3658:. It seems few contributors here recognise the (large) distinctions between the different types of article being discussed - hence comments like "the networks report this anyway" or "they're transient and will quickly get out of date", which are pretty good reasons not to list current schedules but are bizarre if applied to the historic block schedules. On the other hand "it's all fancruft" or "why reproduce what's in reliable sources updated by professional editors anyway, let's just link to them" are poor arguments all round - in the latter case, why would we bother writing Knowledge at all? My take on this: nobody would claim this week's TV guide is a form of encyclopedia, and I don't think it belongs in this particular encyclopedia either. Nor does last week's TV guide (or one from three months, or twelve years ago) become encyclopedic by virtue of age. However, Firsfron has given a very clear explanation of why the historic block schedules pass the general notability requirements - multiple reliable sources have been published which document and discuss them. The only remaining issue for me is whether the
3668:
especially since they contain information systematically-arranged, context-rich and clearly valuable to readers researching old TV series. I was initially going to suggest transwiki to
Wikisource for these articles on the grounds that few of them seem to contain editorial content (just a referenced, fixed table that has no need to be updated) but Firsfron has indicated that there is non-tabular information that could be added too (viz the schedule analysis contained in his specialized encyclopedias). That would clearly not be suitable for Wikisource, and moreover would make the articles more closely resemble other Knowledge articles with substantial textual content. So we should view the articles that contain only tables of information of historic schedules as stubs and when considering whether they should be deleted, it's best to imagine what the articles should look like post-expansion - unlike the modern TV guide schedules that change week-by-week, I think it is clear that the historic block schedules would be kept.
3267:. I feel that Gavin is so caught up in Knowledge policies and guidelines ("There can be no exceptions to these rules") that he's missing the forest for the trees. While I know he's a good-faith editor, he doesn't seem to understand the premise that if something has already been included in other encyclopedias, calling it "unencyclopedic" and "not suitable for inclusion in Knowledge" is silly, and only makes Knowledge look less encyclopedic. Sadly, once Gavin has made up his mind about something being unsuitable for inclusion, it won't be changed: I know this is true based on the Theba, Arizona incident: even after the article went from one in-line citation to eight, he was still arguing for deletion. Above, Gavin is requesting that more "notability" be provided for the schedules (presumably citing more stuff). But I won't waste my time, knowing already from the Theba incident that my work won't make any difference.
2527:, for example. Local stations and minor (under ~100 affiliates) television networks probably don't warrant schedules: because of how the TV markets are set up in the U.S., networks with fewer than 100 affiliates in the U.S. can't or don't pull in Nielsen numbers higher than 1% of the viewing audience, and generally aren't the subject of extensive coverage in reliable sources. Sources exist, though, for ABC, NBC, CBS, DuMont, NTA, Fox, UPN, the WB, the CW, MNTV, PAX/i/ION, and a few others. Local station/cable channels don't average very many viewers. The gap is closing between broadcast and cable, but not that much that cable channels can attract giant audiences that would greatly affect the TV industry: NBC doesn't counter-program based on what Syfy is airing.
3744:(Boddy, pages 225-228), and the subsequent scramble by the networks to avoid similar criticism the following year. Syndicated programmers' struggles against the Big Three's schedules is documented in many sources, but especially in Boddy's book (page 180, for example, where the three networks' use of scheduled "option time" helped kill any chance of a syndicated network seriously challenging the Big Three, and led to the decline of non-network programming to the point where the number of syndicated programs in 1956 (29) had declined to just 1 in 1964. I could go on, but I don't deal with much TV history past 1962. Now, I'm sure the
269::We are not a crystal ball because we can only comment on information that has already been commented on. As an encyclopedia, we focus on the past, not the present (]) or the future (]). That doesn't mean we can't comment on current events (taken in the broad sense, such as the War in Iraq) or future events, but the information we write must already be "out there", so to speak. Generally speaking, it is much harder to write about topics which are rapidly changing or are up in the air, and I don't think it is our place to do so until there is a degree of reliable certainty about the topic. ''']]]''' 19:24, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
2931:. All primetime network series between 1946 and 1980 were sourced to Castleman and Podrazik (1982), Brooks and Marsh (1985), and McNeil (1996). Brooks and Marsh have a 62-page section covering network schedules. McNeil's is only 50 pages. In Castleman and Podrazik's book each chapter begins with a network schedule, followed by pages of text discussing said schedule (and in the early years, ABC's and DuMont's problems with their schedules), what hits resulted from each schedule, and what programs were doomed because of being scheduled against tougher competition (the obvious examples are the programs scheduled against
3787:(and can thus be pretty careless about scheduling; we've all seen the all-day marathons of reruns that many cable channels air, even in Prime Time; broadcast networks never do this) and cable channels don't rely entirely on the ratings/advertising cycles to support their operations. Cable channels generally attract very small audiences, and the major broadcast networks historically didn't counter-program based on what cable was airing, (and in the 1980s-'90s many cable channels were mostly airing old network programs anyway) making (eg.) "what did CBS air against Lifetime?" a senseless question.
3082:(and based on RFC earlier this year, will likely remain one for a long time) meaning there are common sense exceptions to it. Now, presuming Firsfron is accurate in his description of the books, then there is notability here, but that's not the point. Not every single page on WP needs to pass WP:N - WP:NOT, yes, WP:V, WP:NOR, WP:NPOV yes, but WP:N is a guideline for a very good reason, as everything that we are by the five pillars, including works like almanacs, may mean that we include significant data that is completely appropriate per all other content policies but may fail WP:N. --
3993:. For me the test would be, "if the Knowledge version of the schedule were not updated for 6 months, would it be of any worth?" A schedule for a small station, or one that changed rapidly, would fail that test. But a schedule that was described in a slightly more generic way (eg, 4am: "Varies. Teletubbies, British sitcom repeats."), for a massive station might still be useful. I agree that providing another place to look up what's on TV tonight fails to be encyclopaedic. Being able to compare what two networks were running at 7pm on tuesday nights in 2007 is useful and encyclopaedic.
2848:. The people arguing for the deletion of these schedules clearly aren't checking out the references; such lack of basic scholarship continues to be a problem on Knowledge, where someone who doesn't know anything about the subject can make the decision that something is "not notable" or "not encyclopedic" even if the subject is noted in multiple references already listed in the article, and the content already appears in encyclopedias. Editors who fail to note references should re-evaluate their reasons for doing so.
2095:
in terms of how we should approach them, with NOT presently advicing that the former are not appropriate while we're still ok with the latter -- though as some see it, even those should not belong despite NOT's current long-standing wording supporting it. That is, if there is to be discussions on the merits of the historical, non-station specific schedules, that needs more detailed discussion - but we've long-standing advice that current schedules on a station's page should not be included. --
1466:(which you used as an example earlier) and extracting the 2008 season to create a separate article? Personally, I don't believe such an article would be acceptable and would not survive AFD, even though it could be reliably sourced to respectable publications such as the New Zealand Listener and any number of daily newspapers. Adding a series of sections to the C4 article as "2007 schedule", "2008 schedule" and "2009 schedule" would be equally unacceptable, but not testable via AFD. What makes
2761:
classed as primary sources, in the same way a railway timetable is a primary source. This does not change even if the schedules/lineups are reproduced in secondary sources; the schedules on their own cannot take the place of commentary, analysis or criticism that provide context for the reader and evidence of notability to justify their own standalone articles. No matter how many times these schedules are reproduced, without encyclopedic content of this nature these articles fail
1120:
1132:
4099:
value in that information as a business resource, but it is an information resource to those that study past history of televsion (as evidenced by the books referenced above). I also think it's important that there is a layer of discrimination going on here as only the major network broadcasters are included, and the resolution is, at worst, at the fall/spring/summer schedules, which is a very broad stroke and appropriate for encyclopedic summation. --
3124:). So when I say that these barebone schedules are not encyclopedic, I mean that they do not provide any context for the reader, which is a symptom of their lack of notabilty. You can continue to argue that they are encyclopedic in the same way a railway timetable could be argued to be useful and verifable, but without evidence of notability, there is nothing to support your assertion. In their current form, they are clearly prohibited by
2485:. The block schedule of an entire network for an entire season is encyclopedic. Ratings of various shows are discussed in RS'es, people can check what was on years ago, and so forth. This kind of schedule includes empty spaces set aside for local programming, and open-ended time on weekends for sports and movies. However, it is not encyclopedic to update a detailed schedule every week when things are moved around for specials, etc.
1045:
689:
71:
4273:
kind of thing gets covered in reliable sources like my source or like TV Guide (and it does), then reliable sourcing and the question of whether or not the articles are "encyclopedic" should be resolved. If this independent coverage exists for many of the historic, nationwide schedules, then it's reasonable to assume it exists for all, and there should be no justification from this project page for deleting them. --
4895:). That doesn't mean we can't comment on current events (taken in the broad sense, such as the War in Iraq) or future events, but the information we write must already be "out there", so to speak. Generally speaking, it is much harder to write about topics which are rapidly changing or are up in the air, and I don't think it is our place to do so until there is a degree of reliable certainty about the topic.
313:
3174:, is not accepted as a basis for article inclusion in Knowledge. It is a matter of personal opinion to argue that these schedules are significant and important if you don't provide a shred of evidence to support your view point. Simply arguing that these schedules are "significant", "important", "informative", "worthy" or "valuable" does not carry any weight in Knowledge. You have to provide
1223:
as these networks clearly fall into the realm of "historically significant". Now, the problem here is that I can't tell if the networks in the examples given would qualify the same way as "historically significant" that that we'd consider CBS/ABC in the States, or something like BBC in the UK. It would definitely need to be a national station (eg. something like the US's
4095:
timeslot changes, but this is not OR towards a specific POV, and falls well within acceptable synthesis (particularly as the specifics of changes are outlined below the schedules, at least for US television). They are as "inappropriate" as the listing of the results of every game a professional sports team has played, which are also perfectly fine for an almanac.
3591:. Although it is difficult to follow the thread of this talk section, I would like to suggest that, among those editors who, like me, came here in response to the RfC (as opposed to some of those who are continuing an ongoing argument in this section), there is really a pretty strong trend towards consensus that the TV schedules should largely be removed. --
4929:
generally not acceptable, limited exemption applies to the user space of established
Wikipedians who have died. At a minimum it is expected that they were regular contributors, and that more than one tenured Wikipedian will have used the deceased user's page (or an appropriate sub-page) to add comments in the event, and after verification of, their death.
1800:, third bullet point: a "WikiProject cannot decide that for the articles within its scope, some policy does not apply, unless they can convince the broader community that doing so is right". A discussion based at a Wikiproject will be inherently biased. This talk page of the policy in question is a considerably more global forum. A pointer was placed at
2695:
the 1955 schedule on NBC, could be considered encyclopedic (I have a manual in my library discussing such lineups) but current schedules are not encyclopedic at all. We are not a directory and we shouldn't be the place to turn if a user wants expansive tables of information without any discussion about them or significance in published media.
1638:
warnings. If we all want to have an open, transparent discussion about deleting hundreds of editors thousands of edits, why didn't
Hammersoft bother to invite these editors to discuss this on this page? True consensus will never be reached if we exclude those editors who are the most negatively effected by the dictated forced changes.
1988:
a link to reliable sources for the schedules, since one would need to be provided anyway as a reference, and let users click on it, but not migrate the schedule to
Knowledge. Seriously, if I wanted to find out when something was airing, I would not trust Knowledge, but I would expect it to link to the channel's program guide.
2725:, "Knowledge is an encyclopedia incorporating elements of general and specialized encyclopedias, almanacs, and gazetteers." This is the sort of information that would be in a specialized encyclopedia, so we should keep it. It also serves a quite plausible navigational purpose, and so should be kept for that reason alone. —
2988:) against listings of barebone information? As state earlier, merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia: the schedules need to have been noted (i.e. commented upon, not just reproduced) to be suitable for inclusion in Knowledge. --
2018:. In this thread, I see 9 people supporting the removals, with only 2 opposing. There's three others with possibly equivocal opinions not included. This isn't a vote, but after 5 days (inclusive) it's pretty clear where we stand. He's done this 11 times. I am reverting, but would appreciate some support. --
4805:
Of course. We have thousands of articles on future ventures, albums, movies and TV shows. We have articles on future elections, future car concepts, future aircraft. No policy on wikipedia prevents these. I am, however, hesitant to engage in discussion someone who has assumed that everyone on the
4715:
Is this really a specialized encyclopedia? It says it is (from the
Introduction, page x): "This is an encyclopedia " It is called an "encyclopedia" or "encyclopedic" by others (from the blurb at the top of the front cover): "'This is the Guinness Book of World Records ... The Encyclopedia Britannica
4711:
is a one-volume, specialized encyclopedia with more than 3,000 articles in alphabetical order on individual evening, national-network TV programs, and, in the back, a section titled "Prime Time
Schedules: 1946-1980" (my copy, the second revised edition, is from 1981). If this specialized encyclopedia
4090:
It appears the consensus is clear about per-station current schedules from the above - they change too much and too often to be effective in an article about the station. So I suggest focusing on the other issue (which many have ID'd above, but there's too much to separate one aspect from the other)
4054:
and endorse our current policy as expressed. I have just closed a couple of AfDs as No consensus in order to channel the discussion here, as it is more appropriate to have everything centralized. The only way I believe the information about when something was on TV is relevant is if it is included in
3115:
is required to demonstrate these articles' suitability as standalone articles. Evidence of notability comes in the form of significant coverage from reliable secondary sources that are independent of the schedules themselves, and these articles contain none. Clearly reproducing the schedules on their
2971:
There is a misunderstanding here. If the schedules are reproduced without any commentary, criticism, or analysis to provide context, then they are simply a regurgitation of the primary source (from the network itself). Without any commentary, these articles provide no evidence of notability. If these
2943:
lasted long, according to David
Weinstein). A fourth work, Bergmann and Skutch's (2002), was also referenced for the years 1946-1955. A great number of other references could also have been used, but I chose these four because I own them. In addition to these four, I can think of the various books by
2694:
of historical lineups with sourced notability. There's a reason why TV Guide is published every week, and we do not handle rapidly changing news, nor are we a crystal ball for future events. We only handle information after it has received significant discussion. Perhaps historical schedules, such as
2520:
I've said it before. The historic block schedules, consisting of prime time 1946 to present major U.S. network television schedules, must be kept: these block schedules are in use in television encyclopedias, and appear frequently in reliable sources (these are available upon request). These national
1836:
There is nothing wrong with contacting people who have participated in these articles previously, to tell them what is going on. That isn't canvasing, nor is it wrong in any way. Secretly deleting what others have spent a lot of time working on, without seeking their input, is however quite wrong.
1637:
Calton, why should a small group of veteran editors decide the policy for all wikipedians? Hammersoft was disrupting pages by deleting dozens of existing sections. When editors reverted these sections, he would write warnings on their pages. I was simply responding to these disruptions and
Hammersoft
4928:
Knowledge is not the place to memorialize deceased friends, relatives, acquaintances, or others. Subjects of encyclopedia articles must satisfy
Knowledge's notability requirements. Note that this policy does not apply outside of the main article space. Whilst using user space to create a memorial is
4464:
Abductive, what were the criteria you used to assign positions to people? I'm in support of removing per-station program guides, while keeping network-level guides. I _think_ that's the same position as, for example, DGG... but you listed us with two different positions. I'll also point out that the
4292:
Several editors have argued for the overturning of a key tenet of WP:NOT. In order to achieve that goal, they must gain a clear consensus. In fact, the opposite has happened; the majority has argued for the retention of this policy. I've toted up the comments so far. If I made a mistake, please move
3786:
Ah; thanks for the EV definition. I'm not aware of any cable channel receiving a printed "network" block schedule in any television encyclopedia or reliable printed source. I could be wrong, but I've never seen it. Cable channels don't need to please 200 local affiliate stations like the networks do
3768:
I'm thinking EV is short for "encyclopedic value". Which I believe you address sufficiently above, but more to the point, the historic block schedules are verifiable, not original research, are neutral, and are not indiscriminate (if we did it for every cable channel, that would be pushing it), and
2906:
I don't understand then why you did not you cite some coverage from these publications that supports the notability of one or more schedule/lineup articles from the begining of this discussion. Can you add some citations now, so we can examine what you have in in your library? Evidence in support of
2861:
We have no way of telling if the schedules are discussed in any meaningful way at all in these publications, so your assertions are pure speculation. My guess is that the topics of these publications are either the netweorks themselves or the television programmes they produced, and that the network
2219:
Please start an RfC. Per
Protonk this shouldn't be determined here. If for some reason we are going to determine this here, I think we should have major network schedules here, where "major" is unclear in many markets (to me at least). The schedule of a show has a lot to do with the success of the
1987:
This is the reason why WP:NOT says not to include schedules; the sources for the schedules will always be better than Knowledge because they are either the stations themselves, or corporations that make money providing the information, and can afford paid staff. So it would be appropriate to include
1591:
I will contact many of the editors involved in making these scheudules, there are 6 editors here, many veteran editors whose accounts overwhelming focus on attempting to delete other editors contributions, attempting to make policy for everyone else. Typical but not exactly overwhelming conseus. The
5003:
There are problems other than partisanship here. The base is that from an objective perspective the names and most other attributes of the victims are generally not too relevant to the event - however news padding and "human interest" mean that a lot is reported, and the names even become bywords.
4518:
You can move me closer to 'uphold'. I think that editors should be free to include programs guides insofar as they are contextualized by a reliable source (in the sense that Gavin argues). The core of NOTDIR is valid and shouldn't be changed. Which means that as it applies, we should follow it.
4142:
Suppose some lunatic started transcribing the ingredients list from different food packages. Would that be tolerated? Would people argue that some readers might want to know this information? Would people argue that food is notable, so that the ingredient lists must therefore be encyclopedic? I can
3716:
as an example of "The ONLY time would ever include schedule information is where the info is notable". NBC's more recent line-ups are a very good example of noted schedules which were highly successful. However, NBC had earlier schedules which were much more successful and which are just as noted,
3667:
in format - an area for which suitability for Knowledge has always been contentious, and guidelines comparatively fuzzy. For what its worth, the old block schedules do not appear to me to contain "indiscriminate" information (an issue often debated when considering whether lists should be deleted),
3005:
If there is a misunderstanding here, it is your own. I believe I already stated that the schedules in Castleman and Podrazik's 1982 book are reproduced with commentary, criticism, and analysis of the network schedule themselves; each chapter is a discussion of the network line-ups and what happened
2279:
article and are not capable of writing policy nor breaching it on articles within their areas of interest. AfD discussions are not held at the project level. Neither are policy discussions decided upon at the project level. We've had this discussion now for the better part of a week. It's blatantly
2094:
There are two different types of tv schedules being talked about here. The present case is about a specific station's TV schedule embedded in the station's article. The Archive23 talk section is about the historical TV schedules that are generally not station specific. They are apples and oranges
1461:
I am very happy to see such listings removed, although I think you (Hammersoft) should have sought this clarification first, rather than afterwards. If I understand you correctly, you believe that articles on historical schedules are acceptable, but articles on current schedules are only acceptable
1316:
We do need some level that designates a national station, otherwise, we'll have every tiny UHF station have their schedule posted. The US is easy, but probably more difficult for smaller countries, but also at smaller countries, you're less likely to have a large number of stations or stations that
1222:
I think the cavaet on WP:NOTDIR#4 is important, that when the subject is a major national broadcaster, a historical summary of the schedule is reasonable, and so, for example, the upcoming fall season schedule (at the general weekly resolution, not a per-episode frame) for CBS or ABC would be fine,
4777:
Knowledge should be a crystal ball etc. Too many people are caught up in rules which don't really create any positive benefit to what the site offers. As far as I can grasp. everyone on the site seems to be under the 'WP Spell' whereby they care more about Knowledge itself than the actual subjects
4742:
I usually try to avoid saying the word in debates, but there are times when something clearly is unencyclopedic, such as writing articles in the first person with original research. Most everybody here would agree on that and I believe that calling it unencyclopedic would be backed by consensus.
4670:
are always acceptable, unless we have renounced such policies? So yes, keep the historic and national guides. The finer gradations are probably something better resolved case by case for the time being. Articles without sourcing are better served by adding sources to, that sort of thing. I agree
3957:
My argue for keeping all the old ones was this: Showing a historic list of every show ever shown on a notable network, is perfectly fine by almanac standards for the Knowledge. Television plays a massive role in shaping people's opinions, and affecting the world. If someone wanted to see where and
3864:
If you scroll up a bit, you'll see that Firsfron has posted information about 5 books devoted to the subject. So the significant coverage requirement is more than met, for the major-network schedules. Frankly, I'm not sure there's anything left to debate: Major-network schedules are notable due to
3731:
against Uncle Miltie with decent ratings, as discussed in Weinstein, pages 156-157, or scheduling a raucous game show against a public service program on other networks. ABC's early scheduling woes, too, merit attention from historians, such as Goldenson on ABC's 1953 schedule, pages 116-124, many
2608:
Third part sources don't provide any evidence of notability unless they contain some sort of commentary on their subject matter, othewise they are classed as tertiary sources. However, most of these schedules are not even sourced, so I think Hobit is speculating, which not getting us any closer to
2594:
The national network schedules provide clear evidence of notability since many are clearly sourced to reliable third-party publications. Gavin, please go to your local library and check out some of the books listed as references on these pages. Also, there are not "hundreds of different television
2185:
FWIW, I agree with Hammersoft and Uncle G that the schedules for individual stations are not generally appropriate. The stations can do it better themselves. The work it would take us to do it correctly should be better spent on writing articles on topics we need to cover--or perhaps improving the
4272:
shows coverage from a reliable, independent source for historic national-network evening schedules in the United States. The source I cite actually has one-year-per-page schedules that look remarkably like our own. My source was published in 1981, but there have been more recent editions. If this
4098:
I think the key point here is that the specific NOT phrase this falls under includes as the catchall: "resource for conducting business". Current television schedules can be seen as that, since they inform the reader as what's on or what is coming. Once the event has happened, however, there's no
4015:
would look like if only the game log were present in the articles and not the context. It's simple directory info. in the most literal sense of the term and is unencyclopedic. Only the relatively few historical significant schedules should have entries, and those should provide context explaining
2760:
elements of general and specialized encyclopedias, almanacs, and gazetteers; merely being true or useful does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in an encyclopedia. What is being missed by some editors is that these schedules come from the TV networks themselves and should be
2400:
I'm late to the party, but have to agree that some form of culling is in order. Some of the station articles have gotten completely out of hand, and the individual network schedule pages are certainly out of line and fall under the notion of TV Guide-ism (to coin a phrase). I would agree that the
1781:
I don't actually think it is appropriate to determine the fate of these articles via a discussion at WP:NOT. Obviously, we lack a centralized discussion system whereby changes across many articles can be agreed upon (in principle) but NOT isn't a good substitute. My suggestion is that you start
1320:
But I do think it's smart idea to discourage the schedule coverage on the station article and push it to national historical schedule pages - yes they are current, but in 3 months, they will be historical, so there's no problem with that information staying around after the fact. However, it will
1297:
I don't think what medium it is broadcast in or how extensive the coverage of the station/network is should be a factor. If it's important enough for a network, it's important enough for a station. Plus, in smaller countries the definition of "network" and "station" is very much blurred. I concur
1275:
The key factor between being a TV guide and an encyclopedic coverage of what shows a network airs is the fact we do not break this down week-by-week, episode by episode or include one-time events. Now granted, the data on the network pages should technically be put with the data on the historical
4249:
Again, I point out the question: if these historical tv schedules are inappropriate, then what makes the full record of every pro team's every season appropriate? That's just as much a "directory" as these schedules, and are just as discriminate/indiscriminate and have the same types of backing
4245:
Lists of ingredients from food packages would be indiscriminate, since there's 1) an infinite possibility of ingrediants and 2) an infinite possibly of foodstuffs. Nor is this info verifiable without turning to the primary source (most of the time), being the wrapper or container itself. On the
3332:
I think you have missed a point, that even though the schedules are sourced from secondary sources, you are in actual fact repoducing the the primary source because no commentary, criticism or analysis accompanies accompanies the schedules. Without such commentary from reliable secondary sources
2926:
Gavin, these are already cited in the articles themselves. I presumed if you were seriously discussing deleting the articles that you would have taken a look at the articles themselves before vehemently calling for their deletion. That would only make sense. However, you missed the fact that the
1953:
has made the article more accurate instead of less? How can we confirm that the article is correct? If the answer is "Check it against this week's published listings for the channel.", how is such information, that isn't generalized beyond the specific week of the edit where it was introduced,
4094:
I for one think they are fine, per WP being aspects of an almanac - they are not indiscriminate, they are sourced, and they are associated with notable topics (television in country X). There may be a hint of OR in that they have to gloss over the details with the case of rapid cancellation and
3883:
If you a scroll up a bit, you will see that the sources merely reporoduce the schedules direct from the primary source, but they don't add any evidence of notability. Don't forget that just because a TV schedule appears in more than source, it is still the primary source, and in itself does not
4840:
sounds good to me as well. We who work here do not have the responsibility to provide all the possible public benefits needed in the world. We are here to provide one specific thing: a comprehensive 💕. That it be an encyclopedia worth using requires some degree of limit on total imaginable
3662:
of article is suitable for Knowledge. For comparison, there are multiple reliable sources on how to assemble bookshelves, but we disallow articles of the how-to guide format. I can't see anything as clear-cut to disallow block schedules, particularly given PyTom's excellent point that we allow
1705:
Well said! I agree. If you don't like it, then you don't have to go there. The large number of people who do go there for information, and have contributed to it over the years, are important. Is there any way to see just how many hits a particulate page gets? Bringing more people to the
1388:
Bravo! I have yet to see how such scheduling information continues to be "upheld" as an okay exception beyond a general fondness for it. Most are not historically significant, and current schedules certainly should be frowned upon. Knowledge is not a TV guide nor is it a mirror for TV.com. --
1366:
I disagree that the historical comparisons are a problem. It's well established that one can look at the changing reception of a show, and in fact, how new programs are introduced and removed, based on what the competition was airing at the same time, at a level of high granularity, so these
4639:
They can be sourced, they are clearly "encyclopedic" as I show in the subsection below, and they can be assumed to meet WP:N based on the sourcing we've seen on this page and on some of the "References" sections of these articles. In-depth coverage for what is essentially a WP:LIST exists in
3116:
own means these articles are verifable (this is not in question), but merely reproducing the schedules (the primary source) does not constitute evidence of notability. However, what is more obvious is the complete lack of commentary, criticism or analysis that is needed to provide context (
4723:
The book has aspirations, at least, to scholarly reliability (from the "Introduction", page x): "This volume has been carefully researched for the scholar who wants to know what happened and when. But it is also — like TV itself — for your enjoyment." The book went into multiple editions.
3574:. If the basic structure of programming (ie of historical significance) is changed from one year to the next, there need to be an agreed way of presenting it, possibly juxtaposed with historical schedule or competitors' schedules. but these should be the exception rather than the rule.
1192:
notes "The WikiProject cannot decide that for the articles within its scope, some policy does not apply, unless they can convince the broader community that doing so is right." and that never happened. I also found a discussion that occurred in the global forum of Village Pump (policy)
2577:
TV schedules are printed in all sorts of 3rd party publications. They easily meet WP:N. The question is if they violate NOT#DIRECTORY. I think the historical versions certainly don't, but I can also see how one could reasonably conclude they do. But notability isn't at issue here.
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Is this book reliable? Well, it won the American Book Award and the San Francisco State University Broadcast Preceptor Award, for what it's worth (page vii, "Preface to the Second Edition"). According to this Google Books search, the book seems to be cited by hundreds of other books:
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people believe it to be encyclopedic or not. As for the question of whether this is a specialised encyclopedia or not, I note that the word "elements" that you quoted above is vague, probably intentionally so. In the end it is us who determine what elements are fit for discussion.
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The Knowledge community decided the policy, not a small group of 'elite editors' (I'm not an elite editor, and neither is anyone else here). The policy is quite clear. an "article on a ... station should not list ... current schedules". The stance against schedules has been in the
3608:. Past program schedules are of historic interest to lots of people, including those doing serious research, but I can think of no reason why WP should include current program schedules. We're not a one-stop reference for any and all info, we're an encyclopedia, and such info is
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1523:, but as topics for inclusion as standalone articles or lists, their notability is unproven until such time they are the subject of commentary from reliable secondary sources that are independent of the schedules. However, belief in measures subjective importance, such as
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If the schedules are not notable, then they are no different from a railway timetable, and nothing you or any "expert" editor can say can change that unless it can be backed up with citations to demonstrate their notability as standalone article topics in accordance with
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Well put. So long as the "rumors" or inpending upcoming releases are backed up by reliable sources, there is no real negative in not covering them. We cover content that appeals to a broad audience, not only that which seems relevant to some of our community. Best,
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Wow, if Firsfron has books on material which can be sourced, then I am all for keeping that material. Whole books on subjects should be enough for verifiability and sourcing. So keep the historic and national guides at least. i need to think about finer details. :)
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I don't think the current policy is particularly US-centric, just because it uses a US-related article as an example. A sourced article giving network schedules for national networks (or stations with national distribution) in other countries would be fine, too. —
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policy currently explicitly calls out network-level program guides, saying that "Historically significant programme lists and schedules (such as the annual United States network television schedules)", so a departure from this position would be overturning NOT. —
3018:. That clause was added specifically because the people who work with these articles, the people who study early TV history, the people who research early television in reliable sources, realized there was a problem with good-faith but misinformed editors quoting
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Any debate that is contentious shouldn't revolve around this term, as obviously some editors would feel that the element in question is encyclopedic. Just calling something unencyclopedic in this manner would probably lead to a shouting war with no analysis of
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Obviously a good number of editors strongly disagree about a rule which, if history is any guide, was formed by a handful of veteran editors with no larger community impute. It take very little talent or diplomacy to delete other editors contributions.
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If some of the publications contain commentary, then you should add it to the articles to provide some form of context for the reader, otherwise they are just not encylopedic. There can be no exceptions to these rules: just because your views on their
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It's more than just this policy that is relevant here. Our policies on verifiability and prohibiting original research are relevant, also. Here are some specific questions to answer, to see the underlying general point here: How do we know that
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We all know that the argument that places are inherently notable without evidence is questionable to say the least. I think the same principle applies here - the existence of these articles on television schedules is questionable too, and their
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content usually found in "specialized encyclopedias, almanacs, and gazetteers" (and of course, the old block schedules can be found in the specialized encyclopedias that Firsfron pointed out). If anything, these articles most closely resemble
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because of them. Each of Knowledge's prime time network schedules from 1946 to 1980 are referenced to Castleman and Podrazic's 1982 book, but there are other books which also provide the level of detail that you require. However, do not quote
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publications voice some sort of comment on the schedules themselves (not just a regurgitation) then you have knockout evidence of their notability. But if there is no commentary, then why on earth would you think they were encyclopedic when
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that they should be kept - so far we have only various editors expressing strong view. The must be hundreds of different television networks in the US alone, but which one is more important than another is a matter of personal opinion.
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schedules affected (and still effect) millions of viewers each year, and have a major impact on the television industry each fall, especially around Upfront time. Entire books have been written about these schedules: see Castleman's
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For major networks, I don't think its bad. What currently airs on a network can be an encyclopedic subject, though if we can do it better (with maybe a navbox style list divided by genre and stuff), that could be a good compromise.
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Some editors believe that WP:NPOV is being breached in the former position as the position is a means of excluding the names of those killed by Irish republican groupings, while including the names of those killed by British armed
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Let them have their say as well. And honestly, no one has ever article they have worked on or cared about on their watchlist, monitoring every little change constantly, that just not possible. Someone should contact all of them.
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are hugely more wonky than the average editor. I am very far on that extreme myself. I just think those that actually edit the articles in question are as important to hear from as those that live and breath policy (e.g. me).
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clear what the policy is, and it is blatantly clear that per-station television schedules are not permitted under this policy. I am not and never will be opposed to the community as a whole having input, which is why I informed
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schedule comparison pages, because after the current season is over, that's where that information will live. But that information itself should be somewhere on WP. But this is again for the national, over-the-air networks. --
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To be honest, all these arguments are a load of intellectual garbage. Just find some significant coverage from reliable secondary sources (not just the barebone schedules) to provide evidence of notability - this is the only
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page that shows the broadcast network schedule for all the broadcast networks by year is encyclopedic, and gives a historic context, but the individual information (and specific times) does not. I've had this discussion on
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based on your analysis, they pass notability guidelines - even if indirectly. Current schedule per stations, yes are sketchy (that falls into both WP:CRYSTAL and WP:TEMP), but historical ones are a much different beast --
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actually useful information for a reader in (say) three months' time? And how, in that case, is our presenting a single week's specific schedule as if it were the regular general schedule not a mis-representation of fact?
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I agree that the information should probably be removed, but having something that points out when a notable TV show or program comes on, in the article about that show, would be acceptable to my understanding of policy.
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Clearly, if Knowledge incorporates an element of a specialized encyclopedia, that incorporation can't be called "unencyclopedic". Well, these historic schedules can't be called "unencyclopedic" for just that reason.
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Since editors are not familar with the study which called influential veteran editors elite, and it is being read in the wrong way, I removed the term "elite" and replaced it with "veteran". Sorry for any confusion.
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other hand, these lists are selectively looking at certain blocks of programming (prime time schedules) for specific networks of a certain quality (national affliates) that have been covered by non-primary sources.
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when shows were at, and then do a study to determine how each one affected someone, this might be of use. It also shows how the taste of the people changed over time, what sort of thing they watched year by year.
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when discussing policy. You say "Must See TV" can stay, because you know of it; however, plenty of other network schedules have received similar (or even greater) attention from the people who study such trends.
4942:, where the victims all died at the same time, should not be included in the relevant articles, but that it is appropriate to include the names of victims of atrocities where they died at different times, e.g.
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Not at all the wrong venue. If an RfC started, the discussion would be right here. Further, it was announced at Village Pump (policy). The very large majority agree the schedules per station are inappropriate.
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I think we immediately get into a granularity issue there. I suggest the line in the sand isn't if a station is a national network or not. I think the line in the sand is per-station/network. Articles such as
2288:) which has been read by about 50 editors since it was posted there, in addition to the ~30 editors who saw it here. Nevertheless, since you insist, I've added the rfc tag to this section per your request. --
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and are magnets for original research, and should be deleted. Some editors may have strong views about creating these type of article, but unless there is evidence to show that they are notable, they are not
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historical articles provide a key resource. The networks selected are discriminate: these are the major over-the-air broadcasters (even if a station like the CW doesn't get close to some cable networks). --
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is a matter of opinion, not fact. If Firsfron can't add commentary to these articles which he passionately cares about, then I don't know who can. He may as well have supported deltion from the begining.
3938:. *Current* television schedules for television networks/stations are not appropriate content. Schedules are only appropriate if there is a historical context, and not if they are specific to now. --
4822:"whereby they care more about Knowledge itself than the actual subjects" sounds good to me - people who can't separate out their passion for a subject from their role here as an editor are a menace. --
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I have never been and will never be a fan of informing projects of discussions they may have an interest in. Such notifications inherently bias a discussion. Further, projects do not have ownership of
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It's not exactly clear where the discussion stops and the RfC starts, but I came here via the RfC. I think it is very clear that the primetime schedules violate NOTDIRECTORY, and should be deleted. --
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in the past, and have told folks that listing full blown times and dates certainly fails this test, and should be deleted. (bottom line: yes, do the culling; it's okay as far as I'm concerned) --
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I think your removals of those sections were entirely appropriate and will make the stronger statement that sections like that would be equally inappropriate on the CBS or ABC pages. The whole
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does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion. The schedules/lineups have no encyclopedic value unless they support commentary from reliable secondary sources in accordance with
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with your statement below that response to Rossami and historical articles. I do not see how keeping track of current schedules on every station/network article is in any way encyclopedic. --
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Others believe that it is appropriate to include names in relation to both types of atrocity, but that if it is not deemed appropriate in one, then it should not be appropriate in the other.
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Prior to beginning the removals (knowing there'd be resistance) I checked for background discussions. I found one that had been cited previously that occurred at the Wikiproject Television
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successful, with a weak line-up of programs (I'm thinking specifically of Castleman and Podrazik's detailed commentary of the schedule starting on page 87), and DuMont's craptacular
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etc., for a list of works you can use to verify the content in the schedules. As I said, these are already present in the articles, and have been for a very long time.
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1926:) then they need to convince the wikipedia community as a whole. I'm still in favour of removing and I haven't heard any, what I'd call "valid" reasons to keep them --
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be said of the general Monday schedule? How do you know? It's interesting to see how many edits are being devoted to defending, and amassing support for defending,
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We are not a crystal ball because we can only comment on information that has already been commented on. As an encyclopedia, we focus on the past, not the present (
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I'm well aware of that provision, thanks. Start an RfC or start a discussion at the village pump if you like. I just don't think discussing it here is productive.
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and vice versa. I can see where you are coming from: you are arguing that these articles are encyclopedic because they are sourced, but are ignoring the point that
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Unless there some clear evidence of notability, such as commentary from reliable secondary sources that are independent of schedules, then they should be removed.
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can be provided to show that they merit their own standalone articles. While we are at it, lets also put aside lots of other spurious arguements for inclusion:
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who is engaging in pure speculation. Check out these books yourself if you refuse to believe that I have these books. Also, can't you tell from the title what
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but you must dust off a book or a microfiche to find these notes. DuMont's 1953 schedule has received a great deal of attention from critics for being highly
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sources. As noted below, we are more than just an encyclopedia, we include specialized encyclopedias and almanacs, both which these can be derived from. --
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scheduling might have helped kill it, but criticism and commentary of network television schedules goes back all the way to 1946, when two tiny TV networks
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with Noroton that there is no reason to change WP:NOT to ban these kinds of articles. And I don;t see any sort of consensus to do so on this page, either.
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schedules are used merely the framework to discuss them. To back up your statements, you will have to come up with citations, not rumours of citations. --
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I cannot see any way in which tv or radio schedules for forthcoming programs belong in an encyclopedia - if we allow this, then we do become a directory.
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The clear majority says these things don't belong because they are "unencyclopedic." This is worse than them being notable or not; that doesn't matter. '
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Keep historic block schedules for major networks, remove current schedules and suggest week-by-week schedules for historic periods should not be created
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is written to give an exemption to articles on schedules is, quite frankly, special pleading and is not in accordance with the spirit of this policy. --
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can include dozens of pages of block schedules (pages 852-886) just like our own, then we can't really be "unencyclopedic" by following their lead.
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Well, since it is clear that my request to move this to a better forum didn't find widespread agreement, I'll vote. I feel that we should include
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networks in the U.S. alone"; the number of broadcast networks is closer to fifty, and only a dozen or so are true nationally-viewed networks.
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I am crying "uncle", i give up. This is something I am not to interested about anyway. At least the information is still in the edit history.
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that provide no commentary, context, criticism or analysis that are the hallmarks of encyclopedic coverage, which is why they fail WP:NOT. --
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None of Knowledge's content polices support this view. Special pleading only makes you bid for an exemption more obvious: in the absence of
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This is complete not my feelings. I support what NOT currently reads for this: current per-station guides bad, historic guides good. --
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Firsfron makes the very good point that entire books have been written about these network schedules, and that makes them notable. Per
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Since the schedules provide no evidence of notability, there is no rationale to keep them other than various editors views about their
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So, I ask the question of everyone else: Is the display of current scheduling information in station specific articles a violation of
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Not to put words in Garion's mouth, but you seem to be overlooking the presence of the qualifier "historically significant" in #4. --
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William Boddy, Michele Hilmes, James Roman, Leonard Goldenson, and David Weinstein which discuss early network schedules. Please see
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plot sections of TV shows. (Networks and some national stations are another matter entirely and I would not support deleting them).
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It looks like the US-centric part (bias) of the policy, which said "may be acceptable" has been deemed unacceptable by 20+ editors.
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This information should refute a number of statements above, especially that these kinds of pages are somehow "unencyclopedic." --
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because there is no rationale for inclusion, and the editors who are creating them should reevaluate their reasons for doing so. --
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quoting Wikipedia_talk:What_Wikipedia_is_not not a good justification, but you citing Wikipedia_talk:What_Wikipedia_is_not not is?
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on Knowledge. Policies have wide acceptance among editors and are considered a standard for all users to follow. Please review
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in the form substantial coverage from reliable secondary sources that are independent of the schedules themselves. The way that
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An RfC would get a wider bit of input, as would announcing it to the appropriate projects (if that hasn't already been done).
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Instead of having the schedules as part of the page, why not link to the stations' schedules in the External Links section? --
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communication with the guy seems to be futile because he reverted the edits despite the notes left behind on his talk page. -
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merely being significant, true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in Knowledge
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I tend to be equally dubious of "policy wonks" hiding discussions from those they actually impact. Thanks for the RfC tag!
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Do you guyes doubt that TV Guide similar sources have produced articles or listings for every years schedule? I don't. -
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Ah. Do you think Garion was talking about the historically significant national schedules or current station schedules?
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there is no evidence of notability, and your arguments that they should have their standalone articles runs contrary to
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point of view. I've conceded that the local station schedules should go, and I just wish you could have met me halfway.
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3153:, it is only a guideline and thus applied with common sense exceptions. This clearly seems to be one of those cases. --
2062:"Please see our discussion on my talk page. There is consensus, and local Wikiproject consensus can not override policy"
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if phrased as historical ie "2009 season schedules". To clarify, would you accept someone going through the history of
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1168:, remove this tag and it will be removed from the list. If this page is on additional lists, they will be noted below.
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other 'side' is "under a spell" or is vandalizing articles. Please assume good faith and treat people with respect.
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of this discussion counts as being a "policy wonk" bent on hiding discussion, then THANK YOU for the compliment. --
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overwhelming consensus is the hundreds of editors over several years, who have made and maintained these schedules.
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are fine, as they offer an historical perspective to compare programming slots. Station/network articles that have
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Remove 'em all. No matter which way you look at it, they're nearly inherently inappropriate for an encyclopedia. –
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show and even what the show does (follow on to another show etc.) It is clearly an important part of many shows.
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would not count towards that even if WGN does get some national coverage), but that would be a starting point. --
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only assume that a few of the people here would so argue, blind as they are to what an encyclopedia really is.
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258::::Opinions vary. NOT is what we are, but may not want to be, mostly. - ] (]) (]) 02:39, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
251::::Opinions vary. NOT is what we are, but may not want to be, mostly. - ] (]) (]) 02:39, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
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schedule/marketing campaign which includes schedule info., and we do; but the current articles are like what
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Do you doubt that ingredients lists are printed on the sides of the bags of chips? An the serving size too!
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after the discussion closed as keep, and after several inline citations had been added, including one from
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Would you please stop repeatedly linking to that essay? I've already linked above to multiple books which
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Support removal. Schedules are ephemeral and have no encyclopedic value, Knowledge is not a directory.
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Fine, so Knowledge is not an annual national programming guide. The information doesn't belong here per
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Today, I began removing a bunch of scheduling information from a large number of TV stations. Examples:
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of directory information. It is reasonable to have an entry on, say, NBC's long-running and successful
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of their subject matter, by which I mean they don't contain a mix of primary and secondary coverage. --
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schedule for the channel. Is it true for next week? Is it true for this week? Was it even true for
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and consider the historical TV schedules, which presently is called out as an acceptable allowance.)
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The policy was already made, just unevenly enforced. It takes very little talent to imitate TVGuide.
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1565:" I fail to see how, what amounts to a nicely formatted TV schedule is encyclopaedic? Knowledge is
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isn't an acceptable use either. A current schedule isn't encyclopedic. It turns us into a guide. --
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Knowledge talk:What Knowledge is not#The reason why the "unencyclopedic" argument just doesn't fly
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The ONLY time I would ever include schedule information is where the info is notable, such as for
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FWIW, there have been AfDs on some dedicated TV schedule articles in the past, one I remember was
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I think ikip was within his rights to inform others of the situation, however, wikipedia is not a
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No, but I doubt you can find articles on those labels. Big difference, red herring, all that. -
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Why not just delete all of the policy-violating TVGuide stuff, and then see if they even notice?
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of Television!' -- TV Guide"; (from the back cover): "'Hilarious and Encyclopedic!' -- Newsday"
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Thoughts on striking out the parenthetical special exception (which is rather nationalistic)?: "
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got moved around in timeslots and that's thought to be one of the things that killed the show).
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The argument that a schedule is "historically significant" is just basically a restatement of
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It is not possible to set aside the issue of the schedules' notability, because if they fail
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This is understood by some editors to mean that the names of victims of atrocities, such as
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are stronger than mine, that is not a verifiable reason for keeping them; what is needed is
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I'm not sure who should be where, but seeing Masem in with us usual suspects is amusing. -
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4075:. However, I believe that most of historical schedules may be transwikied to Wikisource —
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we would be just as sorry if his name was Walbeck - nonetheless he is defiantly notable.
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but failed to reach consensus. Can we get clarification on the meaning of Not-Memorial?
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WP:Articles for deletion/1991–1992 United States network television schedule (late night)
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being written about in multiple books, while per-station schedules should be removed. —
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Knowledge:Village_pump_(policy)#Discussion_regarding_per_station_TV_schedules_and_WP:NOT
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TV guide doesn't list annual national programming grids, Garion: it's a place to check
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deemphasize the station-centric view that can occur on the individual station pages. --
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Have you even read the policy you've just quoted? Please read #4 all the way through.
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Forget it, Masem. Gavin is never going to understand. This is the same editor who was
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Not a single thing you've said in the above post is accurate, Gavin. These schedules '
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Knowledge talk:WikiProject Television/Archive 5#Current primetime television schedules
1922:. If the members of a particular wikiproject want to make a change to policy (such us
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Late to the party, but I think I agree with Firsfron's view that articles which meet
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these schedules only include "important" television programs, not insignificant ones;
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3483:, not more of per-station schedules. We aren't a directory and we aren't TV guide.
1188:, that happened in 2007. My take on that was it was irrelevant, since our policy at
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to a handful of TV sets (literally in Washington DC, according to Bergmann). Let's
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for inclusion. Notability is an issue here, in the sense that all of the topics in
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another discussion at Wikiproject TV and close this discussion w/ a pointer there.
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Thanks for the thorough analysis, Grappler. Stax, what does "EV" mean (surely not
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The TV Schedule Book: Four Decades of Network Programming from Sign-On to Sign-Off
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The TV Schedule Book: Four Decades of Network Programming from Sign-On to Sign-Off
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prime time U.S. network schedules have been sourced since I sourced them myself
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For extra credit, attempt to check for accuracy what the article says about the
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these schedules go all the way back to "Noah and the flood" and are not recent.
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The schedules themselves are the subject of independent, extensive coverage in
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Recently some old television schedules from decades ago came up for deletion.
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elements of general and specialized encyclopedias, almanacs, and gazetteers.
3570:. These schedules change almost on a weekly basis, and I would concur it is
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and other publications that have articles on network TV schedules (such as
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policy for more than three years. For the record, I did invite people. See
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which they choose to edit/take control of/vandalise as I've seen them do.
4648:). There is no reason to change WP:NOT to ban these kinds of articles. --
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We should do whatever the sources do. It works for other NPOV stuff. -
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Knowledge talk:What Knowledge is not/Archive 23#NOTDIR and TV schedules
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was right to go ahead and remove that listing and any other similar --
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before making any substantive change to this page. Always remember to
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Opinions vary. NOT is what we are, but may not want to be, mostly. -
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I'd agree that this information is encyclopedic and should be removed.
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which showed a pretty strong consensus that the schedules had to go.
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I believe most are historically insignificant and should be removed (
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Wikipedia_talk:What_Wikipedia_is_not#Per_station_television_schedules
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3259:. Gavin was still claiming the article was "unencyclopedic", citing
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come from the networks themselves. They come from reliable sources:
1495:) has reinstated some of the schedules Hammersoft removed. It seems
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The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows; 1946–Present
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Go to TV Guide, not an encyclopedia, if you want this information.
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and largely just tables of times and shows don't need to be here.
3805:. These schedules are no different from any other schedule unless
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who is citing this thread as support for including the schedules.
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these schedules are for "top rated" programs, not low rated ones;
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as Knowledge is not an indiscriminate collection of information;
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these schedules are for the "biggest" networks, not little ones;
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1954–1955 United States network television schedule (late night)
1154:
Within 24 hours, this page will be added to the following list:
4557:(such as the annual United States network television schedules)
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The project page associated with this talk page is an official
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Content should be verified with citations to reliable sources.
2818:. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8108-4270-X.
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I can see why some editors would want these listings based on
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The reason why the "unencyclopedic" argument just doesn't fly
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Keep historic, nationwide (or almost nationwide) TV schedules
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the article about tv series or another programme, such as in
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these schedules are for "broadcast" networks, not cable ones;
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Except, as I noted above, television encyclopedias use them.
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these schedules are for "national" networks, not local ones;
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1976–77_United_States_network_television_schedule#References
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1966–67_United_States_network_television_schedule#References
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1956–57_United_States_network_television_schedule#References
2946:
1946–47_United_States_network_television_schedule#References
312:
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knows that that Knowledge is an encyclopedia incorporating
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stating: rv re-inclusion of schedules against consensus at
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I have each and every one of these books in my collection.
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may be an early case in point: although we are sorry for
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2157:-encyclopedic? I'm sure everyone would be up in arms if
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reverted your deletions of other editors contributions:
297:== Requested clarification of meaning of Not:Memorial ==
290:== Requested clarification of meaning of Not:Memorial ==
4537:
Shouldn't there be two lists, for the two questions? -
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allows for the annual U.S. television network schedules
2799:(4th ed.). New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-024916-8
54:
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available elsewhere on the Web, on TV, and in print.
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The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows
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2827:(9th ed.). New York: Ballantine. ISBN 0-345-31864-1.
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a record of everything under the sun. In my opinion
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357:
3690:, what EV is provided through listed TV schedules?
1706:Knowledge, for any reason, is always a good thing.
1468:
2009–2010 United States network television schedule
1247:
2009–2010 United States network television schedule
4920:Requested clarification of meaning of Not:Memorial
1255:List_of_programs_broadcast_by_CBS#Current_schedule
3742:1960–61 United States network television schedule
3497:Agree with removal; Knowledge is not a TV guide.
3035:I don't think there can be any misunderstanding.
5050:
4960:Other editors disagree that WP:NPOV is relevant.
4694:, first pillar, first sentence (boldface mine):
3606:Support removal and suggest strengthening policy
3170:Once again, the only alternative to notability,
3111:. You are trying to sidestep the issue that the
2833:Watching TV: Four Decades of American Television
2382:Sources discuss this stuff, and so should we. -
4219:Only because some lunatic hasn't done it yet.
2483:Keep network block schedules, remove specifics
2067:You again deleted other editors contributions,
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1200:Despite this, I am starting to get reverted.
4035:and endorse our current policy as expressed.
2719:Support retention of Major-network Schedules.
2170:Yep, thanks. Spellchecker gone wild I think.
3527:Knowledge is not an electronic program guide
2814:The DuMont Television Network: What Happened
2500:Keep network and programming block schedules
210:
4696:Knowledge is an encyclopedia incorporating
4298:Overturn WP:NOT an electronic program guide
2036:Can you please explain this inconsistency:
1612:has started canvassing on this issue (see
3022:randomly. It's still happening, however.
2907:your assertions would be most welcome. --
1561:United States network television schedule
1350:United States network television schedule
1100:(July 2007 - ongoing; partially archived)
138:
2830:Castleman, H. & Podrazik, W. (1982)
1666:User_talk:Jon2guevarra#Program_Schedules
1534:Knowledge is not Movie, Book or TV Guide
2821:Brooks, Tim & Marsh, Earle (2007).
1152:from other editors for this discussion.
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3903:TV schedules should be and all will be
3847:defence against deletion or merger. --
3740:which was directed at the Big Three's
3686:But outside of the rare instance like
2883:It's not "pure speculation", and when
4985:the edit that introduced it to policy
3635:Firefly (TV series)#Broadcast history
1432:Enforcement of no schedules must be
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1114:
307:
304:Revision as of 19:24, 22 August 2009
157:Revision as of 19:24, 22 August 2009
90:Revision as of 19:16, 22 August 2009
80:
46:
2811:Bergmann, Ted; Skutch, Ira (2002).
721:for discussing improvements to the
365:for discussing improvements to the
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13:
3884:provide evidence of notability. --
3313:, and which are presented from a
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35:
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3807:verifiable evidence of notability
3054:verifiable evidence of notability
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1159:Knowledge policies and guidelines
3113:verifable evidence of notability
1481:Just giving you a heads-up, but
1352:series should be reconsidered.
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1118:
1109:Per station television schedules
1043:
738:Click here to start a new topic.
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382:Click here to start a new topic.
311:
4293:yourself into the proper spot.
4121:, all barebones schedules fail
4119:veriable evidence of notability
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3014:to me when WP:DIR specifically
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2808:, McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0070102775.
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2348:Knowledge:Village pump (policy)
2326:Knowledge:Village pump (policy)
2282:Knowledge:Village pump (policy)
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5059:Knowledge requests for comment
4987:, and the background to that.
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4268:A subsection I started below,
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3128:, because they do not contain
2551:. What seems to be missing is
2346:No, but the people who _read_
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1798:Knowledge:CONSENSUS#Exceptions
1737:
1643:WP:Don't template the regulars
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1563:series should be reconsidered.
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1317:aren't national to begin with.
1190:Knowledge:CONSENSUS#Exceptions
324:policy editing recommendations
1:
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3379:Knowledge is not a tv guide.
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1933:
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735:Put new text under old text.
379:Put new text under old text.
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3178:for a standalone article. --
2748:Knowledge's content policies
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1991:
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1137:Please consider joining the
18:Browse history interactively
7:
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3750:began sending their signals
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3001:20:42, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
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2902:16:09, 16 August 2009 (UTC)
2887:say "my guess is..." it is
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2735:22:14, 15 August 2009 (UTC)
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2642:14:32, 14 August 2009 (UTC)
2602:14:40, 14 August 2009 (UTC)
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2122:16:27, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
2108:15:54, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
2090:15:37, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
2028:13:34, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
2010:I am now being reverted by
2004:09:07, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1982:08:44, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1970:content that is a falsehood
1940:07:13, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1910:05:42, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1883:03:43, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1862:03:41, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1828:19:21, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
1814:13:47, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
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1633:00:57, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
743:New to Knowledge? Welcome!
387:New to Knowledge? Welcome!
10:
5075:
3151:Notability is not a policy
2976:has various prohibitions (
1602:19:46, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
1587:19:17, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
1549:11:10, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
1514:10:20, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
1477:23:41, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1456:23:36, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1428:22:46, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1407:22:44, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1380:22:38, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1362:22:22, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1334:23:34, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1308:22:46, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
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1240:22:13, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
1217:22:02, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
339:
208:
136:
4581:
4519:Program guides which are
4253:
4102:
4013:2008_New_York_Mets_season
3772:
3732:others) Let's not forget
3156:
3085:
2098:
1889:Remove. Not encyclopedic
1370:
1324:
1279:
1253:are not fine. Similarly,
1230:
773:Be welcoming to newcomers
417:Be welcoming to newcomers
263:
230:
227:
211:→The reality as I see it
195:Pending changes reviewers
153:
86:
4983:I suggest starting with
4057:Lost (TV series)#Ratings
2836:. New York: McGraw-Hill.
2161:material was removed ;)
1139:feedback request service
191:Extended confirmed users
4924:WP:NotMemorial states:
4773:The reality as I see it
3738:"vast wasteland" speech
3257:World Book Encyclopedia
2617:are not likely to fail
1553:I am in agreement with
85:
3790:Firsfron of Ronchester
3760:Firsfron of Ronchester
3459:Firsfron of Ronchester
3429:Firsfron of Ronchester
3412:Knowledge:NOTDIRECTORY
3402:Firsfron of Ronchester
3320:Firsfron of Ronchester
3270:Firsfron of Ronchester
3025:Firsfron of Ronchester
2963:Firsfron of Ronchester
2898:Firsfron of Ronchester
2851:Firsfron of Ronchester
2841:There are many others.
2802:Castleman, H. (1984).
2677:Firsfron of Ronchester
2598:Firsfron of Ronchester
2530:Firsfron of Ronchester
768:avoid personal attacks
412:avoid personal attacks
328:keep cool when editing
139:→The consensus so far
4841:comprehensiveness.
3712:)? Above you mention
3285:subjective importance
3172:subjective importance
3049:subjective importance
2793:McNeil, Alex (1996).
2744:subjective importance
2549:subjective importance
1521:subjective importance
1079:(Nov 2005 – Jan 2006)
1037:Auto-archiving period
723:What Knowledge is not
681:Auto-archiving period
367:What Knowledge is not
5006:War of Jenkins' Ear
4948:Bloody Sunday (1972)
4944:Ballymurphy massacre
4288:The consensus so far
4086:Historical schedules
4016:their significance.
3905:deleted. Let it go.
3728:Life is Worth Living
3627:100% support removal
3251:for the deletion of
3118:significant coverage
2940:Life is Worth Living
2929:nearly two years ago
2893:The TV Schedule Book
2690:of current lineups.
2502:per Squidfryerchef.
2059:You responded that:
1525:inherited notability
1164:When discussion has
4964:A discussion began
3309:the content, which
2934:Texaco Star Theater
2611:verifiable evidence
1901:cricket photo poll!
1440:. Remove them all.
1251:schedules like this
4936:Warrenpoint ambush
4646:The New York Times
3723:1955-1956 schedule
3637:for example, IIRC
3261:lack of notability
3176:verfiable evidence
2553:verfiable evidence
1501:上村七美 (Nanami-chan)
1150:requested comments
1084:Newspaper Articles
779:dispute resolution
740:
423:dispute resolution
384:
169:
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4891:) or the future (
4679:
4325:Allow some guides
3130:balanced coverage
3103:, then they fail
2692:Support retention
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1620:, and especially
1512:
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1086:(May - July 2007)
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759:Assume good faith
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403:Assume good faith
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2895:might be about?
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2796:Total Television
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4005:Support removal
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3936:Support removal
3754:avoid recentism
3698:
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3572:unencyclopaedic
3564:Endorse removal
3377:Support removal
2740:Support removal
2688:Support removal
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2466:Support removal
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2153:Don't you mean
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3263:: check the
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2986:WP:NOT#STATS
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2159:encyclopedic
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2040:User:Gadfium
1992:
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1961:
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717:This is the
684:
434:
361:This is the
4889:WP:NOT#NEWS
4428:Staxringold
4422:Ohconfucius
4404:Madcoverboy
4353:TheGrappler
4335:Powergate92
4308:Dream Focus
4009:Must See TV
3714:Must See TV
3692:Staxringold
3688:Must See TV
3670:TheGrappler
3643:Staxringold
3631:Must See TV
3589:Observation
3576:Ohconfucius
3568:WP:Fancruft
3311:are sourced
3149:Once again
2505:Powergate92
2470:Madcoverboy
2217:Wrong venue
1470:different?-
332:don't panic
221:Next edit →
215:my thoughts
32:Next edit →
5018:Farmbrough
4940:Omagh bomb
4893:WP:CRYSTAL
4443:. Thanks,
4425:Rivertorch
4419:Irbisgreif
4401:Tryptofish
4371:Hammersoft
4350:Cybercobra
3803:WP:IKNOWIT
3614:Rivertorch
3593:Tryptofish
3551:Irbisgreif
3059:WP:NOT#DIR
2978:WP:NOT#DIR
2750:. I think
2609:providing
2447:Tryptofish
2443:Suggestion
2424:Tryptofish
2330:Hammersoft
2290:Hammersoft
2241:Hammersoft
2204:Dougweller
2020:Hammersoft
1806:Hammersoft
1670:Hammersoft
1608:Note that
1571:Hammersoft
1559:The whole
1300:Hammersoft
1259:Hammersoft
1209:Hammersoft
4970:Mooretwin
4692:WP:PILLAR
4490:reasoning
4484:Abductive
4454:reasoning
4448:Abductive
4431:SmokeyJoe
4380:Abductive
4230:reasoning
4224:Abductive
4192:reasoning
4186:Abductive
4154:reasoning
4148:Abductive
4135:contribs)
3991:Keep some
3940:SmokeyJoe
3916:reasoning
3910:Abductive
3894:contribs)
3857:contribs)
3347:contribs)
3298:contribs)
3265:talk page
3188:contribs)
3142:contribs)
3080:guideline
3071:contribs)
2998:contribs)
2917:contribs)
2872:contribs)
2775:contribs)
2763:WP:NOTDIR
2639:contribs)
2566:contribs)
2076:Why does
2012:User:Ikip
1999:reasoning
1993:Abductive
1951:this edit
1878:reasoning
1872:Abductive
1747:reasoning
1741:Abductive
1641:Also see
1610:User:Ikip
1557:in that "
1546:contribs)
1529:synthesis
1451:reasoning
1445:Abductive
1438:heartless
1434:merciless
1077:Galleries
781:if needed
764:Be polite
719:talk page
425:if needed
408:Be polite
363:talk page
231:Line 300:
228:Line 300:
5053:Category
5038:contribs
4875:contribs
4796:A Nobody
4642:TV Guide
4628:contribs
4618:Casliber
4605:contribs
4547:contribs
4416:Jclemens
4410:Garion96
4398:Amalthea
4389:Cabe6403
4317:A Nobody
4314:Firsfron
4211:contribs
4173:contribs
4037:Eusebeus
3513:Jclemens
3416:Garion96
3381:Garion96
2392:contribs
2380:Keep all
2286:see diff
2173:Amalthea
2163:MuZemike
2145:Amalthea
2045:citing,
1510:contribs
1506:talkback
1493:contribs
1403:contribs
792:Archives
749:get help
436:Archives
393:get help
342:Shortcut
184:contribs
112:contribs
56:Wikitext
5010:Jenkins
4989:Uncle G
4957:forces.
4808:Protonk
4729:Noroton
4668:WP:NPOV
4650:Noroton
4525:Protonk
4441:6:10:22
4395:Uncle G
4383:gadfium
4374:Rossami
4356:Stevage
4347:Protonk
4275:Noroton
3995:Stevage
3799:Comment
3746:Firefly
3639:Firefly
3610:readily
3485:Protonk
3315:neutral
2937:; only
2879:Gavin,
2757:notable
2545:Comment
1974:Uncle G
1820:Protonk
1784:Protonk
1473:gadfium
1354:Rossami
1096:Topic:
1089:Topic:
1082:Topic:
1075:Topic:
4673:Hiding
4571:(talk)
4413:Stifle
4367:Uphold
4123:WP:NOT
3660:format
3541:(talk)
3499:Stifle
3449:(talk)
3419:(talk)
3384:(talk)
3335:WP:NOT
3307:verify
3126:WP:NOT
3122:WP:GNG
3105:WP:NOT
3042:WP:GNG
3020:WP:NOT
3012:WP:DIR
3008:WP:NOT
2984:&
2974:WP:NOT
2788:do not
2615:WP:NOT
2407:mhking
2403:WP:TVS
1958:Monday
1924:WP:NOT
1662:WP:NOT
1626:Calton
1358:(talk)
1205:WP:NOT
1098:Trivia
1093:(2003)
1041:7 days
685:7 days
350:WT:NOT
330:, and
320:policy
200:29,409
128:45,133
102:Hiding
67:Inline
49:Visual
4909:Space
4849:talk
4762:Space
4567:cobra
4563:Cyber
4502:PyTom
4467:PyTom
4359:Hobit
4344:Pytom
4302:Masem
3977:Focus
3867:PyTom
3710:WP:EV
3665:lists
3537:cobra
3533:Cyber
3481:fewer
3445:cobra
3441:Cyber
2752:Pytom
2727:PyTom
2723:WP:5P
2709:Space
2627:stuff
2580:Hobit
2353:Hobit
2308:Hobit
2259:Hobit
2222:Hobit
1856:Focus
1725:Focus
1423:Talk
1166:ended
797:Index
777:Seek
725:page.
441:Index
421:Seek
369:page.
202:edits
130:edits
5034:talk
5015:Rich
5004:The
4993:talk
4974:talk
4966:here
4904:From
4899:Them
4871:talk
4828:talk
4812:talk
4784:talk
4757:From
4752:Them
4733:talk
4666:and
4664:WP:V
4654:talk
4622:talk
4601:talk
4582:ASEM
4559:" --
4543:talk
4529:talk
4506:talk
4471:talk
4305:Ikip
4279:talk
4254:ASEM
4207:talk
4169:talk
4131:talk
4125:. --
4103:ASEM
4062:Tone
4059:. --
4041:talk
4022:talk
3944:talk
3890:talk
3871:talk
3853:talk
3845:real
3773:ASEM
3696:talk
3674:talk
3647:talk
3618:talk
3597:talk
3580:talk
3566:per
3555:talk
3517:talk
3503:talk
3489:talk
3343:talk
3337:. --
3294:talk
3184:talk
3157:ASEM
3138:talk
3120:per
3101:WP:N
3086:ASEM
3067:talk
3010:and
2994:talk
2913:talk
2868:talk
2771:talk
2731:talk
2704:From
2699:Them
2635:talk
2619:WP:N
2584:talk
2562:talk
2511:Talk
2491:talk
2474:talk
2451:talk
2428:talk
2411:talk
2388:talk
2357:talk
2334:talk
2312:talk
2294:talk
2263:talk
2245:talk
2226:talk
2208:talk
2194:talk
2118:talk
2114:Ikip
2099:ASEM
2086:talk
2082:Ikip
2049:and
2024:talk
1978:talk
1962:last
1935:6403
1930:Cabe
1920:vote
1824:talk
1810:talk
1804:. --
1788:talk
1763:talk
1759:Ikip
1691:talk
1687:Ikip
1674:talk
1668:. --
1651:talk
1647:Ikip
1630:Talk
1624:. --
1622:here
1618:here
1614:here
1598:talk
1594:Ikip
1582:6403
1577:Cabe
1542:talk
1536:. --
1487:talk
1436:and
1397:talk
1371:ASEM
1325:ASEM
1304:talk
1280:ASEM
1263:talk
1231:ASEM
1213:talk
1207:? --
1195:here
1186:here
766:and
410:and
180:talk
166:undo
161:edit
108:talk
94:edit
5036:) (
4946:or
4938:or
4873:) (
4844:DGG
4745:why
4603:) (
4545:) (
4434:JJL
4341:DGG
4209:) (
4171:) (
4077:vvv
4018:JJL
3736:'s
2889:you
2885:you
2390:) (
2277:any
2189:DGG
1972:.
1966:can
1567:not
1497:any
1225:WGN
5055::
5040:)
5025:.
5021:,
4995:)
4976:)
4877:)
4851:)
4830:)
4814:)
4794:--
4786:)
4735:)
4656:)
4630:)
4607:)
4589:)
4549:)
4531:)
4508:)
4473:)
4281:)
4213:)
4175:)
4110:)
4043:)
4024:)
3946:)
3873:)
3780:)
3719:un
3676:)
3620:)
3599:)
3582:)
3557:)
3519:)
3505:)
3491:)
3414:.
3288:--
3164:)
3093:)
3044:.
2980:,
2956:,
2952:,
2948:,
2733:)
2664:|
2586:)
2556:--
2493:)
2476:)
2453:)
2430:)
2413:)
2394:)
2359:)
2336:)
2314:)
2296:)
2265:)
2247:)
2239:--
2228:)
2210:)
2196:)
2155:un
2142:.
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