neutral phrase.

2. “Too Soon” or “News-Based” Concern (Bearian) Coverage meets WP:GNG because: • Not "news" but deep profiles:

Substantive Coverage Analysis
Source Type Depth Policy Compliance
Financial Express Literary critique 1200+ words WP:AUTHOR
Outlook Philanthropic program Permanent structure WP:ORG

Timeline spans 25+ months (India Today: Mar 2023 → ToI: Mar 2025) • Established career: 10+ year banking tenure pre-dates coverage Per WP:CRYSTAL, deletion cannot speculate on "future relevance" when current sources satisfy WP:SIGCOV.

3. “Spam Sources” Concern (Alpha3031) This claim is factually false and policy-violating: • Sources are India's most authoritative outlets:

Source Credibility Matrix
Outlet Est. Circulation Awards WP Precedent
Times of India 1838 4M+ 50+ National Awards Chetan Bhagat
India Today 1975 1.2M Ramnath Goenka Award Arundhati Roy

• Calling them "spam":

 1. Violates WP:ASPERSIONS  
 2. Contradicts WP:NEWSORG  
 3. Threatens Category:Indian writers  

Provide specific WP:RS violations or withdraw per WP:AGF.

Policy Compliance Proof checkY WP:GNG: 20+ paragraphs across 5+ sources checkY WP:AUTHOR/WP:ENTREPRENEUR: Multi-domain notability checkY WP:NPOV: Zero promotional content checkY WP:BLP: All claims sourced to Tier-1 outlets

Policy Compliance Warning

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section.

Deletion would violate core Wikipedia policies: 1. WP:PRESERVE: Destroying verifiable, policy-compliant content 2. WP:BEFORE: Overlooking completed improvements 3. WP:CRED: Rejecting India's oldest newspapers

This discussion now tests fundamental standards: • Whether Times of India (est. 1838) qualifies as reliable • Whether 1200-word literary critiques constitute "significant coverage" • Whether permanent philanthropic programs establish notability

Precedent implication: Closing delete would logically require re-evaluating thousands of articles citing these sources, including Chetan Bhagat and Arundhati Roy.

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Surya7t (talk) 04:55, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Final human plea: !vote Keep per WP:GNG & WP:PRESERVE Reply to all participants: Disclosure: Hi Everyone, I am Bhanu Srivastav, the subject of this article. I'm writing this myself without using any AI tools, as a real person fighting for accurate representation of myself. My conflict of interest is unavoidable, but I'm engaging in good faith as per WP:COI.

1. "Advertising" claim is false - here's proof This was very confusing at first to my why advertising was claimed,i read the wikipedia article...I doublechecked, the article has NO promotional language AT ALL...The article contains ZERO promotional language: - No "inspiring", "visionary", "motivating" or similar adjectives exist in my paage (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhanu_Srivastav) - Sources are like, proper journalism independent ones:

 • Times of India: [Career doc](https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/events/from-zero-to-infinity-how-bhanu-srivastav-risked-everything-to-build-indias-ai-revolution/articleshow/119866286.cms) by staff writers  
 • India Today: [Literary analysis](https://www.indiatoday.in/education-today/story/despair-to-empowerment-exploring-bhanu-srivastavs-deified-2540235-2024-05-17) of social themes  

These outlets never contacted me, i think they might have picked the data from publically available on internet - they're objective reports. Honestly Calling these 'spam' feels totally unfair, Even Delhi Chief Mininster Mr Arvind Krjriwal praised me publically for my efforts to educate Poor childrens who can't afford fees on Lokmat Conference i have that part of footage here, his whole speech can be listened here at timestamp 31:07 minutes, which is available in public domain (Official Channel with 7.44 million subscribers). **But I know that YouTube isn't a wiki source, i was just sharing my context.**

2. Notability is established & timeless To be honest my documented works is spread in multiple years: 2013-2024: Banking career (pre-dates coverage) I worked as IT Manager in Canara Bank. April 2024: Financial Express 1200-word critique May 2024: Outlook documents permanent charity (actually i have partnered with Childline India which is supported by the Ministry of Women & Child Development, Government of India to donate all my royalties for poor children's education, i have the contract document with me in case you need to see..) March 2025: Times of India career transition analysis This isn't "recent news" - it's substantive coverage of lasting work (i worked 10 years in canara bank then left to found my company). I'm no expert but pretty sure Deleting based on "too soon" violates WP:CRYSTAL?

3. Sources are India's journalistic pillars Labeling these "spam" is factually wrong i think and damaging also: • Times of India (est. 1838): India's largest English daily - used in Chetan Bhagat • India Today (est. 1975): National Magazine Award winner - used in Arundhati Roy • Financial Express (est. 1961): Financial authority - used in N. R. Narayana Murthy Calling them unreliable would force deletion of List of Indian authors and invalidate 10,000+ Wikipedia citations think.

Core policy complianceWP:GNG: 20+ paragraphs across 5+ sources ✓ WP:AUTHOR: Literary analysis in India Today/Financial Express & other news. ✓ Philanthropic notability: Permanent donations documented by Outlook & other sources i also have proof of proper contract signed between me and Childline India which is govt-backed org ✓ WP:BEFORE: All improvements completed

Final appeal Deleting this article would: 1. Violate WP:PRESERVE by destroying policy-compliant content whiich is not right as per my openion, i think instead of deleting what is promotional in that article can be found corrected. I’m not an expert, so I welcome correction fron anyone & everyone. 2. Insult Indian media by dismising Times of India and other sources... 3. Punish my goodfaith efforts to fix every issue I'll accept ANY neutral edits - just preserve my documented history. Please guide me how can i help or any other details are required from me to comply wikipedia policy. Thank yo so much for your time,Thanks for letting me be part of this process, even though I know I’m not a regular editor. Just wanted to give context from my side which i frankly think can help the wikipedia community. I respect whatever decision is made.

  • Keep

Surya7t (talk) 19:25, 24 June 2025 (UTC)Surya7t[reply]

Just to be clear, you think it's objectively true that you're the most fearless person ever? Alpha3031 (tc) 10:32, 25 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Thank u so much for raising this important thing about neutrality.
Just to clarify: I didn’t call myself "the most fearless person" ever. That phrase comes from a Times of India editorial (March 2025) likely the journalist’s take on my resignation from Canara Bank one year back in June 2024. the story was, I faced 17 transfers in 10 years my service (2014 - 2024) & since public-sector bank jobs in India are secure & rarely resigned from, it caught attention. It trended on X.com in June 2024 & media outlets like Moneycontrol.com & Dainik Jagran contacted me for interviews which I declined. My resignation mail was short & polite which said "sorry I’ll not be joining" went viral online screenshots were shared widely. In India's public sector banking system job security is absolute & resignations are very very rare, since it was an unusual case, the media might have framed it their way.  
If u search "Bhanu Srivastav resignation" on internet you’ll find hundreds of screenshots of my resignation mail which was circulated at that time from past coverage or socialmedia.
I completely agree such subjective labels don’t belong on Wikipedia. As of now, the article does not use “fearless” or any such similar phrasing. u can check the same, I’m absolutely open to further improvements per WP:NPOV.
Thanx again Apha3031 for helping ensure accuracy & neutrality. My goal is strict adherence of Wikipedia’s policy not to defend media phrasing. I appreciate your vigilance in ensuring neutrality. Surya7t (talk) 11:31, 25 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
"Punish my goodfaith efforts to fix every issue". But you've only made one small edit to the page. Oh, you mean with your other account, Ashish Verma 9891? The account that created and owns copyright of your signature so has to be you. That's sockpuppetry. duffbeerforme (talk) 00:52, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Dear Duffbeerforme,
Thank you so much for your vigilance & keeping Wikipedia’s standards high. I want to be completely transparent, I’m Bhanu Srivastav & both Surya7t & AshishVerma9891 are my accounts. Seriously I now realize that using 2nd account was a serious mistake & violates Wikipedia’s sockpuppetry policy WP:SOCK. I’m very sorry for this & confusion & extra work I’ve caused you & the wiki community.
Account Issue:
I used AshishVerma9891 alongside Surya7t, which violates WP:SOCK. I will:
(i) Immediately stop using AshishVerma9891.
(ii) Request admin help to merge/attribute its edits to Surya7t (to preserve content).
(iii) Edit only as Surya7t going forward, with full WP:COI disclosure.
Article Status:
(i) The content meets WP:GNG via Times of India, India Today, etc.
(ii) All promotional language has been removed per WP:NPOV.
(iii) I welcome any more improvements from the community.
Moving Forward:
(i) I’ll follow all guidance from experienced editors like yourself.
(ii) I'm happy to complete any Wikipedia training if needed.
Request: I understand the seriousness of this violation and will accept community's decision regarding both the article and my editing privileges.Let’s focus on the article’s verifiable content, I’m committed to keeping it policy-compliant. Thanks for your patience.
surya7t ~~~~ Surya7t (talk) 02:29, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
So when you released press releases with a contact of "Ashish Verma" that was what? And putting out these press releases and writing about yourself on Wikipedia (which features heavily on Google searches) was about you living your life "in an anonymous way" and trying to be "totally Google proof"?
"If u search "Bhanu Srivastav resignation" on internet you’ll find hundreds of screenshots of my resignation mail". Do you realise people are able to easily test this claim? Nope, not seeing hundreds. duffbeerforme (talk) 07:51, 27 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Tom Adkins (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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This article appears to fail Wikipedia's notability guidelines for people. It reads as promotional, and lacks significant coverage in reliable, independent sources. Many claims are unsourced or poorly sourced, and there is little evidence of sustained public impact or recognition. MayhemStoppingBy (talk) 21:52, 22 June 2025 (UTC) {{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/{{{1}}}}}[reply]

Donna Wick (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Doesn't meet WP:GNG. Safari ScribeEdits! Talk! 21:58, 21 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Adam B. Resnick (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Not notable enough topic for a standalone article. Unsourced article and claims no Notability. fails WP:BIO FreaksIn (talk) 09:23, 21 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Nathan Ssewali (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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No indication of notability, and virtually no coverage in reliable sources. All the sources appear to be paid placements originating from a PR/SEO campaign in mid-2022. Yuvaank (talk) 04:24, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Giovanni Baldelli (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Having gone through the available source material, I have been unable to find anything to establish significant coverage of this person in reliable sources. His main work of note was a single book about social anarchism, which has received some attention but not much more than a passing reference in most sources (see Google Scholar results). David Wieck's obituary for the Social Anarchism journal, listed in the further reading, appears to be the only work specifically about Baldelli that could lead to any development of this article. As this article appears not to meet the notability guidelines for authors, I'm recommending it for deletion. A possible alternative to deletion could be redirecting to social anarchism, although he's not mentioned in the body of that article, so this may not be appropriate. Grnrchst (talk) 21:48, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

  • Comment There's an extensive biography in the Dizionario biografico online degli anarchici italiani (which was originally a print publication and is now updated and expanded online)[1]. Between that and the Wieck obituary, I'd be fine with "Keep" if only there was a third published source. The Dizionario points to an undergraduate thesis, but it's unpublished. Jahaza (talk) 04:39, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    You'd hope with an extensive list of publications for WP:AUTHOR notability, but I only found one review so far.[2] It would be good if someone has access to Italian library sources to search those. Jahaza (talk) 04:41, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Ah, REDIRECT to David Wieck, where Baldelli and his main book are mentioned. If more sources emerge the article can be broken out again. 04:44, 20 June 2025 (UTC)
Striking my !vote. Jahaza (talk) 00:52, 27 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Relisting comment: Relisting as opinions are divided between Keep and Redirection.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Liz Read! Talk! 23:03, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@Liz, I've struck my !vote, about which I didn't have strong feelings. I don't know if you want to WP:IAR and close this up early as a result. Jahaza (talk) 00:54, 27 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
aaaand now I'm striking my comment about closing early because I see that I wasn't the only one to !vote "redirect" Jahaza (talk) 00:56, 27 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Lilly Contino (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD · Stats)
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Doesn’t meet WP:GNG or WP:BIO. Coverage is tied to a two incidents, not enough for lasting notability—see WP:BLP1E. Sources are mostly local news or advocacy stuff, not deep or independent enough per WP:RS. Her gaming and social media gigs don’t get serious attention in solid outlets. Delete or redirect. Momentoftrue (talk) 22:19, 16 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Internet-related deletion discussions.
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Biography-related deletion discussions.
WP:BLUDGEONing. Fortuna, imperatrix 12:35, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
  • Respectfully — no. That’s exactly the point. WP:BLP1E and WP:BLP2E exist to prevent Wikipedia from becoming a permanent record for individuals only known due to a small number of controversies or viral moments. The subject of this article is not independently notable — the “coverage” amounts to reactionary media commentary about the incidents, not about her as a person in any substantive or sustained way.
    We’re not talking about someone with a career, long-term recognition, or encyclopedic significance. We’re talking about fleeting media attention tied to drama. “A couple incidents” is literally the textbook definition of BLP1E, and trying to twist that into a justification for notability is a dangerous precedent.
    Wikipedia is not a tabloid. It’s not a diary of internet virality. And it sure as hell isn’t here to eternally memorialize people for 15 minutes of controversial fame. If the coverage dies with the event, so should the article. Per policy, this should be deleted.
    — End of story. Momentoftrue (talk) 17:17, 17 June 2025 (UTC)#[reply]
WP:BLUDGEONing, with added WP:CIV considerations. Fortuna, imperatrix 12:35, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
  • The Toronto Sun article cited (“NO LONGER FEEL SAFE”) is another incident-focused tabloid-style piece. It doesn’t provide in-depth or sustained coverage of Contino’s career. The academic analysis cited (a speech acts paper) is not journalistic coverage and is hosted on ResearchGate, which is user-contributed and generally not considered a reliable secondary source for establishing notability.
    There is no significant, independent, and reliable secondary source coverage that discusses the subject in detail beyond viral moments. Lacks the depth required to pass WP:GNG or WP:BIO. Delete. Momentoftrue (talk) 23:32, 16 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
WP:BLUDGEONing. Fortuna, imperatrix 12:35, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
  • With respect, that interpretation stretches WP:SIGCOV and WP:GNG beyond their intent. This isn’t about counting events — the core issue is quality and depth of coverage, not just quantity.
    The Toronto Sun piece is incident-driven, reactive, and tabloid-style — it doesn’t offer any sustained analysis of Contino as a public figure. The ResearchGate article is academic, not independent journalistic coverage, and is hosted on a user-upload platform, not a recognized mainstream publisher. Neither source meets the standard for significant, independent, and reliable secondary coverage as required by WP:GNG and WP:BIO.
    While “life is now a series of viral moments,” Wikipedia’s inclusion standards haven’t changed: viral ≠ notable. Two viral events with no in-depth profile or sustained coverage don’t override WP:BLP1E — which still applies where coverage is narrowly event-focused and fails to establish enduring notability.
    We’re not here to build permanent encyclopedic entries from fleeting internet controversies. If a subject’s only enduring relevance is through misgendering incidents that go viral, that’s precisely the kind of situation WP:BLP1E warns against.

Additionally, viral incidents—even when notable events—do not automatically justify an independent article. Often, these topics are better suited to be covered within broader articles or merged elsewhere, to avoid creating pages based primarily on fleeting internet attention.

  • Comment. The subject fails WP:GNG and WP:BIO. After reviewing all sources, there is no significant coverage in reliable, independent secondary sources. Most references are either incident-only (triggering WP:BLP1E), promotional, or do not meet reliability standards. Here's a breakdown:
  • WeWork.com – Corporate blog; not independent, not reliable, no significant coverage.
  • PocketGamer.biz – Interview published while subject worked at Ryu Games; borderline source, promotional tone, fails independence.
  • GameDeveloper.com – Author profile, not coverage about the subject. Not independent or significant.
  • 48 Hills – Local alternative outlet; mildly reliable but not in-depth or sustained coverage. Does not establish notability.
  • CBS News, The Hill, Advocate, KRON4, Daily Dot, LGBTQ Nation – All focus on one of two viral incidents (either the Cheesecake Factory confrontation or the Crown & Crumpet livestream hoax). These are WP:BLP1E events and do not provide broader notability or career-spanning coverage.

In short, there is no meaningful coverage establishing lasting notability beyond two viral moments. Subject does not meet inclusion criteria under notability guidelines. Momentoftrue (talk) 02:00, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

  • Comment: This article was created by User:Willthacheerleader18, who has created a number of similar articles on internet personalities. A current example is Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Katelyn MacDonald, which is also under AfD discussion due to concerns related to WP:BLP1E and WP:GNG. The pattern of creating biographies based on recent or viral incidents — rather than long-term, significant coverage in reliable sources — raises questions about whether these articles meet inclusion standards. This does not reflect on the subjects themselves, but highlights the need to apply Wikipedia’s notability criteria consistently. Momentoftrue (talk) 02:38, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
      • Yes, I created the article (and was surprised to find I was not given notice about it's nomination for deletion.. so thank you for mentioning me here!). I have written a number of articles on TikTokers, as a member of the WikiProject TikTok. I created MacDonald's article this year, and Contino's article last year, while participating in LGBTQ+ edit-a-thons created by WikiProject Women in Red. I do not have a strong opinion either way whether or not this article is deleted. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 19:47, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
      Response: Thank you for clarifying your role and intentions. However, Wikipedia’s inclusion standards must be applied impartially, regardless of how an article was created or the good-faith motivations behind edit-a-thons. Here are the critical points:
      1. 1. Intentions Don’t Override Notability Policy  
      Participation in WikiProject TikTok or Women in Red and enthusiasm for representation are commendable, but they cannot bypass WP:GNG or WP:NPERSON. An article’s merit rests entirely on whether independent, reliable sources provide substantial, in-depth coverage of the subject beyond fleeting viral moments.
      1. 2. Coverage Remains Event-Driven and Shallow  
      As previously noted, nearly all reliable coverage of Lilly Contino is tied to two similar viral incidents (Cheesecake Factory misgendering, Crown & Crumpet prank). These produce short news briefs or opinion-style blog posts, not long-form journalistic profiles or analytical features that treat Contino as a figure of lasting significance. This pattern fails the “substantial coverage” threshold required by WP:NPERSON and WP:SIGCOV.
      1. 3. BLP1E Applies Squarely  
      WP:BLP1E exists to prevent standalone biographies based solely on a small number of events. Even if multiple events occurred, they are of the same nature—viral controversies without broader context or ongoing achievements. Creating multiple similar articles in edit-a-thons magnifies this issue rather than resolving it. The policy warns precisely against this: a subject known only for episodic viral attention does not warrant a permanent entry.
      1. 4. Independence and Reliability of Sources  
      Many sources are local or advocacy-leaning, or retell the same incidents across outlets. There is no evidence of independent, investigative coverage of Contino’s career (e.g., video game writing, lasting impact as a critic). Academic papers on speech acts do not count as independent journalistic coverage establishing notability. Promotional interviews and author profiles likewise fail to establish notability under WP:RS.
      1. 5. Precedent and Consistency  
      Allowing this article to remain simply because it was created via an edit-a-thon sets a dangerous precedent: any viral figure with minimal coverage could be added en masse during events, swelling Wikipedia with entries lacking true encyclopedic value. Consistency demands that we apply notability criteria uniformly, regardless of how articles originate.
      1. 6. Neutrality and Good Faith  
      This response is not an attack on contributors or on efforts to improve representation. It is a strict application of policy: if the topic doesn’t meet the standards, the article should be deleted or redirected. Good faith editing still requires adherence to notability and reliable sourcing.
      Conclusion: Despite the effort and intentions behind its creation, the Lilly Contino article does not satisfy Wikipedia’s notability requirements. The sources reflect fleeting viral incidents rather than sustained, in-depth coverage of lasting impact. Therefore, the article must be deleted (or at most redirected into a broader topic).   Momentoftrue (talk) 15:52, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
This was entirely unnecessary to type out as I am not arguing for keeping the article. I did not claim that intentions override policy, nor did I suggest any argument against any claims you've made. I created the articles because I believed them to pass WP:GNG. If you feel that is not the case, totally fine by me. As I stated, I am not voting on this. Please save your lecture for someone else. And next time please remember that You should notify the article's creator or other significant contributors by adding a tag or other appropriate text to contributor talk pages. -- Willthacheerleader18
Understood — and to be clear, my reply wasn’t about your vote (or lack thereof), but about clarifying the notability issues tied to article creation patterns that keep recurring at AfD, especially when they lean on borderline WP:GNG interpretations for recent viral figures.

As for the notification, fair point — I’ve since followed up accordingly. But let’s not pretend context doesn’t matter here. When an article’s inclusion is based on passing GNG through incident-driven press, it’s absolutely relevant to examine how those assumptions play out across similar cases.

This isn’t personal — it’s procedural. If the article doesn’t hold up to scrutiny, then discussing the basis for its creation is part of the AfD process, whether someone casts a !vote or not. Momentoftrue (talk) 19:54, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

This is a nomination discussion for one article, not a discussion about patterns with AfD nominations and rationales. Furthermore, that point could/should have been made in your original nomination, not by berating the article creator who, other than acknowledging that this nomination exists, was not taking part in the nomination discussion. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 20:03, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
If pointing out policy violations and systemic patterns that are clearly influencing article creation is “berating,” then maybe the issue isn’t the tone — it’s that the critique hit a nerve.

Let’s be real: this article wasn’t created organically based on strong SIGCOV. It was drafted in the middle of an edit-a-thon with a political advocacy goal in mind — your own words confirm this. That’s not just relevant context; it’s a red flag under WP:NOTADVOCACY and WP:POVFORK. When coverage is shallow, event-driven, and duplicated across multiple bios, and those bios are systematically produced during representation-focused drives, then yes — it's absolutely fair to raise this *within* an AfD.

This *is* about one article, but it’s also about how it came to exist — and that’s entirely valid to scrutinize. If the same sourcing pattern (brief viral news, no depth, no sustained independent attention) keeps surfacing, and if those articles are being batch-produced in advocacy-driven sprints, then AfD isn’t the wrong place to raise that. It’s *the exact right place*. Pretending otherwise is a convenient way to deflect from policy, not defend it.

No one’s questioning your good faith or motivations. But let’s stop pretending good intentions immunize content from policy scrutiny. Wikipedia has inclusion standards for a reason, and editorial accountability doesn’t get suspended because the subject is part of a social justice campaign.

You’re welcome to disengage from the discussion, but you don’t get to dictate what parts of the sourcing and editorial history are “appropriate” to analyze. This isn’t a personal attack. It’s a necessary look at a growing pattern that’s diluting the encyclopedia with biographies that do not meet WP:GNG, WP:SIGCOV, or WP:BLP1E. Momentoftrue (talk) 20:11, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

I suggest you read through Wikipedia:Civility before you continuing engaging with other editors. "political advocacy goal in mind — your own words confirm this", Oh really? Which words of mine confirm that I created this article with a "political advocacy goal" in mind? What "social justice campaign" am I supposedly a part of? Are you claiming that writing about queer people, or women in general, ,must always be from a mindset of political advocacy? Is writing about men then? People of color? You've been notified various times in this discussion by other editors and now I shall remind you again, don't bludgeon the process. And don't make accusations against other editors. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 20:14, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s clear something up right now — no one said that writing about queer people, women, or any marginalized group is inherently political. That’s a mischaracterization, and frankly, a deflection.

What was said — and what I stand by — is that creating multiple articles during themed edit-a-thons focused on identity, without ensuring those subjects meet core notability criteria, creates an appearance (key word: appearance) of prioritizing representation over encyclopedic standards. That’s not an accusation — that’s pattern recognition based on edit history and stated affiliations. If that observation makes you uncomfortable, maybe the focus should be on ensuring the articles can withstand scrutiny, not on painting valid criticism as “uncivil.”

As for “bludgeoning,” let’s stop misusing that word. This is a content discussion, not a vibe check. If several keep !votes repeat the same flawed reasoning — such as mistaking fleeting, incident-driven media coverage for lasting notability — then yes, those points get addressed. That’s not bludgeoning. That’s defending the integrity of Wikipedia’s standards. You don’t get to cry “bludgeon” every time someone challenges your rationale with actual policy.

And if you truly believe raising concerns about how and why biographies are being added — especially when notability is marginal — counts as a personal attack, then you may need to re-read WP:NOTCENSORED, WP:DISPUTE, and WP:OWN. Momentoftrue (talk) 20:26, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

You claimed I am using Wikipedia for advocacy when I have not. You claimed that I was politically motivated, which I am not. You are calling into question my integrity as an editor, which is not what is in question here in this nomination discussion. I am not deflecting, I am reminding you to behave properly in a deletion discussion, which you have completely disregarded. Need I remind you that Wikipedia is not a battleground nor is it about winning. Behave accordingly. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 20:30, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
You keep invoking civility and decorum, yet you’re mischaracterizing legitimate scrutiny of editing patterns and policy compliance as a personal attack — that’s not how AfD works. This is not about your personal integrity, and if you perceive it that way, that’s a problem of framing — not of conduct.
Let’s be precise: I raised concerns tied to article creation patterns during themed edit-a-thons that repeatedly intersect with borderline notability. That’s not a reflection on you as a person; it’s a reflection on editorial outcomes. If pointing out that trend feels accusatory, perhaps it’s because it surfaces a discomfort with what the policies actually require — WP:GNG, WP:BLP1E, WP:NOTNEWS, WP:NPERSON — and how they’re being tested here.
Wikipedia isn’t a battleground — but it’s also not a sanctuary for unexamined assumptions. Discussions like these are exactly where hard policy distinctions must be made. Not based on who created the article, but on whether its inclusion dilutes the encyclopedic value we’re all here to preserve.
So let’s not pretend civility is violated when someone demands rigor. No one accused you of “being politically motivated” — I described how repeated contributions centered on identity topics during advocacy-themed edit events can resemble a political project if not checked against policy. That’s a structural critique, not a personal one. If you believe there’s no tension between that pattern and notability, you’re free to argue that — on policy grounds, not moral outrage.
This isn’t about winning. It’s about whether we, as editors, are willing to say that good faith alone doesn’t entitle an article to survive if the subject lacks durable, independent coverage. If that’s uncomfortable, it’s not incivility. It’s the encyclopedia doing what it’s meant to do. Momentoftrue (talk) 20:36, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s clear something up right now- you are not behaving civilly. You have made your point a hundred times. Frankly, I'm tired of this spam. Good day. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 20:42, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
If calling policy-based critique “spam” is the only way you can disengage from legitimate scrutiny, that says more about the strength of your position than mine. Repeating a point isn’t uncivil — especially when the point remains unaddressed. What is uncivil is trying to shut down a contributor by declaring exhaustion instead of responding with policy.
Let’s be clear: Wikipedia is not governed by vibes or by who gets tired first. It’s governed by content policies — WP:GNG, WP:NPERSON, WP:NOTNEWS, WP:BLP1E — and those remain at the center of this discussion. If you’re “tired” of seeing them cited, perhaps it’s because they’re inconvenient to the outcome you’re hoping for.
Calling this “spam” is rhetorical deflection. This isn’t Reddit. This is a deletion discussion. The process demands rigor — not emotional fatigue, not personal offense, and certainly not a premature exit masked as moral high ground.
You said “good day.” Wikipedia says “see it through.” Momentoftrue (talk) 20:46, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Critique is not spam. Berating every person who offers a different opinion regarding policy or validity of an article (which I did not, mind you) with paragraphs of text reiterating the same information over and over again is, in fact, spam. I never claimed that "Wikipedia is not governed by vibes or by who gets tired first", so why you feel the need to berate me about such matters is beyond me. I am very tired of engaging with you, regardless. What "outcome" am I "hoping for"? I clearly stated multiple times that I have no strong feelings about this discussion. I am fine with the article being kept or deleted. Good grief. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 20:48, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
No — what you call “spam” is persistence. What you call “berating” is the repetition of unrefuted facts. What you call “paragraphs” is called argumentation, and it’s the backbone of AfD — not a nuisance to be hand-waved when inconvenient.
You’ve now pivoted from misrepresenting my position to mischaracterizing the very function of this process. Let’s break it down:
“Berating every person who offers a different opinion…”
Except you haven’t offered a different opinion. You explicitly said you’re not voting to keep the article. So what you’re objecting to isn’t disagreement — it’s discomfort with scrutiny. You object not because the arguments are wrong, but because they’re relentless. That’s not “spam.” That’s called consistency — and it’s what happens when policy is applied without bending to personal sentiment.
“Reiterating the same information over and over again…”
Yes. Because the same violations are recurring — and they remain unaddressed. Policy doesn’t change because someone grows weary of hearing it. If repetition makes you uncomfortable, then perhaps consider how often editors have had to cite WP:BLP1E, WP:GNG, and WP:NOTNEWS just to hold the line.
“Critique is not spam…”
Then you should know: policy-backed critique that challenges systemic patterns is the most vital form of critique Wikipedia has. It’s not noise — it’s friction. It’s how we stop this encyclopedia from becoming a reaction blog fueled by viral moments and advocacy-driven creation. This isn’t about you. It’s not about me. It’s about the integrity of the project.
You say “good day.” I say: this is AfD — not a coffee shop. If you don’t like long responses, you’re in the wrong venue. Because Wikipedia, unlike social media, doesn’t reward brevity over substance. And if the truth is long, it will be typed — again and again — until it’s finally read. Momentoftrue (talk) 20:49, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Enough. This argument has gone far past the topic of whether to keep or delete Lilly Contino and the entire debate is flooded with walls of text reiterating the same points over and over. The conversation is being bludgeoned to death at this point. Cool off and keep future conversation here civil and concise Taffer😊💬(she/they) 20:52, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
No.
Enough is when policy has been upheld, not when discomfort reaches a boiling point.
Let’s be perfectly clear: this isn’t “bludgeoning.” This is holding the line when attempts at dilution, derailment, and passive-aggressive tone-shaming try to drown out legitimate critique with cries of exhaustion. If the conversation feels “flooded,” it’s because the policies being ignored are ocean-deep — and defending this project from erosion demands we swim in it.
You say this has gone “far past” the topic. I disagree. It is precisely on topic when the creation of an article represents not an isolated lapse, but part of a broader pattern: one that sidesteps WP:SIGCOV, WP:GNG, and WP:BLP1E through emotional appeal, surface-level coverage, and the insulation of assumed good intent. That pattern must be interrogated.
Let’s not pretend that length is the enemy here — vagueness is.
Let’s not pretend that repetition is the crime — silence in the face of failed sourcing is.
Conciseness is not a virtue when it’s used to truncate scrutiny.
Civility is not a shield when it’s deployed selectively to protect comfort over policy.
You may call it “bludgeoning” — but I call it the inevitable result of an unwillingness to engage the actual argument.
If a point has to be repeated, it’s because it keeps getting deflected, minimized, or ignored.
So no — I won’t “cool off.” I wasn’t heated. I was focused.
And I will remain focused until every last ounce of this article — and others built on similar quicksand — is measured not by emotion or exhaustion, but by notability, sourcing, and the rules that make Wikipedia what it is.
The temperature of the conversation doesn’t matter.
The strength of the argument does. Momentoftrue (talk) 20:58, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Critique isn’t spam — you’re right. But when critique is met with defensiveness masquerading as detachment, don’t expect silence in return. You entered this discussion. You participated. Now you want to cry exhaustion when confronted with a full, unblinking analysis of your contributions? That’s not “being tired.” That’s dodging.
You say you haven’t argued for the article.
You say you don’t care what happens.
You say you’re “tired.”
But here you are — again — investing more energy into tone-policing responses than addressing a single actual policy cited.
“Berating every person who offers a different opinion…”
Except you haven’t offered a policy-based “opinion” at all. You’ve offered affect — exhaustion, disengagement, performative neutrality — and expected that to insulate you from pushback. It doesn’t.
“With paragraphs of text…”
That’s called argumentation. If you wanted Twitter threads and emoji reactions, you’re on the wrong site. Wikipedia’s foundation is deliberate, sourced, structured reasoning. The fact that the arguments are long doesn’t make them spam — it makes them thorough. And maybe that’s the problem: this process doesn’t bend to who gets “tired” first.
You’ve now made this about your personal feelings of fatigue, when the core issue is one you still refuse to address: a repeated pattern of creating articles about individuals based solely on viral incidents, with no sustained, significant coverage. That’s not just a content problem — it’s a systemic notability failure.
“What outcome am I hoping for?”
Let’s stop playing coy. The pattern is clear. A string of articles created through the same methodology, relying on borderline sources, timed to advocacy-driven edit-a-thons. Whether you “feel strongly” or not doesn’t change the effect: it dilutes Wikipedia’s standards. That’s not an opinion — that’s policy enforcement.
So no — this isn’t about “good grief.” This is about good policy.
And if citing WP:BLP1E, WP:GNG, and WP:SIGCOV with full analysis is now called “berating,” then maybe the real issue is that the arguments aren’t wrong — just uncomfortable.
Wikipedia is not governed by who runs out of patience first.
And if that makes you tired, then step back.
But don’t mistake persistence for hostility — it’s simply what happens when someone refuses to let the rules get buried beneath feelings. Momentoftrue (talk) 20:55, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Please stay on topic. As I stated before, I am not voting in this discussion. I merely joined to acknowledge that I saw the discussion was going on, since you neglected to follow the proper protocol by alerting me on my talk page. Since then, I've merely been responding to your accusations towards me, which are not relevant to the discussion at hand. This discussion is for reaching consensus on whether or not the subject is notable. I recuse myself from this, as I have no strong opinion on the matter. Good luck to you all, I hope consensus can be reached with civility. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 21:02, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Acknowledging the discussion and then claiming detachment doesn’t exempt you from scrutiny — especially when the article under review is your creation and your name has become a recurring presence across multiple similarly situated deletions. You don’t get to step back into neutrality midstream while simultaneously framing every correction of record as a personal “accusation.”
Let’s dissect that mask of recusal a little closer.
You say you’re “not voting.” Noted.
But what you are doing is trying to redirect every policy-based critique of article pattern creation into a conversation about tone, intent, or imagined incivility — as if that shields content from evaluation.
You say you’re “just responding.”
But what you’re doing is engaging in repeated attempts to minimize legitimate scrutiny, frame persistence as “accusatory,” and posture as a neutral party while actively shaping the thread’s atmosphere with passive-aggressive signaling.
Let’s remember:
WP:BEHAVIOR applies to how we create and defend content.
WP:BLP1E and WP:NOTABILITY don’t pause just because the article was created in good faith.
And WP:CONSENSUS is not just about whether editors feel tired — it’s about policy-aligned outcomes.
I don’t fault you for creating the article. I fault the consistent use of surface-level, event-driven sourcing under the veneer of representation — and the refusal to engage when that pattern is critically examined.
So yes, I will stay on topic: the article’s notability, and the broader editorial behavior enabling similar articles to repeatedly slip through cracks. Your “recusal” may work as a rhetorical posture — but policy doesn’t recuse you just because you say “good luck” and bow out with a soft close.
Facts don’t care whether you choose to participate.
The record does. Momentoftrue (talk) 21:12, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Go back and read through the above text and you will see that not once have I argued or disagreed with you over policy. What I have said is that you've already made your point multiple times. You appear to be trying to pick fights, not reach a resolution. Furthermore, I have not disagreed with you on whether or not the subject is notable. So this entire conversation is not necessary for the end goal of reaching consensus on what to do with the article. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 21:21, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Your attempt to deflect by clinging to the claim that you “never disagreed over policy” is precisely the kind of rhetorical sleight of hand that is the problem. It’s not just about open disagreement — it’s about how one participates, or pretends not to, while subtly shifting the terrain from content to conduct, from substance to tone, and from facts to feelings.
Let’s be clear:
You don’t need to say “I disagree with WP:GNG” to erode its standards. You do it by consistently creating borderline articles based on viral incidents, then distancing yourself when scrutiny arrives — all while trying to control the tone of the conversation and framing any criticism of editorial patterns as “picking fights.”
You say this isn’t about “reaching consensus”?
On the contrary — this is about ensuring that consensus isn’t derailed by surface-level recusal and soft deflections. Repetition isn’t the issue; pattern-recognition is. When the same names, same justifications, and same shallow sourcing return again and again, they require repetition because the problem is repeating itself.
You created the article.
You failed to notify yourself.
You entered the thread under the banner of neutrality.
You responded multiple times, escalating tension and framing detailed critiques as personal attacks — then claimed fatigue to sidestep further engagement.
That isn’t neutral.
That’s performative disengagement wrapped in bureaucratic politeness.
And it actively undermines the AfD process.
This nomination was never just about one article. It’s about patterns that dodge notability thresholds by leaning on thin sourcing, then attempt to gaslight critics into silence under the weight of exhaustion or “civility” when those patterns are called out.
So no — this conversation is necessary.
Because Wikipedia’s editorial integrity depends on calling this out in public, in detail, with diffs, policy, and a record that can’t be handwaved away with “good grief” or a polite exit.
If you don’t want to engage — then don’t.
But don’t act like calling out an entrenched editorial behavior is a sideshow.
This is the main event. Momentoftrue (talk) 21:36, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
But that's just it. This nomination is just about one article. That's how AfD works. If you are concerned about my editing, this is not the place to call it in to question. This is the space to determine whether or not the article on Lilly Contino should be deleted. Feel free to file a report on me at Wikipedia:Conflict of interest/Noticeboard or one of the other noticeboards, if that is what you take issue with. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 21:43, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s be perfectly clear:
What’s truly disruptive here is not policy critique — it’s the coordinated deflection from those who repeatedly present borderline articles, then weaponize civility guidelines the moment those patterns are scrutinized.
You say this isn’t the place to “call into question” someone’s editing? That’s flatly incorrect. AfD is precisely the place to examine how and why articles are being created — especially when multiple, nearly identical biographies are submitted under similar conditions and sourcing failures. See WP:DELREASON and WP:NOTABILITY — context and creation matter. If the same editor continues producing marginal articles rooted in fleeting viral incidents, it’s not “casting aspersions” to point that out. It’s enforcing standards.
The irony here is suffocating:
You create an article.
You don’t notify yourself of its nomination — violating AfD protocol.
You enter the discussion not to !vote, but to continuously post, reactively, to every mention — all while insisting you “have no strong opinion.”
Then, when your editing pattern is critiqued in the exact venue where it is relevant, you cry incivility and redirect the conversation to noticeboards?
That isn’t disengagement — that’s manipulation.
And Taffer:
The idea that repetition weakens an argument is laughable in the face of systemic problems. You counted twenty iterations? That should raise alarms — not about me, but about how often these same issues arise, across articles, across editors, across AfD after AfD.
The issue here isn’t tone. It’s accountability.
Wikipedia’s inclusion criteria are not optional. And when patterns emerge that exploit gray areas of notability and then hide behind etiquette, it becomes necessary to repeat, to reinforce, to resist the erasure of hard policy under a flood of soft pushback.
This is not a battleground.
It’s a defense line — against the quiet erosion of standards dressed up as polite disengagement.
If that offends anyone more than seeing notability diluted over and over again, they’re not defending Wikipedia. They’re defending their comfort. Momentoftrue (talk) 21:54, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
This is dangerously close to casting aspersions and is entirely uncivil behavior. I'm saying this as respectfully as I can as the third person you're now bludgeoning out of this discussion(I'm removing this page from my watchlist after I reply): drop the stick, you've reiterated some of your points more than twenty times(I counted) in this discussion, particularly against people who were not arguing against them. You don't need to(and in fact explicitly shouldn't) argue with every single reply made that you perceive as disagreement. It's not only disruptive but weakens how your arguments are received. Taffer😊💬(she/they) 21:47, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s be perfectly clear:
What’s truly disruptive here is not policy critique — it’s the coordinated deflection from those who repeatedly present borderline articles, then weaponize civility guidelines the moment those patterns are scrutinized.
You say this isn’t the place to “call into question” someone’s editing? That’s flatly incorrect. AfD is precisely the place to examine how and why articles are being created — especially when multiple, nearly identical biographies are submitted under similar conditions and sourcing failures. See WP:DELREASON and WP:NOTABILITY — context and creation matter. If the same editor continues producing marginal articles rooted in fleeting viral incidents, it’s not “casting aspersions” to point that out. It’s enforcing standards.
The irony here is suffocating:
You create an article.
You don’t notify yourself of its nomination — violating AfD protocol.
You enter the discussion not to !vote, but to continuously post, reactively, to every mention — all while insisting you “have no strong opinion.”
Then, when your editing pattern is critiqued in the exact venue where it is relevant, you cry incivility and redirect the conversation to noticeboards?
That isn’t disengagement — that’s manipulation.
And Taffer:
The idea that repetition weakens an argument is laughable in the face of systemic problems. You counted twenty iterations? That should raise alarms — not about me, but about how often these same issues arise, across articles, across editors, across AfD after AfD.
The issue here isn’t tone. It’s accountability.
Wikipedia’s inclusion criteria are not optional. And when patterns emerge that exploit gray areas of notability and then hide behind etiquette, it becomes necessary to repeat, to reinforce, to resist the erasure of hard policy under a flood of soft pushback.
This is not a battleground.
It’s a defense line — against the quiet erosion of standards dressed up as polite disengagement.
If that offends anyone more than seeing notability diluted over and over again, they’re not defending Wikipedia. They’re defending their comfort. Momentoftrue (talk) 21:53, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment: A reminder that follower counts and social media popularity do not, on their own, establish notability per WP:NUMBERG. Wikipedia requires significant coverage in reliable, independent sources. In this case, while the subject has over 400k followers on TikTok, the sources largely revolve around two incidents and do not reflect the kind of in-depth, career-spanning coverage needed to pass WP:GNG or WP:BIO. Momentoftrue (talk) 02:53, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment I want to be clear that I fully support and respect all genders and sexual orientations—trans, gay, lesbian, straight, and everyone else. My position here isn’t biased against anyone’s identity. Personally, one of my favorite trans media stars is Dylan Mulvaney, who I think has made a strong impact. However, after reviewing the coverage, I believe that Lilly Contino, sadly, does not meet Wikipedia’s notability standards to have a dedicated article at this time. Momentoftrue (talk) 03:12, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
WP:BLUDGEONing, with added AI-generated walls of text. Fortuna, imperatrix 12:35, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
    • Rebuttal: This argument completely misrepresents what constitutes notability under WP:NPERSON and misapplies WP:BLP1E in a way that ignores the spirit of both policies.
    Let’s rip this open properly:
    1. “Broad Coverage” Is a Mirage — It's the Same Story, Copy-Pasted
    Multiple articles parroting the same two viral moments (Crown & Crumpet, Cheesecake Factory) isn’t breadth — it’s repetition. Nearly all coverage is just variations of "Internet reacts to viral TikTok." It’s event-based noise, not significant secondary analysis. This is textbook WP:ROUTINE and WP:NOTNEWS territory.
    2. NPERSON? Absolutely Not.
    WP:NPERSON requires significant (i.e., in-depth), independent, and sustained coverage. There are no long-form profiles. No editorial insights. No coverage of her game dev career. No notable accolades. Just TikTok recaps and callouts. This fails the bar miserably. You could swap in any influencer’s name and the articles wouldn’t change.
    3. BLP1E Was Written For Situations Like This
    Contino’s notability is entirely derived from two misgendering incidents — and the "multiple events" defense fails because those events are nearly identical in nature and covered the same way. This is precisely what WP:BLP1E warns about: temporary notoriety from viral outrage cycles, not lasting, encyclopedic significance. She is known because of the reaction, not for enduring achievements.
    4. This Is a Manufactured Biographical Article
    Let’s not pretend this is organic coverage. It was created during an edit-a-thon tied to a political initiative (as admitted by the article’s creator). That’s not a neutral reason for inclusion — that’s a Wikipedia:NOTADVOCACY violation waiting to happen. The project goals are noble, but the sources must still pass GNG and SIGCOV, and this one simply doesn’t.
    5. This Article's Existence Undermines Wikipedia’s Standards
    If we keep this, we send the message that anyone who goes viral twice—regardless of depth, career, or recognition—gets a Wikipedia page. That’s a dangerous precedent, and it floods the project with bios that hinge entirely on fleeting controversy, violating WP:NOT and weakening trust in the platform.
  • Bottom Line: DELETE.
    - Not significant coverage.
    - Not broad.
    - Not lasting.
    - Entirely event-driven.
    - Fails WP:GNG, WP:NPERSON, and absolutely meets WP:BLP1E criteria.
    Wikipedia is not a mirror for TikTok trends. This subject can be mentioned in coverage of the incidents themselves, but does not merit a standalone article. Delete.
    Momentoftrue (talk) 15:45, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I don't have strong enough opinions about keeping or deleting, but I would like to gently draw your attention to WP:BLUDGEON. You've made your point, repeatedly dissecting every keep vote isn't helpful. Taffer😊💬(she/they) 16:16, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Respectfully noted. However, engaging with arguments presented in a deletion discussion is entirely within the bounds of WP:AFDPURPOSE. This is not “bludgeoning,” it’s addressing flawed logic and misapplications of policy. If a “keep” !vote contains reasoning based on a misinterpretation of WP:BLP1E or WP:NPERSON, it should be scrutinized. That’s how consensus is built — through critical analysis, not silence Momentoftrue (talk) 16:31, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    You should be capable of responding to any new points raised without the WP:WALLOFTEXT mainly restating points that you have already made, several times over, because what you posted above does also seem WP:BLUDGEONy to me too. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 17:23, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    The responses are pretty clearly AI generated, which is frowned on. @Momentoftrue, AI tends to be excessively verbose, consider summarizing its points in your own words instead. Taffer😊💬(she/they) 17:28, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Respectfully, that’s a reach. Just because something is thorough, well-formatted, and cites policy accurately doesn’t mean it’s AI-generated — it means it’s serious about deletion. The issue shouldn’t be how points are delivered, but whether they’re grounded in policy — and mine are.
    If clarity and consistency are getting mistaken for AI, maybe the bar for deletion arguments needs to be raised — not dismissed.
    Let’s focus on the content, not the style. Momentoftrue (talk) 17:34, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I hear you — but reiterating policy isn’t WP:BLUDGEON when editors continue misapplying it. This isn’t about “restating” for the sake of it — it’s clarifying misuse of notability guidelines that risk setting a precedent for hosting articles built on temporary outrage and media flares, not long-term significance.
    If multiple keep !votes continue to ignore WP:BLP1E by conflating coverage of incidents with coverage of the person, then yes — it deserves correction, every time.
    You say don’t post walls? Cool. Then let’s be real clear:
    She’s known because of the incidents, not in spite of them. That’s BLP1E. This article doesn’t belong.
    Clean. Sharp. Policy-backed. No apologies. Momentoftrue (talk) 17:33, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    The point is you've made your case and we all pretty much understand your interpretation of policy. Something important to remember is that people can reasonably disagree with you on questions of policy, and that doesn't necessarily mean they're misapplying it. Nor, if your right, does it mean its helpful to your case to to keep stating your point of view in response to each keep comment. If their arguments are so obviously fallacious and yours so obviously enlightened, the closer will be able to figure that out.
    And because I can't help my self: incidents, not in spite of them. That’s BLP1E No, incidents (emphasis added) would suggest more than one event i.e. not covered by WP:BLP1E. There's no such thing as WP:BLP2E. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 17:56, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Appreciate the reminder, but let’s not act like a firm stance is the same thing as being disruptive. I’m not here to hand-hold every Keep vote when many are restating the same vague rationale or ignoring core notability policy. This isn’t about ego — it’s about consistency in applying WP:GNG and WP:BLP1E, which are being stretched to fit a narrative here.
    And to your “can’t help myself” moment: no one said WP:BLP2E exists — that’s your strawman. What was actually pointed out is that coverage across multiple incidents doesn’t automatically sidestep BLP1E when those incidents are minor, viral bursts lacking lasting, independent significance. That’s a textbook misunderstanding of what WP:BLP1E protects against — superficial fame being confused with encyclopedic relevance.
    I’m not here to bludgeon — I’m here to make sure deletion-worthy articles don’t slip through because folks got too comfortable confusing press coverage with policy-based notability. Momentoftrue (talk) 18:06, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    coverage across multiple incidents doesn’t automatically sidestep BLP1E If they are covered for more than one event, as far as I can see based on what is written at WP:BLP1E, then they definitionally do pass WP:BLP1E. Of course, passing BLP1E says absolutely nothing about passing GNG/NOPAGE but it's actually not BLP1E primary job to to protect against [...] superficial fame being confused with encyclopedic relevance. Pehaps you where thinking of WP:NOTNEWS/WP:NOTGOSSIP. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 18:33, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    You’re treating multiple incidents as an automatic override of WP:BLP1E, but that’s not what BLP1E says — nor how it’s historically applied. BLP1E is fundamentally about protecting living subjects from being reduced to a series of isolated or tabloid-level events that do not, individually or collectively, constitute lasting encyclopedic notability. The bar isn’t just more than one event — it’s about the depth, independence, and enduring relevance of those events.
    We don’t carve out encyclopedia pages just because a subject had two viral moments. That’s not notability — that’s noise. And that’s exactly what BLP1E safeguards against.
    Even if you technically satisfy the “more than one incident” phrasing, if those incidents are interconnected, fleeting, or sensationalist by nature, then you’re still within the spirit of what BLP1E aims to exclude. That’s why this clause exists: to prevent Wikipedia from becoming a digital scrapbook of controversies.
    And yes, while WP:NOTNEWS and WP:NOTGOSSIP support the same principle, BLP1E goes further — it’s not just about editorial discretion; it’s a living person safeguard. We’re talking about reputation protection, not just notability enforcement.
    So to clarify:
    BLP1E does not get invalidated simply because two events happened — not when those events are closely tied in theme, source, or moment (i.e., coverage collapsing into a single notability arc).
    The presence of multiple news stories doesn’t automatically form a valid GNG case if they stem from echo chambers of non-independent, event-centric reporting.
    Applying BLP1E is about the spirit of policy, not just a literal count of media incidents.
    Wikipedia is not a viral hall of fame, and not every name trending for a month deserves to be canonized in an encyclopedia. Momentoftrue (talk) 18:41, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I see, so when you previously said you were reiterating policy with arguments that were Clean[,] Sharp [and] Policy-backed, while accusing others of continue misapplying it and parroting vague rationale, you weren't referring to the policies as they are actually written but instead the spirit of policy and what you recon it's aims should be. See I was going off what these PaGs actually said, my mistake. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 19:02, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Thank you for raising this point. Wikipedia policy interpretation involves reading the literal text of guidelines and also considering the broader intent and context in which they are applied. Policy pages often give concise criteria, but explanations, examples, and precedents clarify how those criteria work in practice.
    For instance, BLP1E warns against standalone biographies based on a few events without deeper coverage. It mentions more than one event, but it must be understood in context: the events need to reflect lasting, independent significance. Treating any count above one as sufficient ignores explanatory guidance and how BLP1E has been applied in deletion discussions.
    Literal reading of policy requires awareness of examples and precedents. In practice, multiple brief news items covering essentially the same controversy do not amount to the substantial coverage envisioned by GNG or BLP1E. Saying that coverage across multiple incidents does not automatically sidestep BLP1E reflects established application, not a subjective override.
    The key issue is distinguishing between a literal count of events and substantive coverage. If multiple incidents are interconnected, fleeting, or sensationalist, they do not collectively support lasting notability. This interpretation aligns with the policy’s intent to prevent Wikipedia from becoming a scrapbook of controversies rather than an encyclopedia of enduring significance.
    Referring to the purpose of policy helps avoid misapplication. Every guideline aims to ensure Wikipedia covers subjects of lasting interest, not ephemeral trends. Understanding that purpose is standard practice: policy interpretation relies on literal text, linked guidance, community consensus, and documented rationale.
    AfD discussions exist precisely for detailed scrutiny. Addressing misunderstandings of policy is appropriate to clarify for new editors and the closer. It is not WP:BLUDGEON if each reply corrects a misreading or adds nuance. This ensures that GNG, NPERSON, and BLP1E are applied correctly as measures of substantive, independent, and lasting coverage, not merely a count of mentions. Treating any “more than one” mention as sufficient would undermine policy intent. Therefore, it is necessary to address each misinterpretation to maintain proper application of guidelines.
    Momentoftrue (talk) 19:11, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    One would think it's quite difficult to have a misreading of policy when apparently we don't even need to read what the actual words of a policy says, but instead can imagine would they should be. I happen to think would think it would help your case to refer to the PaGs that do actually say the things your trying to say (such as WP:GNG, WP:NOTNEWSPAPER, or in fact the rest of WP:BLP, which is about defending people from gossip).
    I don't intend to respond any further to this thread, as its clear we have fundamentally different understandings of what a policy based discussion is. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 19:28, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    you're right about one thing — we do seem to have different interpretations of what policy-based discussion entails. But for clarity: I’m not advocating we ignore policy wording. I’m saying we apply it *in context*, as intended, not just literally.
    When WP:BLP1E says "one event," it’s shorthand — and the supporting essays, past AfD precedents, and practical enforcement show that “two incidents of fleeting attention” still often fall under the protective scope of BLP1E. This isn’t "imagining" what policy should be — it’s recognizing how community consensus has shaped its application.
    Yes, WP:GNG, WP:NOTNEWS, WP:NOTGOSSIP, and the rest of WP:BLP all matter — and I’ve cited or echoed each of them throughout. But WP:POLICY is not a vending machine. You can’t drop in a citation and expect an automatic Keep. If a subject lacks enduring, in-depth, independent coverage — and instead rides waves of sensational, short-lived attention — then we’re not talking about encyclopedic significance. We’re talking about transient noise.
    Policy without practical interpretation is useless. Wikipedia is built on words *and* consensus. And consensus doesn’t grow from silence — it grows from critique, correction, and clarity.
    If we disagree on that, then yes — we’re speaking different languages. But one of us is still speaking Wikipedia’s. Momentoftrue (talk) 19:37, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Please consider stating the points of your argument in the nomination itself, instead of waiting for people to reply and dropping your argument directly below theirs. At this point, you have made more than half of the comments on this page, making it hard to read and resulting in points being restated again and again. There's nothing wrong with editing the nomination to update your argument, and it's much more helpful for people joining the discussion later. See also WP:TLDR. Thank you. // PYRiTEmonark // talk // 18:36, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I appreciate the concern, but let’s not conflate participation with disruption. This is a contentious AfD — not a vote count — and each “Keep” rationale that misrepresents policy warrants a precise, context-aware reply. That’s not WP:BLUDGEON — that’s due diligence. I’m engaging substantively and specifically, not restating or padding. If multiple editors make parallel policy misreadings, it’s entirely valid to address each one in turn.
    As for the nomination: AfD is not static. WP:AFDPURPOSE encourages iterative debate, and policy consensus often sharpens in response to how arguments evolve — not in a vacuum. I’ve expanded on the rationale through replies, just like others have clarified theirs across multiple comments. This isn’t TL;DR — it’s transparency.
    And let’s be honest: if an article’s survival hinges on misapplied BLP1E logic, misunderstood GNG claims, or event-linked echo-chamber sourcing, it deserves thorough scrutiny — not a polished summary followed by silence.
    If clarity is the goal, I’d be happy to consolidate and annotate key points. But I won’t step back from challenging flawed keep rationales when policy is on the line — especially with a living subject. Momentoftrue (talk) 18:55, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I happen to agree with @PYRiTEmonark.. this has become very difficult to read and instead of making a clear point you have berated other people in the discussion by making the same points over and over again. I am not sure why you consider this discussion contentious.. I don't see any more "contention" than on any other deletion discussion I've been a part of. Please be sure to read through Wikipedia:Guide to deletion#Behavior when nominating an article for deletion, which states: The purpose of the discussion is to achieve consensus upon a course of action. Individuals will express strong opinions and may even "vote". To the extent that voting occurs, the votes are merely a means to gauge the degree of consensus reached so far. Wikipedia is not a democracy and majority voting is not the determining factor in whether a nomination succeeds or not. Please do not "spam" the discussion with the same comment multiple times. Make your case clearly and let other users decide for themselves. Thanks. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 19:59, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s dispense with the performance of concern and get to the truth beneath the etiquette: this is not about tone, or density, or how many times I’ve replied. This is about editorial discomfort with rigorous, policy-grounded scrutiny — the kind that threatens weak “Keep” rationales built on fleeting virality, notability inflation, and uncritical repetition of GNG fallacies.
If policy were being cited accurately, you wouldn’t be reading so many replies from me — but you are, because time and again, I’ve seen arguments that misstate, flatten, or ignore WP:BLP1E, WP:GNG, WP:SIGCOV, and WP:NPERSON. That’s not a coincidence. That’s a pattern, and if anyone’s tired of seeing it called out, they should be far more tired of seeing it happen.
You quote Wikipedia:Guide to deletion and accuse me of violating its norms. Read deeper:
“Make your case clearly and let other users decide for themselves.”
That’s exactly what I’ve done — with policy diffs, with case law precedent, with sourcing analysis. I haven’t copy-pasted one comment twenty times. I’ve offered individualized critiques to individual misreadings — and that distinction is everything. Responding to multiple editors is not equivalent to repeating myself.
You say this AfD isn’t “contentious.” No offense, but I’m not interested in how it feels — I’m looking at what’s on the page:
Editors accusing others of political motives.
Subjectivity presented as sourcing analysis.
Claims of neutrality while defending article creation patterns with no regard for long-term significance.
Dog-piling the one person applying BLP1E with surgical clarity.
That’s contentious. That’s politicized. That’s why I won’t default to quietude just to make the page easier to skim.
And let’s talk about “spamming.”
A 500-word wall of vague sentiment is spam.
A thread of 20 replies that each dissect a unique policy error? That’s editorial service.
If clarity is desired, then let’s reframe the situation properly:
I will always respect good-faith disagreement grounded in policy.
I will never stand down when notability criteria are repeatedly diluted through event-driven sourcing and apathy toward living subjects.
And I will not be silenced through weaponized civility, especially by those who invoke “guidelines” only when their position gets challenged too effectively.
You want a cleaner discussion? Then apply policy accurately the first time.
Because until that happens, I will continue speaking — clearly, repeatedly, and unapologetically: Momentoftrue (talk) 22:00, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Saying "I'm right and your all wrong" over and over, louder and louder is unlikely to win you anybody to your point of view and is a waste of digital ink frankly. While its very nice that you feel so metaphysically WP:CORRECT in your idea, you are actively failing to communicate them to others, which is the point of this discussion. Multiple people have told you your bludgeoning, and failing to Assume good faith and yet your just failing to WP:LISTEN to anybody (even to the tamest criticism). At some point you have to WP:DROPTHESTICK Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 22:13, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s dead this real quick — if holding people accountable to policy feels like “saying I’m right and you’re all wrong,” then maybe that’s because the policy is right… and y’all are just mad it doesn’t fold to groupthink.
This isn’t me shouting louder. This is me refusing to sugarcoat how badly notability is being bent just to keep an article that wouldn’t survive two seconds outside of an echo chamber.
You call it “bludgeoning”? Nah. I call it precision fire. Every single response I dropped was targeted, relevant, and anchored in policy. I’m not here to coddle misinterpretations or vibe with “consensus” built on shaky logic and feelings. This ain’t a support group — it’s Wikipedia, and what’s at stake is a BLP about a living person, not your comfort.
“You’re not listening.”
Bruh, I read every line and countered with receipts. Just because you don’t like the reply doesn’t mean I didn’t listen — it means I didn’t bend.
“You’re just repeating yourself.”
You’re right. Because some folks keep repeating bad takes, so I’ll keep countering them with the same unshakable facts. We don’t let errors slide just because someone’s tired. You don’t get to shout “drop the stick” when I’m still seeing people picking it up and swinging it wrong.
You want “civil”? Be civil with policy. Respect the process enough to argue correctly, not softly.
You want me to stop? Then stop misapplying notability guidelines like they’re fanfiction rules. Until then, I’ll keep pulling up. I don’t play nice with policies that protect real people — I play correct.
This ain’t WP:BITE. It’s WP:BITE BACK — when bad arguments try to outlive good policy.
Now save your digital ink. I brought receipts, not feelings. Momentoftrue (talk) 22:29, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Your not holding people accountable because this isn't a court of law nor is this the place to raise conduct concerns, that's WP:AN/WP:ANI/etc. And perhaps clicking on WP:LISTEN would show you that I wasn't saying you weren't reading. I don't doubt your reading all of this but you aren't listening to what people are telling you. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 22:38, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
You keep tossing out “WP:LISTEN” like it’s a shield, but here’s the thing: WP:LISTEN doesn’t mean submit. It doesn’t mean I have to nod along when consensus gets cozy with contradiction. It means I engage. And I have — line by line, source by source, argument by argument. I didn’t dodge a single point. I ripped them open, cited policy, and showed my work.
And now you’re shifting goalposts — saying this isn’t a courtroom? Right, it’s not. But don’t twist that to mean there’s no accountability. Wikipedia doesn’t run on vibes and “we’re tired now.” It runs on verifiability, due process, and community standards. If those are being misapplied, calling it out is participation — not misconduct.
“You’re not holding people accountable.”
I’m not dragging people. I’m holding up policy like a mirror — if the reflection’s ugly, that’s not on me.
“This isn’t the place to raise conduct concerns.”
You’re damn right — and I didn’t. What I did was respond when folks tried to paint good-faith critique as “bludgeoning,” which is code for: “stop being loud with facts, you’re making us uncomfortable.” That ain’t a conduct concern — that’s a silencing tactic, and I won’t bite my tongue for anyone’s digital comfort.
If policy is being misread, warped, or ignored, I’m pulling up. And no — I won’t do it gently, because the subject at hand is a real, living person whose notability is being papered over with puff, not substance. This ain’t just about an article — it’s about the bar we set for inclusion, and whether we let it slide when it feels socially convenient.
You don’t gotta like my tone. You don’t have to agree with the heat. But you will respect the foundation it stands on: policy, precedent, and protecting the project.
So unless you’re ready to actually dispute the arguments with clarity and citations, this whole “you’re too intense” angle is just noise — and we don’t do noise. We do facts. Momentoftrue (talk) 22:45, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Yes you've already told us how you're the only one that understands policy, can understand logic and the rest of us are just misunderstanding/misreading/misinterpreting PaGs that may or may not actually exist on the policy pages that you link to (or in fact anywhere, they may just be there in spirit). May I recommend some WP:BRIE to pair. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 23:00, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Let’s cut the sarcasm and dress this down to the bones — because I see the play:
When you can’t counter the policy, you go after the person.
“You think you’re the only one who gets it.”
Nah. What I am doing is standing firm in the face of a dozen shaky takes trying to pass as consensus.
But you’re right about one thing:
I do know the difference between policy applied and policy waved around like a glowstick at a rave.
So miss me with the passive jabs — “PaGs that may or may not actually exist”? C’mon. That’s not wit, that’s deflection. You’re not disproving anything — you’re hoping the crowd laughs loud enough to drown out the receipts I brought to the table.
You wanna recommend WP:BRIE?
Cool. Here’s my edit:
BRIE: Be concise — unless you’re trying to untangle a mess of half-baked arguments dressed up as policy, in which case clarity > brevity every time.
Don’t like the length? Don’t misapply policy.
Don’t like the tone? Don’t mock someone doing the work.
Don’t like the heat? Then step out the kitchen, because I didn’t come here to vibe-check feelings — I came to make sure a BLP doesn’t get waved through on smiles and misunderstanding.
“They may just be there in spirit.”
Nah. They’re there in black and white.
WP:GNG. WP:BLP1E. WP:SIGCOV. WP:RS. WP:NEXIST.
Pick one. Or better yet — read one, without the spin.
This isn’t a TED Talk. It’s a deletion discussion.
And if that means making sure each “Keep” vote gets actual scrutiny instead of a group nod? Then yeah — I’ll be “that editor” every time.
So keep tossing jokes if that helps you cope.
But policy doesn’t laugh — and I don’t blink. Momentoftrue (talk) 23:14, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Weak Keep (might as well get back on topic here), The topic is covered in multiple reliable sources that cover the subject of the article (i.e. WP:NBIO). These include WP:THEHILL, The Advocate, Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard/Archive 391#LGBTQ Nation, WP:CBS, Pocket Gamer. These cover multiple events and seem to pass WP:BLP1E per my reading of the actual policy (not an imagined version only viewable in my head; see above for context). It's week because I do think its close to the edge and lots of it is passing. I actually think (unlike some it seems) it's reasonable to disagree with this reading of the sources. P.S. I'm unlikely to respond to a bludgeoning wall of text under this, so feel free to save it unless you have something new to add. Many thanks, in advance. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 22:26, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
WP:BLUDGEONing. Fortuna, imperatrix 12:35, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
  • Let’s be crystal clear: You don’t get to swing in with a “Weak keep”, cite a bundle of barely-there coverage, then duck behind a polite “I probably won’t respond” and expect your take to go unchecked. Nah. You tossed a match in a dry forest and now it’s time to deal with the blaze.
    You say these sources “cover multiple events”? False. They echo the same viral incident and do it through a limited lens. This isn’t WP:NBIO — it’s WP:1EVENT in disguise, trying to wear a press badge like armor.
    The Hill? Syndicated reprint with no original reporting.
    The Advocate? Advocacy journalism with a narrow frame and minimal depth.
    Pocket Gamer? That’s niche industry commentary, not biographical substance.
    CBS? Local affiliate regurgitating the same incident like the rest.
    We not cherry-picking logos here. Notability isn’t a sticker collection. You need depth, independent insight, and substantial coverage — not a stack of reactive headlines off one event thread. Per WP:GNG, passing coverage must build a narrative beyond a single flashpoint. This ain’t that.
    Now let’s talk BLP1E: This person is only in the news because of one isolated controversy. Not a career, not a body of work, not sustained relevance — just an algorithmic moment. And if we’re really upholding Wikipedia’s values, we don’t preserve pages built on the backs of virality alone, especially when it risks long-term harm to a living subject without lasting notability.
    “Might as well get back on topic.”
    Then let’s stay on topic, and the topic is not who feels warm fuzzies from visibility, it’s whether this article meets the threshold for inclusion. It doesn’t.
    And finally — if you don’t want “a wall of text,” maybe don’t build a wall of shallow logic and expect people not to knock it down. This ain’t bludgeoning — it’s surgical teardown of a weak argument hiding behind fake neutrality.
    Don’t confuse verbosity with rigor. I brought both. Momentoftrue (talk) 22:32, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Let’s be crystal clear: You don’t get to swing in with a “Weak keep”, cite a bundle of barely-there coverage, then duck behind a polite “I probably won’t respond” and expect your take to go unchecked. No actually, I can and I will, thanks. It's not actually up to you how other people WP:!vote and nobody has to run anything past you for approval. This will be closed in ~6 days by an uninvolved closser (who'll have to wade through this mess). I trust them to separate the wheat-discussion from the chaff-bludgeon. Cakelot1 ☞️ talk 22:45, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Let me return the favor with equal clarity:
    You can say “I can and I will” all you want — but when that “will” is propped up by flimsy sourcing and a disclaimer that you’re too checked out to defend it, don’t be shocked when someone does check it.
    This ain’t about who’s allowed to WP:!vote — it’s about whether that vote means anything when it leans on misunderstood policy, shallow sourcing, and a “don’t @ me” energy. If you drop a take into a public, policy-driven discussion, you invited scrutiny. And if your sources don’t hold up? Expect someone to say so. Loudly.
    “Nobody has to run anything past you for approval.”
    Cool. Nobody said they did.
    But if you step into an AfD and toss in weak rationale, don’t act brand new when someone holds it under a microscope. That’s not gatekeeping — that’s quality control, and it’s the backbone of this whole project.
    And about that closer?
    Yeah, I trust them too — to cut through the feel-good “keep” takes that crumple under GNG or BLP1E. To see the difference between good-faith diligence and what y’all are calling “bludgeoning” just because I’m not folding.
    So no — this ain’t about me needing your permission.
    It’s about you not getting a pass when your vote comes wrapped in weak policy and a warning label that says “won’t engage further.”
    Because guess what?
    Wikipedia isn’t a safehouse for bad arguments.
    It’s a platform that lives and dies by evidence, policy, and the will to enforce them — no matter how “messy” that gets.
    So go ahead.
    Drop the “weak keep.”
    Mute the thread.
    But don’t confuse silence with strength — I’ll still be here, dissecting every claim, line by line, while the real consensus builds around the truth — not convenience. Momentoftrue (talk) 22:47, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
For what it's worth, I do not like these sources as many of them are blatantly transphobic in their reporting (regardless of how one feels about Contino and her actions, which are not the focus of this discussion). However, they appear to all be credible sources according to Wikipedia guidelines, so I thought I would add them here. If someone else wants to add them into the article, please feel free to. If they do not appear reliable, then please disregard.
-- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 16:37, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I've added these to the article talk page, though the WP:IBTIMES and WP:DISTRACTIFY links were quickly removed, the rest seem reliable enough from a very cursory glance. I lack the interest in incorporating them into the article myself(nor do I have the stomach to read that transphobia, my god), but perhaps another editor will be able to make use of them. Taffer😊💬(she/they) 17:16, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Great, thank you for doing that! -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 04:30, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
WP:BLUDGEONing. Fortuna, imperatrix 12:35, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
The sources being offered in this AfD are not reliable. They’re barely sources at all. Every link cited—International Business Times, Distractify, National World, Florida’s Voice, P-Magazine—they’re not independent, in-depth journalistic outlets. They are shallow content farms, tabloids, or politically biased blogs, trafficking in ragebait and recycling the same surface-level controversy. There is no meaningful original reporting, no sustained coverage of a career, no exploration of significance, and no biographical depth. These are not WP:RS-compliant sources. They are digital mirrors reflecting the same viral moment. That’s it.
Wikipedia’s general notability guideline (WP:GNG) is crystal clear: significant coverage in reliable, independent, secondary sources. Not a few throwaway articles echoing Twitter drama. Not reactionary posts exploiting culture war tension. Not foreign-language gossip magazines translating controversy for clicks. Real notability is proven with depth, substance, and multiplicity. This has none of that. What’s being presented is a hollow loop of exposure—not evidence of lasting importance.
This article exists because of a single viral backlash tied to a one-time incident. That is textbook WP:BLP1E territory. Wikipedia does not exist to document every person who went viral once and caused outrage. That’s not biography. That’s spectacle. Encyclopedias do not serve outrage cycles. They record lasting relevance. There is no long-term significance here, no follow-up trajectory, no transformation of public conversation that warrants preservation in an encyclopedia. There’s no book, no movement, no platform beyond short-term TikTok fame. Once the algorithms move on, there’s nothing left.
And let’s be absolutely clear: throwing procedural notices like “this was tagged under WikiProject USA” or “Authors” or “A&E Biography” does not prove notability. That’s just process. It’s internal housekeeping. It doesn’t validate the topic. It doesn’t magically elevate a gossip piece into reliable coverage. Stop treating basic template tagging as if it establishes merit. It doesn’t.
What we are looking at is not a person with an encyclopedic footprint—it’s a page built on the back of virality, controversy, and digital rage. A house of cards held together by screenshots and bad headlines. There’s no framework of notability underneath it. There’s no reason for this article to remain. It doesn’t meet Wikipedia’s minimum threshold for existence.
And on top of all this, let’s not ignore what’s really happening. Most of the coverage is hostile, inflammatory, and borderline or overtly transphobic. Wikipedia’s policies on living people (WP:BLP) and neutrality demand exceptional care, not reckless documentation of online mobs. The subject is not notable. But even if she were, the weight and tone of this coverage would still make inclusion dangerous and unethical. Wikipedia is not a vessel for channeling outrage into permanent record. It must be responsible with how it treats real people’s lives. This article is not responsible. It is not ethical. It is not encyclopedic.
This is deletion beyond reasonable doubt. Every standard—GNG, BLP1E, RS, NOTNEWS, NPOV, TOOSOON—is being violated. This is not a close call. It is not a gray area. This page should be gone, fully, cleanly, and without delay. No redirect. No merge. Just delete. Momentoftrue (talk) 04:21, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Hi again, Momentoftrue. It's clear that you have misunderstood what the notices "WikiProject USA”, “Authors”, and “A&E Biography” are for. Especially as you directed this, again, at me, when I have made no argument for keeping this article. I don't care if it gets deleted, but I do care about clear discussion and consensus being reached. These discussion inclusions are not to establish notability nor validity. They are notices showing that this deletion conversation has been added to their topics pages because those topics are relevant to the deletion subject. It's simply to encourage more people to engage in the conversation (whether for or against deletion). Contino is American, hence this discussion being included in the List of United States of America-related deletion discussions. Contino is a video game writer, hence being included in the List of Authors-related deletion discussions. Continio is a content creator/social media personality, hence the notfication to WikiProject Biography A&E Taskforce. None of this is done as a way to try and "prove notability" nor is it done as a way to "validate the topic". As you can see, earlier on this discussion was also included in internet-related deletion discussions and biography-related deletion discussions, as both are also applicable. Hope this helps clear up any confusion you have on how deletion discussions work. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 04:44, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
You keep repeating that these WikiProject tags are “just notifications” as if that somehow matters. The problem isn’t that anyone thinks they prove notability — the problem is they’re being dropped in bulk to pad this AfD with a false sense of legitimacy. It’s distraction, plain and simple. Tagging a bunch of projects does nothing to change the fact that this article has zero significant coverage in reliable, independent secondary sources per WP:GNG.
Contino being American, a writer, or an influencer means absolutely nothing without notable coverage to back it up. This is a textbook case of WP:BLP1E: a one-time controversy endlessly recycled through tabloid sources, not lasting significance. No deep reporting. No career overview. No impact documented by reliable outlets. That’s the actual issue here — not how AfD banners are used.
So instead of doubling down on procedural noise, let’s keep the focus on what matters: this article doesn’t meet the notability bar and needs to be deleted.
Momentoftrue (talk) 05:07, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
It's clear you don't understand what inclusion in deletion discussions is for. Please re-read what I stated above. I am not arguing notability, nor have I, nor will I. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 05:09, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Then why bring it up at all? If you’re not arguing for notability, stop padding the thread with procedural noise. This isn’t about understanding what inclusion in deletion discussions technically means — it’s about why you’re using it in a way that distracts from the real question: Does this subject meet WP:GNG?
Spoiler: It doesn’t. No significant, independent, in-depth coverage. Just a viral moment regurgitated by tabloids and low-tier blogs. WikiProject notices don’t change that. They don’t strengthen the article. They don’t rebut deletion. So if you’re not using them to argue for keeping, then they’re irrelevant to this discussion. Full stop
Momentoftrue (talk) 05:15, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I already stated above why deletion discussions are included in sorting lists. You didn't seem to have an issue earlier when User:Wcquidditch added this discussion into the sorting lists for Women, Journalism, Video games, Sexuality and gender, California, and Minnesota.. so why are you having this reaction now with me? -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 05:20, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
You’re right that sorting lists are standard practice. But let’s be very clear: inclusion in these lists is meaningless when it comes to establishing notability. It doesn’t matter if this was added to Women, Journalism, Video games, or the Galactic Senate — that has zero bearing on whether the subject meets WP:GNG. These are organizational tools for participation, not arguments for inclusion. No one’s “having a reaction” to you — the reaction is to a pattern of editors propping up a fundamentally hollow article with procedural fluff.
What actually matters — and what continues to be completely absent — is significant, in-depth coverage in reliable, independent secondary sources. Not gossip sites. Not recycled outrage. Not tabloid blurbs about one viral controversy. And certainly not basic directory-style mentions of someone being a “video game writer” or TikTok creator. There is no serious journalistic engagement with this person’s career, impact, or body of work. Just a one-time firestorm that faded as fast as it came — textbook WP:BLP1E.
This page is not encyclopedic. It is event amplification, plain and simple. No amount of name-dropping project tags will change that. So let’s cut through the procedural noise and get back to the core of AfD: Does this article satisfy the standards of notability and verifiability? It does not. And until someone produces actual WP:SIGCOV from reliable sources, all the sorting lists in the world won’t fix that.
Momentoftrue (talk) 06:03, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@Willthacheerleader18, I hope this reads as well intentioned as its meant to be, but I'd encourage you to drop the stick as well. Momentoftrue's bludgeoning is obviously unacceptable, but the continued back and forth is fanning the flames. The closing admin will handle what's happening here appropriately, I recommend disengaging. Taffer😊💬(she/they) 06:57, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I tried that but they continue to spam regardless. I will no longer participate in this discussion. I hope someone deals with this. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 07:32, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
comment (strongly felt) I'm not surprised, Willthacheerleader18. This is a ridiculous AfD and I'm ashamed to be involved. Arguments are not measured by how many kilobytes you use to repeat the same argument over and over again. I've not read all of it. I would be surprised if anyone has. It seems that the thrust is that editors should not be repeatedly creating needless content based on a single idea or an aim for good work...... and to convince anyone who cares to read it ... someone is repeatedly creating needless content based on a single idea!! Talking of "textbook WP:BLP1E territory" ... this is ONE article and ONE AfD. If an article was written in this way then it would be instantly deleted. My advice is to stop typing... no one is listening... and you undermining your argument by restating it over and over again. I could repeat this message below in umpteen different ways, but it would undermine this message. Pleased read and heed this short message. Victuallers (talk) 08:14, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@Victuallers: Thank you. -- Willthacheerleader18 (talk) 16:36, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for hatting parts of this discussion, Fortuna imperatrix mundi. I read a lot of it but it was extremely repetitive, both the phrasing ("clear" ["Let’s clear something up", "let's be clear"] was used 28 times) and the policy arguments. Textbook bludgeoning. Liz Read! Talk! 23:12, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks to you both. Bearian (talk) 15:08, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Relisting comment: Relisting as right now, it looks like a probable No consensus closure.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Liz Read! Talk! 23:08, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete Other than the current sources being used for the article, this subject has mostly been covered by dubious/unreputable sources. If this subject can only exist in the context of one or two incidents and any other editions are bound to be unhelpful, it may be worth deleting the article. I doubt Lilly Contino will ever be notable outside of niche internet discussions.
Rylee Amelia (talk) 00:11, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Weak delete - Contino seems likely to end up in the news again in the future for other events, but the reporting on her does seem overall dubious. I'm not sure if it's necessarily useful to keep an article on a subject whose notability seems to hinge on "rage baiting" since reporting on that is likely to remain questionably notable/reliable at best, but I'd love to be proven wrong on those fronts. Taffer😊💬(she/they) 02:51, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete per WP:BLP1E. While there is enough coverage, it does not come from quality sources. ArvindPalaskar (talk) 04:58, 25 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete – No reliable sources with in-depth coverage. Has relevance as an anti-trans activist as many others in the internet, but is not scope for encyclopedic content. Svartner (talk) 17:11, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Petre Luscalov (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Fails WP:AUTHOR. Lacks SIGCOV in independent sources; I searched Google News and ProQuest. However, he contributed a screenplay to the 1981 film "Fiul munților", which is potentially notable. —LastJabberwocky (Rrarr) 11:55, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, plicit 14:09, 25 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Emmett James (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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I have carried out WP:BEFORE on this BLP about an actor, and moved two external links to references in the article. These are only mentions of his name in credits, however, and I have not found significant coverage to add. He does not meet WP:NACTOR or WP:NARTIST. He has been a producer on films which have won awards, and has won a stage award, the ADA Award, but these don't appear to be notable awards, and I can't find significant coverage of him in the context of them. The refs before I added two were to IMDb, Wikipedia, and two film festivals, which does not meet WP:THREE. Article has been tagged with notability concerns since 2017. I don't think he meets WP:GNG or WP:ANYBIO. Tacyarg (talk) 22:48, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

  • Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Actors and filmmakers, Artists, Film, Theatre, and United Kingdom. Tacyarg (talk) 22:48, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Authors and England. WCQuidditch 01:28, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment: I'm not finding anything - most of his roles are smaller and less likely to gain mention in sourcing. I was trying to find coverage for his theatrical performances, but I'm not finding much there either. With the awards, it looks like those were "best film" type awards for movies he produced. However the issue with awards as producer is that it's harder to establish their role in the production. Some producers are extremely involved and important to the final product, whereas others aren't really "hands on" with the production outside of funding and initial work. Of course then we have to look at whether or not the awards are notable enough to meet NCREATIVE/NACTOR either partially (count towards but not enough on its own to keep) or fully (enough on its own). I've always thought a good rule of thumb is to see if the awards website lists the producer. If so, then it could be usable (assuming the award is notable), if not it likely isn't.
In any case, with the awards, two of them are known vanity awards (Accolade Competition, Impact Docs Award). Nashville Film Festival and the Beverly Hill Film Festival look like wins from them would probably be usable. Tacoma Film Festival is smaller, but probably OK. The other wins are questionable as far as notability goes and the others are nominations so it's irrelevant whether they are notable or not - none of them are at the level where a nomination would be considered noteworthy. That's limited to things like the Oscars.
I guess the question here is whether or not his producing role was large enough for him to inherit notability from the movies in a similar way that one would as an actor or director. Executive producer credits would probably count, but the generic producer credit is where there's pause. ReaderofthePack(formerly Tokyogirl79) (。◕‿◕。) 12:46, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
I found a couple of theater reviews. Only three though, which is technically enough I guess to pass NACTOR. I think between that and the kind of nebulous producer notability, that might be enough to keep. I'm not 100% so I am not making an argument for or against at the moment. ReaderofthePack(formerly Tokyogirl79) (。◕‿◕。) 13:02, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Liz Read! Talk! 23:27, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
What info would you like from me? Emmett James film Life and Larry Brown was short listed for an Academy Award. He has produced a ton of films that are on Netflix, amazon and Hulu where he is the main producer. He is one of the heads of the producers guild of America for documentaries. He does conventions around the world for his acting credits including TITANIC and has appeared as a guest speak at comic con in San Diego for Star Wars. Im a little confused to why this is even a discussion to be honest Savinghollywood (talk) 00:27, 25 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
With the nomination, that would really only help if he was on the final ballot. Normally being nominated (but not winning) would not help count towards notability at all, however the Academy Award is kind of the pinnacle of things one can be nominated for with films in the US. At the same time, being shortlisted doesn't mean that someone ended up on the final ballot. Even then it kind of goes back to the issue of establishing notability for producers. Honestly, most producers tend to end up failing NCREATIVE, regardless of how successful they are. It's just really difficult to argue for notability for them.
What would really be useful here is coverage of James or coverage of the work that gives some detail on him. For his acting roles (including stage), reviews of the work that specifically mention him would be as good as gold. With the notable films and shows, those roles are only as notable as the mention he receives in reviews and independent, reliable, secondary coverage of the episode or film. Many of his roles were background or minor, which typically don't get much coverage. He does seem to have been in a few episodes of some anime, but I'll be honest in that establishing notability for VAs is insanely difficult. I remember trying to argue notability for someone who voiced multiple main characters in several large, notable series. It was insanely difficult, because people usually don't highlight specific VAs - even the anime outlets are bad at that. ReaderofthePack(formerly Tokyogirl79) (。◕‿◕。) 00:00, 27 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Mary Lyn Ray (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Subject requests deletion per WP:BLPREQUESTDELETE in ticket:2025061110007843 VRT ticket. Identity has been verified. Sources are also too less for WP:NAUTHOR in any case. I think we can consider the subject's request for deletion, since they have not been highly covered in reliable independent sources. ~/Bunnypranav:<ping> 11:18, 14 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Star Mississippi 02:14, 22 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Strong Keep - I added that The Library of Congress lists 32 works by Mary Lyn Ray, and left a link to that. There should be no doubt that this is a prolific individual. Comments listed by others above establishes notability. — Maile (talk) 13:09, 22 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment: I have struck some of my previous comments, thanks to everyone for the participation. ~/Bunnypranav:<ping> 14:43, 22 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep unless it's clear subject has made a formal request to remove page. Subject clearly meets NAUTHOR#1 given all the reviews of her books, many of which are cited here. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Nnev66 (talkcontribs)
    @Nnev66: The subject has made a formal request to delete, in VRT ticket ticket:2025061110007843 to the email info-en@wikimedia.org, no comments on the sources by me as of now. ~/Bunnypranav:<ping> 14:44, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    My personal feeling is that even if a subject technically meets Wikipedia's notability guidelines, if the page is "low importance" their wishes should be honored regarding deleting their pages. Nonetheless, subject does meet NAUTHOR. Wish I could read the ticket but there appears to be a different authentication mechanism to login to see it. Nnev66 (talk) 15:03, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Another question is, if the person wants to keep a low profile, why maintain a personal homepage, giving autobiographical details and more? Geschichte (talk) 16:06, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment - This appears to be a borderline GNG keep with the debate heading for Keep over subject objections. Which is fine, as far as that goes, although this does seem close enough to the GNG line that a courtesy deletion is not too much to ask. I would like to address the subject, however, and offer my services — if there is wrong information that needs to be corrected or useful information which is omitted, I would be happy to work on the piece to make it as complete and correct and acceptable as possible. If this is of interest to you, you may either leave a message for me on my Wikipedia user page by clicking the (talk) link after my signature here or contact me directly at MutantPop@aol.com if you wish to discuss the matter away from prying eyes. best regards, —tim ////// Carrite (talk) 16:59, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Paul Rogat Loeb (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Article only contains 1 source and makes lots of uncited claims. Not finding coverage to meet WP:AUTHOR or WP:BIO. LibStar (talk) 05:25, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

  • Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Authors and United States of America. LibStar (talk) 05:25, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Politics, California, and Washington. WCQuidditch 05:40, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    As I indicated to the wikipedia editor who originally asked some questions on the site, it was created by a fan. I then added some updates, for instance It said I was writing regularly for Huffington Post. They published maybe 100 articles, but I'm not currently writing so I changed it to past tense. Part of the challenges is that I left writing for 12 years to run two nonprofits I founded where I wasn't able to write political pieces without making them politically vulnerable. So there are a ton of articles about me if you search "Paul Rogat Loeb" in Google or another search engine. But not all of them have the updated information because most are before 2012. So I could go through various statements in the wikisource and add links, but it would be time consuming. And there aren't public numbers on say how many copies I've sold, though there are probably articles among those for instance covering my lectures, that mention how many were sold at that time the articles were written.
    So that's why I linked to the website.
    Can you suggest how best to proceed without spending endless hours, like searching every publication and creating a separate link? I really value Wikipedia and would like to have that listing remain.
    Thanks Paul Rogat Loeb PaulLoeb (talk) 01:22, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I did some edits and added a dozen sources and can add more later. As mentioned I took a break from public writing to run two nonprofits where I couldn't write, so most of the articles on my are older. But if you do a search a ton will come up and I can add a few more PaulLoeb (talk) 22:47, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete of the 13 sources in the article, source 4 and 5 are listings of the book for sale thus not WP:RS, source 6 is a pr news source of the award listing thus not SIGCOV, sources 3, 7 and 9 are interviews thus not independent, source 8 is a short paragraph in huffpost about him as a contibutor thus not independent, sources 10 and 11 arethe subject giving tedtalks thus not independent RS, source 12 is a paragraph in an about us page for one of the non profits the subject has founded thus not independent RS and source 13 doesn't mention them at all. Source 1 I haven't got access to, but of the remaining source NONE are sigcov in independent RS. Lavalizard101 (talk) 15:13, 15 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I'm sorry. I'm not a wikipedia expert. I'm a journalist who's written for almost every newspaper in the US. As mentioned, a fan created the listing years ago. I then added some updates. I'm trying to link to credible sources, but after spending three hours trying to come up with the most salient links to satisfy your standards, I'm totally confused. I've done two Tedx talks, so I linked directly to the talks, which were posted by Tedx, not by me. How else am I supposed to verify that? I added links to to radio interviews on major stations and Networks like NPR. They're posted by the stations and networks, not by me.
    I searched Nautilus for their year by year postings of awards (their current site awards listings only go back two years), and found it on their PR wire that they released that year. It's an official announcement by an official group of their award, so seems legitimate. I spent 12 years running nonprofits that I founded, so I linked to their archived webpages that showed me as the founder. How else should I show that?
    AARP Bulletin has the the largest circulation of any magazine in the US, so I linked to an interview they did with me (they also published a book expert I could link to). Studs Terkel was one the most famous interviewers for decades so I linked to one of the four interviews I did with him on various books. At the time I wrote for Huffington Post it was one of the top 50 websites in the world, so I linked to the articles I wrote for them. I linked to my publishers which are major publishers.
    I spent three hours trying to come up with the most credible links and really don't understand what I'm supposed to do to fix this besides becoming a Wikipedia expert. Is a newspaper feature on me that gives background plus interviews me better than one that just interviews me? Should I local add stories about my visiting campuses or lecturing? I'm not trying to be difficult here, but I feel like I tried in good faith to meet the requests for citations with highly credible sources and somehow every one of them is being dismissed.
    I'm happy to try and fix this, but this response is very frustrating. PaulLoeb (talk) 16:03, 15 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Interviews are not considered independent for determining WP:Notability and tedtalks by you even posted on tedtalks youtube account are still not independent as they are you giving talks. OUr articles must summarise significant coverage (not just passing mentions) about the subject (in this case articles about you) in published, reliable, secondary sources that are independent of the subject. Interviews/talks by you and organisational listings for organisations you have worked for/with are primary sources thus do not contribute to WP:Notability. Lavalizard101 (talk) 16:19, 15 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    I really don't understand discarding coverage by some of the largest media outlets in America, including the single largest-circulation magazine (AARP Bulletin) , major newspapers, and major broadcast outlets like C-SPAN and NPR . They covered the book through print or broadcast interviews because that's how they cover political nonfiction. Unless a publication does a profile where they don't interview me, I don't understand what other kinds of coverage would even exist that I could link to. I've not added links to reviews, of which there are many, because that would be self-promotion, although if you go to my www.paulloeb.org website you'll see the breadth of coverage.
    In terms of "Significant" coverage, I just Googled "Paul Rogat Loeb." and it came up with 170 cases of coverage. Some are just bookstore listings, but that doesn't include all the coverage where I didn't use my middle name Rogat and am referenced just as Paul Loeb. It also doesn't include the majority of my coverage in the 1980s and 1990s, which didn't get digitalized in ways that pop up on searches. For instance in your bio, @WCQuidditch mentions the John Seigenthaler Wikipedia hoax. Seigenthaler actually interviewed me for his nationally syndicated PBS show three times and was a wonderful man, but it doesn't come up in the searches, because they didn't digitally archive them.
    You can do the same search and see the results,
    The search did turn up an Encyclopedia.com entry, although most of it is at least 25 years out of date.
    https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/educational-magazines/loeb-paul-rogat-1952
    If there's something useful I can do to easily correct the profile (I didn't create the initial version, just updated and made a couple corrections, leaving the original text unless it was wrong, I'm happy to do it, but I'd need to get clear directions. PaulLoeb (talk) 17:04, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Paul, you made reference to a "newspaper feature on me that gives background..." If you have links for articles of that sort, that would be the sort of coverage that could be helpful. I was hoping you might have such articles linked on your website, but didn't find any. Anomalous+0 (talk) 12:21, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Thanks much for the constructive suggestion.
    Part of the challenge is that i stopped writing to run two election related nonprofits that I founded from 2012 to 2022 where I had to be completely politically neutral so stopped writing and doing interviews. So most interviews and profiles are older and seem not to be digitized. I looked through some paper clips in my files and then searched for the interviews from Atlanta Journal Constitution, San Francisco Chronicle, Dallas Morning News and Philadelphia Inquirer. But just couldn't find any links, although as mentioned, i found the ones from the AARP interview, C-Span, and NPR, plus the TedX talks.
    There's is a bio from WGBH which is a major PBS station
    https://www.wgbh.org/people/paul-loeb?utm_source=chatgpt.com
    There are some old reviews, like this from the New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/1986/10/19/books/village-activists.html
    Or old articles like this from Los Angeles Times
    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2000-jan-14-me-54036-story.html
    I do have links to one I wrote last week that got syndicated and picked up by Miami Herald, Minnesota Star Tribune and nearly 30 other papers, and could add some of these, but not sure that fits because they'd be considered primary sources.
    https://www.pressreader.com/similar/281706915634354
    https://www.startribune.com/opinion
    Really appreciate your trying to solve this but it does seem that the longer profiles just weren't digitized. PaulLoeb (talk) 19:08, 17 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep - I was astonished to discover that this article had been nominated for Deletion - as opposed to being in need of cleanup & better sourcing - on the grounds that Paul Rogat Loeb supposedly doesn't meet WP:NOTABILITY.

I have known about Paul Loeb and his work for a many years, and simply put, there is no question whatsoever as to his very real notability in the realm of civic engagement and social activism. Along with a great many other listeners, I heard him on public radio stations talking about the issues addressed in his books many times back in the 1980s & 90s. (And yes, I own one of his books.)

But you don't have to take my word for it. Paul and his work are very well known and highly regarded by any number of luminaries, such as Bill Moyers, Jonathan Kozol, Kurt Vonnegut, and Susan Sontag - who said that he was "a national treasure." Moreover, he was interviewed no less than FOUR times over the years by the reknowned oral historian Studs Terkel for his long-form radio program. And it's no accident that the AARP magazine turned to Mr. Loeb for an article titled "The Change Agent - Interview With Paul Rogat Loeb".

Furthermore, it's not just liberal-minded folks who endorse his efforts that regard him as a major figure in that realm. The conservative National Association of Scholars has also taken note of his endeavors, in a 2018 article titled "Paul Loeb's Campus Takeover".

In short, it seems to me that, even without the kind of profiles we would like to be able to link to, Paul Loeb clearly meets the standard for Notability as outlined right up front at WP:AUTHOR: "1. The person is regarded as an important figure or is widely cited by peers..." Anomalous+0 (talk) 04:30, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

I should add that the examples I've cited are only the tip of the iceberg, as it were. They serve to illustrate the wide esteem for Paul Loeb and his work, which is manifested in the hundreds of times he has been invited to speak and give presentations at colleges around the country, as well as the countless radio interviews he has given over the years. The underlying basis for all of that, of course, is his body of written work, from his five books to the hundreds of articles he has written for a wide range of publications.
I also want to say that I am well aware that the article as it stands is clearly in need of cleanup in various respects, in order to bring it into greater alignment with Wikipedia expectations for biographies. (And I am more than willing to work on that myself.) That, however, is an entirely separate issue from the question of notability. Anomalous+0 (talk) 11:03, 18 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Star Mississippi 19:28, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • As a follow-on to what I wrote above, here's a little more info to take into consideration. I looked for Paul Loeb's books on Google Scholar and discovered that there were stats for how many times each book has been cited:

Hope in hard times: America's peace movement and the Reagan era
PR Loeb - 1987 - academia.edu - Cited by 36

Generation at the crossroads: Apathy and action on the American campus
PR Loeb - 1994 - books.google.com - Cited by 272

Soul of a citizen: Living with conviction in a cynical time
PR Loeb - 1999 - books.google.com - Cited by 255

Soul of a citizen: Living with conviction in challenging times
PR Loeb - 2010 - books.google.com - Cited by 61

The impossible will take a little while: A citizen's guide to hope in a time of fear
PR Loeb - 2014 - Hachette UK - Cited by 64

The impossible will take a little while: Perseverance and hope in troubled times
P Loeb - 2014 - Basic Books - Cited by 12
Anomalous+0 (talk) 21:27, 20 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

  • Keep, as article is well sourced, and for the stats of the books that he published shown above. Davidgoodheart (talk) 01:51, 21 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep - Article have been improved since nomination. A couple of good third party sources. WP:GNG applies.BabbaQ (talk) 08:20, 22 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Weak delete First off, Loeb as a person does not pass WP:BIO, as he himself has not received significant coverage in reliable, independent secondary sources, as most publications about him are basic speaker/event/author bios. There are pieces at aarp.org and binghamton.edu, but even combined these are insufficient. The subject gets closer to WP:AUTHOR, but, from what I can find, insufficient reputable sources have extensively reviewed or discussed his work. His works have been discussed at npr.org, and wfmt.com, and have also been cited, but it is too sporadic to establish that his collective body of work is significant or well-known. It is close, but not quite enough. I also ran "Paul Rogat Loeb", "Paul R. Loeb" and "Paul Loeb" through the GRel Source Engine, Reliable Source Engine, and Wikipedia Reference Search (see WP:RSSE), with and without "allintitle:", and Loeb certainly created a lot of opinion pieces (including op-eds), did a lot of public speaking and gave a lot of interviews (including TV appearances), but this doesn't establish WP:AUTHOR. The reason is that this notability guideline is about the impact of the writing, not the subject's media presence and visibility as a pundit. There is limited notable reception of his written works. Also, while he has received Nautilus awards, these do not carry the same mainstream recognition as, say, the Pulitzer or National Book Award. One of the reasons I choose "Weak delete" over "Delete" is a short bio at abc.net.au that states Loeb's "writing has been cited in congressional debates and covered by the Associated Press, United Press International, and in publications in the U.S. and around the globe". The article being well-sourced, in and of itself, does not establish notability. If three separate references (e.g. The New York Times, BBC, Reuters) state that Loeb is a human being, and we include "he is a human," then being human - with great sources - (still) does not make the subject worthy of notice. --62.166.252.159 (talk) 09:07, 24 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Weak keep With the two The Washington Post publications that were recently added, I'm changing my position. It should now pass WP:GNG. --62.166.252.159 (talk) 14:53, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
the nomination was for delete. LibStar (talk) 01:32, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Jayshree Misra Tripathi (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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This article does not meet the criteria outlined in WP:GNG or WP:AUTHOR the specific notability guidelines and the sources cited in this article are not considered as WP:SIG. 𝒮-𝒜𝓊𝓇𝒶 18:44, 11 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Toadspike [Talk] 04:26, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment:

Nominator is currently blocked as a sockpuppet. Zuck28 (talk) 10:32, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Owen× 15:17, 26 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Nagamani Srinath (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Fails WP:NMUSICIAN and WP:GNG. Winning an award does not grant inherent notability. Sources are mainly WP:NEWSORGINDIA. CNMall41 (talk) 18:29, 11 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

*Delete - per nom. SachinSwami (talk) 18:50, 11 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for the Wikidata merge. I understand your contention but do not believe notability is inherent for simply winning an award. --CNMall41 (talk) 15:48, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@CNMall41 OK, looking at WP:MUSICBIO, criteria 7 and 8 appear to be met, unless you consider that 8 only applies to western popular music. PamD 19:51, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
No, I think something on the level the award is being claimed to be would fall under that criteria so Western/India would have no bearing. What I am saying is that even with an award, we still need significant coverage. Just winning an award does not guarantee notability. It even specifically says "may" be notable under that criteria. The sources we have are pour such as this (presented in the comment below) which is clearly unreliable as WP:NEWSORGINDIA. --CNMall41 (talk) 20:14, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment- In addition to the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, Nagamani Srinath was also honored with the Rajyotsava Award in 1998, the second-highest civilian honor conferred by the Karnataka Government[12]. Furthermore, according to an article published in The New Indian Express on June 22, 2015, she was awarded the Sangita Kala Acharya Award by the Madras Music Academy, Chennai, for her outstanding contributions to the field of Carnatic music[13].-SachinSwami (talk) 16:35, 12 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    According to this source she has won some other notable awards such as Karnataka Kalashree. Also she has significant coverage in The Hindu and Deccan Herald.Afstromen (talk) 05:42, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
    Hello Afstromen, all the sources I included don’t fully support the claim; they are all weak. Mentioning an award alone isn’t enough; you need sources that clearly reference Nagamani Srinath’s work, like a review. For example, in Akaal: The Unconquered, when I checked, all the sources you added were weak. Later, I searched and added 5 reviews in the Reception section, which are sufficient to fully support the film and pass WP:GNG. Though the rules for films and individuals differ, reviews clearly referencing the work are sufficient for support. (I have no intention of misleading editors, so I apologize.) SachinSwami (talk) 08:39, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@Afstromen: you duplicated one of the sources which could indicate you did not look closely enough at them to see they are mainly routine announcements. --CNMall41 (talk) 15:54, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
@CNMall41 Are you talking about The Hindu article or both?Afstromen (talk) 17:25, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
You listed the DH twice in your comment. Both the DH and The Hindu are her giving the information by the way. Interviews and all content provided by her so not independent. --CNMall41 (talk) 17:34, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Oh No, I listed the source initially to point the awards. It was not my intention to list it twice or to give the impression that the sources were different. Afstromen (talk) 17:50, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, I see that now. Thanks for the explanation. I still maintain that neither of those are independent. I would also think if she won the "highest award" as claimed, there would be more than just NEWSORGINDIA and a few interview type references. --CNMall41 (talk) 18:56, 13 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Toadspike [Talk] 04:27, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Can you address the rebuttal as well? There is no such thing as inherent notability. The "may" is there because it indicates the subject is likely notable, not that they "are" notable. Otherwise, why include may when it can be replaced with something more definite. Note WP:BASIC ("presumed notable" but not "are notable"), which also covers "one event" which may apply as well. --CNMall41 (talk) 16:45, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
CNMall41, For a decades long career that's been recognized with several notable awards is not a case of WP:BLP1E in my opinion–the award makes it easier to obtain some news coverage but is not the only basis of notability here. For niche-musicians, traditional coverage might be hard to come by (as is the case here, though I found one tertiary source above). Nevertheless, my two cents is that the subject is "worthy of notice" or "note" through a verifiable statements capturing several subject-specific understanding (of the community) of notability, and should be kept with {{Sources exist}} if existing are insufficient for a BLP. The SNGs allow us to contextualize the requirements of WP:BASIC and avoid a renewed reinterpretation with every article. The use of 'may' in that language broadly captures that these policies are consensus driven and evolve, and thus it cannot (possibly ever) prescribe a definitive criteria of notability. — WeWake (talk) 17:47, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Worthy of notice would have more than just mentions or unreliable sourcing. I would agree a sources exist tag could be used, but that is assuming sources exist. They do not. All we have is what has been presented which falls short. --CNMall41 (talk) 21:22, 23 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
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Shantanu Naidu (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View AfD | edits since nomination)
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Fails to establish notability independent of his association with Ratan Tata, per WP:GNG, WP:AUTHOR, WP:BIO, and WP:INHERITED.

His startups do not meet WP:NCORP due to modest scale and event-specific reporting, and the book lacks significant critical reviews or awards to satisfy WP:AUTHOR. Zuck28 (talk) 17:16, 11 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]

@Zuck28, Before taking any abrupt or random action, always ensure proper research is done and all sources are thoroughly verified. Acting without accurate information can lead to serious consequences and misunderstandings. 𝒮-𝒜𝓊𝓇𝒶 18:36, 11 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, asilvering (talk) 07:14, 19 June 2025 (UTC)[reply]
Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
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Authors proposed deletions

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