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== RFC: Can background info be included to a bio article when the article creates the false perception that subject was the only media-related death at an event? == | |||
{{WikiProject History of photography|class=C}} | |||
Can background info be included to a bio article when the article creates the false perception that subject was the only media-related death at an event? ] (]) 07:32, 6 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:There is no "false perception" except on the part of people with a severe reading comprehension problem. | |||
:The article states that this: ''''' the only photojournalist covering the event to be killed in the attacks.''''' | |||
:You're alleging that readers would instead understand this: ''''' the only media-related death in the attacks.''''' | |||
:Readers are not stupid. They can generally read plain English. ] (]) 19:19, 6 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
===Proposed text=== | |||
{{quotation|'''Biggart and other US media-related, terrorist-related deaths''' | |||
:Bill Biggart was not the only media-related death or photojournalist to die from the attack on the World Trade Center. According to the ], which counts both journalists and media workers, there were eight media-related deaths as a result of the September 11 attacks. The IFJ noted that in addition to Bill Biggart, six broadcast TV engineers, who are counted as media workers, died inside Tower One where they worked. The IFJ also reported that another freelance professional photojournalist, Thomas Pecorelli, was killed as he was a passenger on the American Airlines flight that was the first airplane flown into the WTC. Biggart, however, remains the only photojournalist to die while reporting the event. | |||
:Biggart was one of 31 to 37 journalists and one of 100 media workers who died in 2001 worldwide depending on the source used. Paris-based ] reported that 31 journalists were killed worldwide while reporting in 2001. New York-based ], using a different counting standards, listed 37 journalists who died in 2001, including US journalists Biggart and ], a photo editor, who died on 5 October from on of the serial anthrax attacks following 9/11. The IFJ, using an expansive definition that includes workers in addition to journalists, reported that 100 media workers were killed around the world in 2001. | |||
:''Other journalists and media workers killed at the World Trade Center'' | |||
* Rod Coppola, TV engineer for WNET-TV, WTC (North Tower) | |||
* Donald DiFranco, TV engineer for WABC-TV, WTC (North Tower) | |||
* Steve Jacobson, TV engineer for WPIX-TV, WTC (North Tower) | |||
* Bob Pattison, TV engineer for WCBS-TV, WTC (North Tower) | |||
* Thomas Pecorelli, professional freelance photojournalist, American Airlines Flight 11 passenger | |||
* Isias Rivera, TV engineer for WCBS-TV, WTC (North Tower) | |||
* William Steckman, TV engineer for WNBC-TV | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{Image requested|in=the United States|journalists}} | |||
===Consensus Discussion=== | |||
==Notability== | |||
Do you '''Support''' the inclusion of the section, which helps the reader, or do you '''Oppose''' it because it's not relevant to the biography? | |||
Delete this minor footnote in the September 11th story. He's not notable enough to merit an entire article.] (]) 00:46, 27 February 2013 (UTC)Beingsshepherd | |||
* '''Support''' The lead states that Biggart was the "only photojournalist" and although this is qualified with "only photojournalist covering" or reporting the event, the word "only" and the fact that the information that qualifies "only" has been missing, misleads readers into a false assumption that Biggart was the only journalist or media worker to have died in the WTC attacks or they don't have enough information to evaluate the statement(s). The fact that there were others is well documented and is not in dispute. The question is whether the fact should be in the article, whether it's relevant to Biggart, and whether it needs a section in the article for clarification. I support the inclusion of this fact in both the lead and as a section. Not to include it in either the lead or as a section would introduce POV into the article. The information is needed for WP:NPOV and for context about Biggart and his role as the "only photojournalist", and so I believe it is also relevant to the bio. My opinion is, Let the readers decide if they want to know more and read it/not read it and let them make their own evaluation of its merit.] (]) 09:00, 6 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
'''Oppose''' | |||
<span style="color:blue">''The lead states that Biggart was the "only photojournalist" and although this is qualified with "only photojournalist covering" or reporting the event...''</span> No, it says that he is ''the only photojournalist covering the event to be killed in the attacks'', which comes from the source cited for that statement. It does not say "he was the only photojournalist" or "only photojournalist covering or reporting the event". This is a deliberate lie on your part. Stop misrepresenting what the sentence says. | |||
<span style="color:blue">''...misleads readers into a false assumption that Biggart was the only journalist or media worker to have died in the WTC attacks''</span> No it does not. It leads them to understand that the was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event. It does this because that's exactly what it says. | |||
Information in an article must be about that article's subject. Information that is not about that subject does not go in that article. Period. That's plain common sense, and if this little personal agenda of yours hampers your ability to comprehend this, then you need to find another Web hobby. You have had this explained to you, and a requested Third Opinion supported this, yet you edited against that finding anyway, while simultaneously trying to prolong the matter with another discussion. If you want to hold a consensus discussion, that's perfectly fine. But you will not revert the article until that discussion is '''concluded'''. The next time you engage in edit warring, you '''will''' be blocked from editing. 19:21, 6 March 2013 (UTC) ] (]) 19:19, 6 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
*'''Oppose''' inclusion of the section as written - too much detail not relevant to this photographer. Some of it may be usable as prose or footnotes. The current article's sentence might be rephrased <code>the only photojournalist to be killed in the attacks, among those covering the event</code>. This emphasizes his solo death, while it avoids any hint that he was the only photographer. '''Furthermore:''' | |||
# Crtew, your RFC question is biased by the inclusion of reasons. It's better to let people state their own reasons, rather than preloading the question with the reasons you see. Should be simply: <code>"Do you '''Support''' the inclusion of the section, or '''Oppose''' it?"</code> | |||
# It's called "Discussion", not "Consensus Discussion". See prior RFCs as examples. | |||
--] (]) 07:25, 7 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:<small>The following comment was moved out from inside my comment, and refers only to my "might be rephrased", above --] (]) 02:48, 8 March 2013 (UTC)</small> | |||
:'''Comment:''' I like your wording here.] (]) 08:50, 7 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
*'''Oppose''' Inclusion of the section as written, as it's way off topic. The article is only about Mr. Biggart, and doesn't need to list all these other folks, just rewrite the one sentence in question so as not to state or imply that he was the only photojournalist who happened to be present, but rather the only one covering the event (per <s>Crtew's</s> Lexein's suggestion, e.g.). ] (]) 19:17, 7 March 2013 (UTC) (ammended 22:45, 7 March 2013 (UTC)) | |||
:As much as I would love to take credit for this thoughtful edit :-) it was actually Lexein's idea.] (]) 22:42, 7 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
Lexein, how is your proposed rewording different in meaning? The only difference between that wording and the current one is that the current one is clear and straightforward (''"He was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event"''), and this one you've proposed is needlessly tortured. The current wording ''does'' emphasize his solo death, and does not convey any hint that he was the "only photographer", which is a silly thing to infer, since everyone and their grandmother has seen the event in photos taken from a gazillion different angles, from different burroughs, from different cities in New Jersey, on video and in still photos, etc. How does the current wording "state or imply that he was the only photojournalist present"? | |||
:The sources cited would suggest otherwise. ] (]) 07:12, 27 February 2013 (UTC) | |||
Siafu, in what way was he the only one covering the event? Or did you word that statement incorrectly? You don't ''seriously'' there was only one photojournalist covering the 9/11 attacks, do you? (I apologize if I'm misunderstanding you, but I'm just going off of what you wrote.) | |||
IF that's true, then the article should contain their attestations, rather than just pointing to them. Seemingly, his only significance, is once having taken photographs (of an unknown quality) in an interesting place at an interesting time. | |||
' |
Also, what's wrong with calling this a consensus discussion? Isn't that was it is? Isn't that what Crtew wanted? ] (]) 00:02, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | ||
::My rewording removes all ambiguity, acknowledging the multitude of photogs explicitly, and it's not at all "tortured." We disagree, no big deal. And btw, "Consensus Discussion" implies that it's a discussion about consensus, which it isn't: Crtew took some snarky heat from another editor about that phrasing, and I just wanted to state the facts plainly, sans snark. --] (]) 02:48, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Yes, I want a consensus discussion and the two who have offered their opinions on this matter have been helpful. By just eliminating ONLY or any indication in the article that he was one media-related death, then that would make me happy.] (]) 23:24, 7 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:"''should contain their attestations, rather than just pointing to them...''" I don't know what you mean by this. Can you clarify? | |||
::There is no indication that he was the only "media-related death". That is an idea of your sheer invention, which is born out of your own person agenda (which you mentioned , and which violates ]), and not something that any reasonably intelligent person would make. The idea that anyone would infer one idea from the other is just plain inane. | |||
Currently, one has to explore external sources to appraise Biggart's noteworthiness; which should be conveniently evidenced within the encyclopaedic article. | |||
: |
::Biggart's notability is that he was the only photojournalist killed in the event while covering it, which the article explicitly states, and which is supported by the cited sources. How do we describe that without the word "only"? ] (]) 00:05, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | ||
:::Nightscream, you seem to be ignoring the ''intent'' of Siafu, Crtew and I, which is to reduce possible misunderstanding by native and non-native English speakers alike, due to the densely packed form "He was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event". My final suggestion: "Among the many photojournalists covering the towers, he was the only one killed." --] (]) 02:48, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
Are they the rarest people in the world? ] (]) 01:11, 28 February 2013 (UTC)Beingsshepherd | |||
::::That further revision is better. I do like the specificity on photojournalists and the clarity that you are trying to achieve. The other photojournalist was on the plane that was flown into the tower and he was not covering the event. Still, I still don't understand why we can't even have one single sentence that says something about this other photojournalist. Is that so wrong to give people information that would qualify the emphasis on photojournalists and information for them to evaluate the importance of covering. At no time in this discussion, before or now, has this fact been in dispute. So why should this fact be a secret? One sentence cannot detract from the relevance of the bio, can it? For me, not.] (]) 09:41, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:"They" ''who''? ] (]) 05:36, 28 February 2013 (UTC) | |||
::::Continuing the thought: The killing of a journalist is a rare event in the United States. A little bit of context introduced here would place Biggart into perspective. There was another journalist in the US who died in a hostage situation back to the 1970s but this wasn't called terrorism back then. Biggart's death is the beginning of a new trend, which may be a different angle on his notability. The anthrax death follows shortly afterward. Daniel Pearl comes later, too. Just focusing on Biggart would not allow a reader to gain a more in depth way to learn about him or make the reasonable connections with this phenomenon and others like him. Let's say we had other sources available that would make this article worthy of feature status. There would be no way to achieve a "comprehensive" article under featured article requirements (see ]) given the way the direction we seem to be taking. ] (]) 10:38, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
<span style="color:blue">''Nightscream, you seem to be ignoring the ''intent'' of Siafu, Crtew and I, which is to reduce possible misunderstanding by native and non-native English speakers alike, due to the densely packed form "He was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event".''</span> Densely packed? It's a sentence. It's not "densely packed", it's direct and straightforward in the information that it conveys. Your final suggestion merely shuffles the different aspects of the sentence around in a way that is less straightforward, and less intuitive vis a vis the way sentences are written. Again, how does the current wording raise possible misunderstanding of a meaning that it does not contain nor resemble? Who are these native and non-native English speakers whose reading comprehension is so compromised that that you can make this assertion about them? Your wording does not "remove all ambiguity", it introduces it where there previously was none. | |||
working photojournalists (obviously). ] (]) 00:50, 1 March 2013 (UTC)Beingsshepherd | |||
<span style="color:blue">And btw, "Consensus Discussion" implies that it's a discussion about consensus, which it isn't: Crtew took some snarky heat from another editor about that phrasing, and I just wanted to state the facts plainly, sans snark.</span> This is a consensus discussion. That's what Crtew and I agreed upon, and that's what we called for. | |||
::This conversation doesn't seem to be improving the article. BS, you may nominate for delete if you think this. And please leave a person a message when you revert as a courtesy and as way to track changes. ] (]) 01:24, 1 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
<span style="color:blue">''I still don't understand why we can't even have one single sentence that says something about this other photojournalist.''</span> Because the article isn't about him. Why is this so difficult for you to understand? | |||
:::'''''working photojournalists (obviously).''''' Well, it wasn't obvious, otherwise I would've known what you meant. No, working photojournalists are not "rare", but that's irrelevant to the issue, since notability for Misplaced Pages's purposes isn't determined by rarity, as you should know. It's determined by coverage in secondary sources. | |||
<span style="color:blue">''Biggart's death is the beginning of a new trend, which may be a different angle on his notability.''</span> The article is not about such a "trend", nor are there sources for this in the article. Please see ] and ]. If you can find sources that support this idea, then adding them along with this idea would be fine. Without such sources, this is an idea of your invention, and adding it to the article is not permitted. Again, these are '''core policies''', yet you speak as if you're completely unaware of them. ] (]) 15:32, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:::'''''This conversation doesn't seem to be improving the article.''''' It wasn't intended to. It's a notability discussion, not a content discussion. ] (]) 01:41, 1 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Do you see this point of notability in this article? Do you see that this is a talk page? On talk pages, one may talk about research leads -- points to search for. Do you see the difference and where policy applies and where there is free room for discussion? And for the last time, please stop speaking for me. ] (]) 16:52, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
As I see it, the mystery of the "only working" photojournalist should now be clear to one and all with the most recent expansion of the article. There was another photojournalist who was killed in the attacks but he was a passenger on the AA flight. I have listed his name as well as the 6 TV engineers to add perspective. Hopefully readers in the future will have this point clarified (although a rewrite up top at the lead will still need to happen first). I know you're having a different conversation but if BS is not seeing how the person is notable (and we both believe he is), then perhaps the article itself (from that start point) was at fault. I hope the additional edits since your conversation began helps. The article now 1) includes notable exhibits of his work both discussed at the top and detailed below, 2) clarifies through additional context the significance of his death, 3) provides more background material about his career and creative work, and 4) uses an infobox to help readers discover Biggart quicker faster than before. Peace, ] (]) 20:23, 1 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
::I have no idea what you're trying to say with regarding to "research leads", and I am not "speaking for you". Why do you keep accusing me of this? Where have I spoken for you? ] (]) 18:06, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
== Context == | |||
I've reverted the deletion of section called "Context." Let's talk about it first and see if we can come to a consensus! | |||
:::A wording occurs to me. How about this: ''Although Biggart was not the only journalist killed in the attacks, he is notable for being the only professional photographer killed while covering it''. How does that sound? ] (]) 21:22, 8 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
If you want to retitle it, I have no problem with that (please feel free to do so), but the information is relevant to Biggart's case. He was neither the only photojournalist nor the only media worker to die in the WTC attacks. This information, therefore, offers readers perspective and clarity. This is a section and does not diminish from the focus of the article. Moreover, it would be unreasonable to create articles about them as they are not notable. Yet sources at the time mention them in relation to Biggart. Therefore, they properly belong mentioned in this article. ] (]) 20:34, 1 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
== Taxi Driver == | |||
Lists are also appropriate within articles when additional articles would not be suitable as per WP policy.] (]) 20:55, 1 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
Where in the press does it say that Biggart talked to a taxi driver? This is a small matter of verification. His own website is not a reliable, third party. ] (]) 22:03, 6 May 2013 (UTC) | |||
:The issue is not the title of the heading. With regarding the heading, the problem, which I though I made clear in my edit summary, is that context is not provided by a discreet section. Context is provided by virtue of the sources and description of the subject's notability, which should be established in the Lead. | |||
== External links modified == | |||
:Biggart was the only photojournalist to ''cover'' the event to be killed in it (which as it turns out, is what the actually says). Whoever wrote that original passage wasn't accurate in relating that information. The only other photojournalist on that list was Thomas Pecorelli, who died aboard American Airlines Flight 11, and was therefore not covering the event. The others on that list are not journalists at all, but TV engineers. TV engineers are not journalists. They're a type of electrical engineer, whose work is mechanical or technical, rather than editorial or journalistic. I have amended the sentence in the Lead that describes Biggart's notability, making it clear that he was the only photojournalist killed in the event who was '''covering''' it. | |||
Hello fellow Wikipedians, | |||
:The people on that list are not relevant to Biggart, or to his notability, and their inclusion in the article comes across as an attempt to implicitly mitigate the prior description of Biggart's notability. If you want to discuss or dispute a subject's notability, or the manner in which their notability is ''described'', then do so on the talk page. You don't do an end run around that quite proper protocol by including information not relevant to the subject. Obviously, lists are appropriate in articles, but only when they are ''relevant'' to the article subject. None of those TV engineers, nor Pecorelli are relevant to Biggart, and I am unaware of any policy that says otherwise (though please point me to the policy in question you were referring to that you feel makes those TV engineers relevant to Biggart). | |||
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:If this does not convince you, I will request Third Opinion. Let me know. Thanks. ] (]) 02:14, 2 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/20130203060436/http://www.newseum.org/scripts/journalist/main.htm to http://www.newseum.org/scripts/Journalist/main.htm | |||
When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the ''checked'' parameter below to '''true''' to let others know. | |||
::I would also suggest that you learn a bit more about policy yourself, and about copyright infringement, before , along with the source cited for that material, with the false accusation to that effect. Even if you felt that the material was not properly paraphrased ''enough'', why would you ''remove the citation'' for it??? Or argue that different information can be added to it? ] (]) 03:18, 2 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
{{sourcecheck|checked=false}} | |||
:::I didn't make a false accusation. There are policies about the extent of material/quotes taken and on the close paraphrasing of material and the line over which a copy vio is crossed. Policies are also clear: all copy vios must be deleted immediately. | |||
Cheers.—]<small><sub style="margin-left:-14.9ex;color:green;font-family:Comic Sans MS;">]:Online</sub></small> 15:31, 25 February 2016 (UTC) | |||
::: Moreover, the source for the old as well as the new information under section Sept 11 is not reliable and was/is the only source. A person's web site, even in a memorial, is a self-interested source. It would be alright to use this site if you could verify the information elsewhere and add it along with others. I haven't yet found a taxi in any other source, and I've read them all. Perhaps I missed it, but I suggest you find other sources for the weak information added. Find secondary sources. The tone of the article switches over to non-encyclopedia writing at this point, too. | |||
== External links modified == | |||
:::The fact that you reverted the context section with my note on this talk page and without holding a conversation about the matter is disheartening for collaboration.] (]) 08:53, 2 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
Hello fellow Wikipedians, | |||
As for the relevance of the additional material: "No man is an island." It's important to understand that he was the "only" "working" photojournalist -- without the other information you might as well delete those two words. Another photojournalist died in that attack. Without the other section, we don't understand the importance of "working." He was not the "only" media worker. Nobody is saying that a media worker is a journalist, but the work is related. There were 8 media-related deaths in that attack, as sourced. The article seems to exclude this information in favor of "a narrative" that he was the lone media death. That's not accurate. The other deaths, again, do not diminish from his importance. Articles should provide a perspective that places the person in relation to what is going on around them. ] (]) 09:38, 2 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
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== Assessment == | |||
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20140222053532/http://www.filmjournal.com/pdn/esearch/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1991209 to http://www.filmjournal.com/pdn/esearch/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1991209 | |||
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How is this article still a stub-class? Please explain using the standard assessment. ] (]) 20:57, 1 March 2013 (UTC) | |||
{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}} | |||
== Copyright Vio == | |||
Cheers.—] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">(])</span> 04:41, 20 July 2017 (UTC) | |||
The new material that replaced my citation needed template and added later today is a clear copyright violation. First, the source is not independent. Second, the paraphrase is so close and the extent so much that it violates WP policy outright and has to be stricken immediately. ] (]) 21:15, 1 March 2013 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 18:39, 1 January 2025
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RFC: Can background info be included to a bio article when the article creates the false perception that subject was the only media-related death at an event?
Can background info be included to a bio article when the article creates the false perception that subject was the only media-related death at an event? Crtew (talk) 07:32, 6 March 2013 (UTC)
- There is no "false perception" except on the part of people with a severe reading comprehension problem.
- The article states that this: the only photojournalist covering the event to be killed in the attacks.
- You're alleging that readers would instead understand this: the only media-related death in the attacks.
- Readers are not stupid. They can generally read plain English. Nightscream (talk) 19:19, 6 March 2013 (UTC)
Proposed text
Biggart and other US media-related, terrorist-related deaths
- Bill Biggart was not the only media-related death or photojournalist to die from the attack on the World Trade Center. According to the International Federation of Journalists, which counts both journalists and media workers, there were eight media-related deaths as a result of the September 11 attacks. The IFJ noted that in addition to Bill Biggart, six broadcast TV engineers, who are counted as media workers, died inside Tower One where they worked. The IFJ also reported that another freelance professional photojournalist, Thomas Pecorelli, was killed as he was a passenger on the American Airlines flight that was the first airplane flown into the WTC. Biggart, however, remains the only photojournalist to die while reporting the event.
- Biggart was one of 31 to 37 journalists and one of 100 media workers who died in 2001 worldwide depending on the source used. Paris-based Reporters Without Borders reported that 31 journalists were killed worldwide while reporting in 2001. New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, using a different counting standards, listed 37 journalists who died in 2001, including US journalists Biggart and Robert Stevens, a photo editor, who died on 5 October from on of the serial anthrax attacks following 9/11. The IFJ, using an expansive definition that includes workers in addition to journalists, reported that 100 media workers were killed around the world in 2001.
- Other journalists and media workers killed at the World Trade Center
- Rod Coppola, TV engineer for WNET-TV, WTC (North Tower)
- Donald DiFranco, TV engineer for WABC-TV, WTC (North Tower)
- Steve Jacobson, TV engineer for WPIX-TV, WTC (North Tower)
- Bob Pattison, TV engineer for WCBS-TV, WTC (North Tower)
- Thomas Pecorelli, professional freelance photojournalist, American Airlines Flight 11 passenger
- Isias Rivera, TV engineer for WCBS-TV, WTC (North Tower)
- William Steckman, TV engineer for WNBC-TV
Consensus Discussion
Do you Support the inclusion of the section, which helps the reader, or do you Oppose it because it's not relevant to the biography?
- Support The lead states that Biggart was the "only photojournalist" and although this is qualified with "only photojournalist covering" or reporting the event, the word "only" and the fact that the information that qualifies "only" has been missing, misleads readers into a false assumption that Biggart was the only journalist or media worker to have died in the WTC attacks or they don't have enough information to evaluate the statement(s). The fact that there were others is well documented and is not in dispute. The question is whether the fact should be in the article, whether it's relevant to Biggart, and whether it needs a section in the article for clarification. I support the inclusion of this fact in both the lead and as a section. Not to include it in either the lead or as a section would introduce POV into the article. The information is needed for WP:NPOV and for context about Biggart and his role as the "only photojournalist", and so I believe it is also relevant to the bio. My opinion is, Let the readers decide if they want to know more and read it/not read it and let them make their own evaluation of its merit.Crtew (talk) 09:00, 6 March 2013 (UTC)
Oppose The lead states that Biggart was the "only photojournalist" and although this is qualified with "only photojournalist covering" or reporting the event... No, it says that he is the only photojournalist covering the event to be killed in the attacks, which comes from the source cited for that statement. It does not say "he was the only photojournalist" or "only photojournalist covering or reporting the event". This is a deliberate lie on your part. Stop misrepresenting what the sentence says.
...misleads readers into a false assumption that Biggart was the only journalist or media worker to have died in the WTC attacks No it does not. It leads them to understand that the was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event. It does this because that's exactly what it says.
Information in an article must be about that article's subject. Information that is not about that subject does not go in that article. Period. That's plain common sense, and if this little personal agenda of yours hampers your ability to comprehend this, then you need to find another Web hobby. You have had this explained to you, and a requested Third Opinion supported this, yet you edited against that finding anyway, while simultaneously trying to prolong the matter with another discussion. If you want to hold a consensus discussion, that's perfectly fine. But you will not revert the article until that discussion is concluded. The next time you engage in edit warring, you will be blocked from editing. 19:21, 6 March 2013 (UTC) Nightscream (talk) 19:19, 6 March 2013 (UTC)
- Oppose inclusion of the section as written - too much detail not relevant to this photographer. Some of it may be usable as prose or footnotes. The current article's sentence might be rephrased
the only photojournalist to be killed in the attacks, among those covering the event
. This emphasizes his solo death, while it avoids any hint that he was the only photographer. Furthermore:
- Crtew, your RFC question is biased by the inclusion of reasons. It's better to let people state their own reasons, rather than preloading the question with the reasons you see. Should be simply:
"Do you Support the inclusion of the section, or Oppose it?"
- It's called "Discussion", not "Consensus Discussion". See prior RFCs as examples.
--Lexein (talk) 07:25, 7 March 2013 (UTC)
- The following comment was moved out from inside my comment, and refers only to my "might be rephrased", above --Lexein (talk) 02:48, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- Comment: I like your wording here.Crtew (talk) 08:50, 7 March 2013 (UTC)
- Oppose Inclusion of the section as written, as it's way off topic. The article is only about Mr. Biggart, and doesn't need to list all these other folks, just rewrite the one sentence in question so as not to state or imply that he was the only photojournalist who happened to be present, but rather the only one covering the event (per
Crtew'sLexein's suggestion, e.g.). siafu (talk) 19:17, 7 March 2013 (UTC) (ammended 22:45, 7 March 2013 (UTC))
- As much as I would love to take credit for this thoughtful edit :-) it was actually Lexein's idea.Crtew (talk) 22:42, 7 March 2013 (UTC)
Lexein, how is your proposed rewording different in meaning? The only difference between that wording and the current one is that the current one is clear and straightforward ("He was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event"), and this one you've proposed is needlessly tortured. The current wording does emphasize his solo death, and does not convey any hint that he was the "only photographer", which is a silly thing to infer, since everyone and their grandmother has seen the event in photos taken from a gazillion different angles, from different burroughs, from different cities in New Jersey, on video and in still photos, etc. How does the current wording "state or imply that he was the only photojournalist present"?
Siafu, in what way was he the only one covering the event? Or did you word that statement incorrectly? You don't seriously there was only one photojournalist covering the 9/11 attacks, do you? (I apologize if I'm misunderstanding you, but I'm just going off of what you wrote.)
Also, what's wrong with calling this a consensus discussion? Isn't that was it is? Isn't that what Crtew wanted? Nightscream (talk) 00:02, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- My rewording removes all ambiguity, acknowledging the multitude of photogs explicitly, and it's not at all "tortured." We disagree, no big deal. And btw, "Consensus Discussion" implies that it's a discussion about consensus, which it isn't: Crtew took some snarky heat from another editor about that phrasing, and I just wanted to state the facts plainly, sans snark. --Lexein (talk) 02:48, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- Yes, I want a consensus discussion and the two who have offered their opinions on this matter have been helpful. By just eliminating ONLY or any indication in the article that he was one media-related death, then that would make me happy.Crtew (talk) 23:24, 7 March 2013 (UTC)
- There is no indication that he was the only "media-related death". That is an idea of your sheer invention, which is born out of your own person agenda (which you mentioned here, and which violates WP:NOTMEMORIAL), and not something that any reasonably intelligent person would make. The idea that anyone would infer one idea from the other is just plain inane.
- Biggart's notability is that he was the only photojournalist killed in the event while covering it, which the article explicitly states, and which is supported by the cited sources. How do we describe that without the word "only"? Nightscream (talk) 00:05, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- Nightscream, you seem to be ignoring the intent of Siafu, Crtew and I, which is to reduce possible misunderstanding by native and non-native English speakers alike, due to the densely packed form "He was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event". My final suggestion: "Among the many photojournalists covering the towers, he was the only one killed." --Lexein (talk) 02:48, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- That further revision is better. I do like the specificity on photojournalists and the clarity that you are trying to achieve. The other photojournalist was on the plane that was flown into the tower and he was not covering the event. Still, I still don't understand why we can't even have one single sentence that says something about this other photojournalist. Is that so wrong to give people information that would qualify the emphasis on photojournalists and information for them to evaluate the importance of covering. At no time in this discussion, before or now, has this fact been in dispute. So why should this fact be a secret? One sentence cannot detract from the relevance of the bio, can it? For me, not.Crtew (talk) 09:41, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- Continuing the thought: The killing of a journalist is a rare event in the United States. A little bit of context introduced here would place Biggart into perspective. There was another journalist in the US who died in a hostage situation back to the 1970s but this wasn't called terrorism back then. Biggart's death is the beginning of a new trend, which may be a different angle on his notability. The anthrax death follows shortly afterward. Daniel Pearl comes later, too. Just focusing on Biggart would not allow a reader to gain a more in depth way to learn about him or make the reasonable connections with this phenomenon and others like him. Let's say we had other sources available that would make this article worthy of feature status. There would be no way to achieve a "comprehensive" article under featured article requirements (see WP:Assessment) given the way the direction we seem to be taking. Crtew (talk) 10:38, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
Nightscream, you seem to be ignoring the intent of Siafu, Crtew and I, which is to reduce possible misunderstanding by native and non-native English speakers alike, due to the densely packed form "He was the only photojournalist killed while covering the event". Densely packed? It's a sentence. It's not "densely packed", it's direct and straightforward in the information that it conveys. Your final suggestion merely shuffles the different aspects of the sentence around in a way that is less straightforward, and less intuitive vis a vis the way sentences are written. Again, how does the current wording raise possible misunderstanding of a meaning that it does not contain nor resemble? Who are these native and non-native English speakers whose reading comprehension is so compromised that that you can make this assertion about them? Your wording does not "remove all ambiguity", it introduces it where there previously was none.
And btw, "Consensus Discussion" implies that it's a discussion about consensus, which it isn't: Crtew took some snarky heat from another editor about that phrasing, and I just wanted to state the facts plainly, sans snark. This is a consensus discussion. That's what Crtew and I agreed upon, and that's what we called for.
I still don't understand why we can't even have one single sentence that says something about this other photojournalist. Because the article isn't about him. Why is this so difficult for you to understand?
Biggart's death is the beginning of a new trend, which may be a different angle on his notability. The article is not about such a "trend", nor are there sources for this in the article. Please see WP:Verifiability and WP:No Original Research. If you can find sources that support this idea, then adding them along with this idea would be fine. Without such sources, this is an idea of your invention, and adding it to the article is not permitted. Again, these are core policies, yet you speak as if you're completely unaware of them. Nightscream (talk) 15:32, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- Do you see this point of notability in this article? Do you see that this is a talk page? On talk pages, one may talk about research leads -- points to search for. Do you see the difference and where policy applies and where there is free room for discussion? And for the last time, please stop speaking for me. Crtew (talk) 16:52, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- I have no idea what you're trying to say with regarding to "research leads", and I am not "speaking for you". Why do you keep accusing me of this? Where have I spoken for you? Nightscream (talk) 18:06, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
- A wording occurs to me. How about this: Although Biggart was not the only journalist killed in the attacks, he is notable for being the only professional photographer killed while covering it. How does that sound? Nightscream (talk) 21:22, 8 March 2013 (UTC)
Taxi Driver
Where in the press does it say that Biggart talked to a taxi driver? This is a small matter of verification. His own website is not a reliable, third party. Crtew (talk) 22:03, 6 May 2013 (UTC)
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