User talk:Derekjoel/Fear the Fiasco

Latest comment: 14 years ago by Chzz

{{help me}} I need some assistance with general organization. I have attempted to make this page and has been deleted. I am a new user and realize it was probable missing quite a bit. I just put it back together on my subpage. It doesn't have most of the content, but the headings and general structure is there. With content aside, what other characteristics am I missing that would allow me to post the article?

A few issues:
  1. The article contains almost no content. It'll need to have content--or just be a stub before it'll stay as an article.
  2. There's no real assertion of notability, specifically with regards to our guidelines on notability for musical artists and albums, as was stated in the speedy deletion notices you received on your talkpage. //roux   20:30, 6 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

{{help me}} Thank you for the quick response. I'll write the content soon and go from there.

Cool beans. Please only use {{helpme}} for asking questions. And please make sure to read and understand our notability guidelines. Thanks. //roux   20:53, 6 March 2009 (UTC)Reply


{{help me}}Ok, so I am still new to posting an acceptable wikipedia page. I have placed a good amount of content on the band's main page. can i get some direction of where to go from here?

{{help me}} what will it take to post this as a stub? I realize that not all the content can be sited. I'd rather cut it down and have it up there than not at all.

It's all about notability. In order to have an article on Wikipedia, the subject must meet the notability guidelines. The simplest, most important one is the general notability guideline, which says a subject needs significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject. That carefully-worded phrase explains quite a lot;
"Significant coverage" - such as, a number of news articles about the article topic - not passing mentions
Reliable sources - well, this is defined in some detail in WP:RS, but the essence of it is - something that is generally trusted - such as the BBC, CNN, The New York Times. Books are good, too. Blog-sites are rarely reliable.
Independent - we don't use primary sources, such as the persons own website, or their publishers/labels website, or anything like that. We avoid press-releases. We want secondary coverage - other people independently writing about the subject.
In the case of this article, looking on the internet, I am unable to find any appropriate sources, and therefore I think it will be difficult to establish notability. I'm sorry. If a subject hasn't received reasonable coverage, then there are simply not enough facts that can be verified.
I hope that this at least explains things a bit more. For more help, you can either;
  • Leave a message on my own talk page; OR
  • Use a {{helpme}} - please create a new section at the end of your own talk page, put {{helpme}}, and ask your question - remember to 'sign' your name by putting ~~~~ at the end; OR
  • Talk to us live, with this or this.
Best wishes,  Chzz  ►  22:34, 14 August 2009 (UTC)Reply