Jennifer's Body article, and welcome to Wikipedia

edit

Hello, C.S.Strowbridge. In seeing your edit to the Jennifer's Body article, I am not sure what you mean about the audio commentary having revealed that Needy and Chip had sex before the first time we see them have sex in the film. But in the film, that first time we see is clearly presented as their first time. The film plot trumps all; this is why I reverted you on this matter. If you have more to say about this, do so on the article talk page...so that this may be worked out.

Also, judging by the year you joined Wikipedia and your contributions, I see that you can still be considered a fairly new editor here. Thus, I give you this list in order to help your editing here at Wikipedia:

  1. Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not, which summarizes what belongs in Wikipedia and what does not;
  2. Wikipedia:Neutral point of view, which describes Wikipedia's mandatory core approach to neutral, unbiased article-writing;
  3. Wikipedia:No original research, which prohibits the use of Wikipedia to publish personal views and original research of editors and defines Wikipedia's role as an encyclopedia of existing recognized knowledge;
  4. Wikipedia:Verifiability, which explains that it must be possible for readers to verify all content against credible external sources (following the guidance in the Wikipedia:Risk disclaimer that is linked-to at the bottom of every article);
  5. Wikipedia:Reliable sources, which explains what factors determine whether a source is acceptable;
  6. Wikipedia:Citing sources, which describes the manner of citing sources so that readers can verify content for themselves; and
  7. Wikipedia:Manual of Style, which offers a style guide—in general editors tend to acquire knowledge of appropriate writing styles and detailed formatting over time.

These are often abbreviated to WP:NOT, WP:NPOV, WP:NOR, WP:V, WP:RS, WP:CITE, and WP:MOS respectively.

Also, you need to always sign your comments when "talking" on Wikipedia talk pages. To sign your comments, all you have to do is type four tildes (~~~~) beside them.

Take care, and welcome to Wikipedia. Flyer22 (talk) 19:30, 28 December 2009 (UTC)Reply