website statistics

Archive for the 'Obituary' Category

All the Rage #15: Seven Words You Can Say on Wikipedia

If it’s Sunday (or, admittedly, sometimes Monday) it’s Blog P.I.’s weekly post about the ten most-edited articles on Wikipedia:

  1. Wall-E model courtesy Andy Castro on Flickr.Article: WALL-E
    Why: Disney-Pixar’s latest movie hit theaters this weekend, and it’s unsurprisingly shaping up to be a hit, posting Pixar’s third-best opening ever.
    Detail: Wikipedia aims to be as impartial as possible, but what can you do when the subject is universally acclaimed? You fine-tune the language and cut back on verbatims, as one editor advises: “Well, as you say, the reaction has been overwhelmingly positive, so it will be difficult to get the reception section sounding anything less than a puff piece. However, and speaking as the editor who added the current version of the reception section, I entirely agree that the reviews should be paraphrased better, with fewer direct quotes.”

  2. Article: The Stolen Earth
    Why: The penultimate episode of the latest run of Doctor Who episodes on BBC One.
    Detail: Which means there’s a very good chance we’ll see the final episode appear in one of these slots next weekend. Of the numerous British articles included in this list over the past few weeks, Doctor Who has ranked the highest most consistently.

  3. Article: 2008 NBA Draft
    Why: If you’ve ever wondered where all these new basketball players come from, perhaps you should learn about the NBA draft.
    Detail: The NBA still hasn’t caught back up with football in national prominence, but basketball fans still eagerly anticipate and closely follow draft night each year. With two televised rounds of thirty picks each and numerous trades, that’s a whole lot of updates on one night — and as Wikirage shows, most edits did occur all on one night.

  4. Article: Night of Champions (2008)
    Why: It’s not the WWF, that’s the World Wildlife Federation. It’s WWE now — World Wrestling Entertainment.
    Detail: If the NBA draft is a bit less-attended than the adventures of the Tenth Doctor and his TARDIS (yes, I’ve been skimming the Doctor Who pages) at least it is a little better-attended than this WWE event. This page was reverted and protected and reverted, but not necessarily due to vandalism. More the problem seems to be enthusiastic but inexperienced editors adding information in the wrong place and even trying to use the page as a forum. This happens often on some popular subjects, and it makes me wonder about members of the WikiProject Professional wrestling. No doubt the project counts among its members some dedicated and knowledgeable editors, but it seems that they find themselves having to undo a lot of the “help” they get. I doubt the same happens at WikiProject Molecular and Cellular Biology.

  5. NBA Draft archive photo from Noam Galai on Flickr.Article: Guitar Hero World Tour
    Why: Previously titled Guitar Hero IV, makers of the next installment of the popular video game series have continued to make new information available over the past few weeks, but was protected from unhelpful help (see above) until early June. Now the gates are wide open.
    Detail: Allowing people to add spurious rumors such as the planned inclusion of a Soulja Boy track with no guitar instrumentation (since removed). Interesting also that video games seem to show up in this list months ahead of release — the title won’t be out until late October — while movies typically don’t appear until the week of release.

  6. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Death and taxes may be inevitable, but only one ranks well in the list of most-edited Wikipedia articles.
    Detail: Passing this week: one of the most influential comedians in my life and the second half of the 20th century, George Carlin. And then some other people, including a 37-year-old American comic book artist of cancer, a 20-year-old Russian-Kazakh model who threw herself from her 9th story Manhattan appartment yesterday afternoon, and the 9-year-old University of Georgia mascot, Uga.

  7. Article: District of Columbia v. Heller
    Why: In the session’s most closely-watched decision, the Court affirmed 5-4 that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to own a firearm.
    Detail: Through the week I’ve been somewhat skeptical of the claim bandied about that the case was the first to rule on the Second Amendment, and here is an amusing smackdown of Slate’s lead legal correspondent, who apparently was among the banditos: “We are well aware of U.S. v. Miller, and know much more about it than the sensationalist writer Lithwick. The article does not say that D.C. v. Heller is the first case to pertain to the Second Amendment or that has incidental remarks that could be interpreted as pertaining to the question of individual-rights vs. collective-rights; it is not the first such case, nor is it the second. It is, however, the first case to definitively or directly or comprehensively address the question.”

  8. George Carlin photo via eyewash design on Flickr.Article: Battlefield: Bad Company
    Why: Not the English rock supergroup, but a new video game from Electronic Arts which “puts the player in a fictional war against Russia, where gamers will lead a squad of AWOL soldiers fighting both Russians and Mercenaries.”
    Detail: I can’t really tell where all the edits went, except that editors have removed some unnecesary sections, but I was a bit surprised to find out that this page has existed since August 2006, presumably when it was first announced.

  9. Article: 2008 WWE Draft
    Why: Did you know the WWF WWE had a draft? Or maybe that should be “draft”? If it wasn’t for Wikipedia and this feature, I wouldn’t.
    Detail: Do you think Vince McMahon is mocking David Stern?

  10. Article: Camp Rock
    Why: The Disney Channel sitcom all but ignored in last week’s edition because I was trying to pay attention at Personal Democracy Forum is back again, down to the tenth slot from the third.
    Detail: For I think the first time, Disney holds the first and last articles on this list.

  11. Holdovers this week: Camp Rock

    Falling off the list: Everything else.

    Recurring themes: Top American film releases, Doctor Who episodes, the NBA, Disney.

    Honorable mention: I would have thought Carlin would have been ranked higher. Instead, it looks as if his page was edited heavily on June 22 but not much thereafter. And while there was some coverage this past week of the young woman who was fired for editing Tim Russert’s article before his death was officially announced, less has been said about Carlin’s article though an edit war of sorts took place here. Several people tried to add the correct data, only to have other editors ask for more information, changing the article back until receiving confirmation.

    Meanwhile, you still can’t say the seven dirty words on television, but as the headline implies, you most certainly can say them on Wikipedia. In the proper context, of course.

P.S. For what it’s worth, I feel compelled to note that I have made a few disclosed edits to a handful of Disney movie articles for distributor Buena Vista. However, I have not contributed to the Disney movies listed here — haven’t been asked and haven’t needed to do so.

Images courtesy andy castro, noamgalai and eyewash design on Flickr.

All the Rage #12: The Neither Tim Russert Nor 3G iPhone Edition

Although All the Rage exists as a feature for the purposes of examining the top 10 most-edited articles on the English-language Wikipedia for the week ending Saturday, sometimes it’s almost more interesting what doesn’t make the list. Today we’ll do both:

  1. UEFA Euro 2008 logoArticle: UEFA Euro 2008
    Why: The 2008 UEFA European Football Championship is under way right now in Austria and Switzerland, and at least some English-speaking country must still be alive.
    Detail: Possibly the UK? British subjects (the articles, not the citizens) dominated the top slot for the past month now, and we can assume plenty of them are involved here.

  2. Article: The Incredible Hulk (film)
    Why: It’s the number one movie in America this week.
    Detail: Just as British articles have been landing in the top 5 edited articles for several weeks now, so have the top-grossing U.S. films on their opening weekends.

  3. Article: Kung Fu Panda
    Why: The number one movie in America last week.
    Detail: See above.

  4. Article: Lukas Podolski
    Why: This Polish-born German soccer player made both goals in a 2-0 victory over Poland on June 8. Then he scored the Germans’ only goal in a 2-1 defeat by Croatia.
    Detail: I’m not sure if he’s just really good or Germany is really just not that good. And if you assumed that the German-language Podolski article would be longer than the English one, as I did until just a moment ago, you’d be wrong.

  5. From the Treaty of Lisbon page on WikipediaArticle: Treaty of Lisbon
    Why: This EU treaty, apparently in the works since at least 2001, was rejected this week by Irish voters, thus throwing its future into question.
    Detail: I’d never heard of this treaty once, I’ll admit. But if I wanted to find out more about it, this is probably the best place to find it. I am sincerely impressed by the quality of the article. When I first saw it, I assumed it was a historical subject that had made Featured Article. Well, it’s not — but it should probably be up for Featured Article status. The editors who assembled this page are among Wikipedia’s most sophisticated.

  6. Article: ICarly
    Why: It’s another one of those Nickelodeon “sitcoms” aimed at “tweenagers”, and it’s back on this list after appearing once, in this feature’s second week.
    Detail: Given the target age range for this show noted above, I’m surprised this show is so frequently edited. It can’t be my sisters and their friends; though they’re a precocious wireless generation more advanced than the wired childhood of my generation, I doubt they’re editing Wikipedia just yet. The youngest editors I’ve seen are still a few years older, maybe late middle school. Does this show have an adult following? A few questions I can’t answer: Why hasn’t Hannah Montana been on this list? And do you think SpongeBob SquarePants would have made this list during its heydey?

  7. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: The most consistently-ranking Wikipedia article on WikiRage is back after a couple off-weeks.
    Detail: If that’s how you want to put it. Passing this week: Washington’s most respected journalist, Tim Russert, the politician uncle of Rep. Jeff Flake, a 28-year-old Armenian chess grandmaster, by heart attack (perhaps even more tragic than the 58-year-old Russert) and the suicide of a Polish-German footballer (stay happy, Lukas Podolski).

  8. Jurassic Park poster, fair use.Article: Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
    Why: It’s the new Coldplay album, released in Europe last week and available in the United States on Tuesday.
    Detail: They are English, but somehow I doubt that’s it. For one thing, they’re in all those iTunes commercials right now. I’m one of those Radiohead fans who views all Coldplay fans as easily entertained if not actual philistines, but I’ll admit the section played before the Apple logo comes onscreen is catchy.

  9. Article: Jurassic Park (film)
    Why: Front-paged on the English Wikipedia as a Featured Article on June 9.
    Detail: Meanwhile, the article about the novel Jurassic Park “needs additional citations for verifications.” That’s a damn shame.

  10. Article: George I of Great Britain
    Why: The Featured Article on June 11.
    Detail: For the first time this week, the first and last articles on this list concern something British.


  • Holdovers this week: Nothing, actually, for just the second time.

  • Falling off the list: Last week’s list.

  • Recurring themes: British articles of all kinds, American blockbuster films, Featured Articles, I try to be polite when I don’t care about the subject.

  • Tim Russert via queenkv on Flickr.Honorable mention: Tim Russert made it just to #24 according to WikiRage as of Sunday afternoon. That’s fewer than the apparently unintentionally hilarious new M. Night Shyamalan flick, the two-weeks out Adam Sandler vehicle, and a Tamil-language film released in “many theaters.” Hmm.

  • On the other hand, according to Brian Cubbison at the Syracuse Post-Standard, Wikipedia beat the AP to announcing Russert’s death on Friday afternoon. John Robinson at the Greensboro News-Record praises Wikipedia for getting there first. Indeed, if you follow breaking news, you know AP almost never gets beaten on getting there first. Plus, I’m pleased that newspapers have reporter-bloggers following Wikipedia this closely.

    But I’d also like to salute the anonymous first-time editor at 66.187.200.74 in New York City for rolling the page back until the rumors could be verified. As I understand it, MSNBC held back the news until it could notify Russert’s wife, Maureen Orth, and the other TV networks held back until NBC News could break it. Plus, the Verifiability requirement for new information is one of the central tenets of Wikipedia. It’s what keeps the sometimes unreliable website anywhere in the neighborhood of reliable. Wikipedia is supposed to be a research site, and it shouldn’t try to be a news site. I suppose that’s what Wikinews is for, but it hasn’t really caught on.

    I don’t really know what else to say about that, except my best to his friends and family. I’m going to miss the hell out of Russert on “Meet”.

  • One more thing: Notice something missing? How about the 3G iPhone? In fact, this article is at #20 overall at the time of this writing. I’m not sure if it’s counting edits still, because the article has been “merged” with iPhone. The announcement last week was covered heavily by the business and tech press in addition to the Apple and gadget blogs, but on this website full of geeks, that’s as good as it can do? Does this bode ill for Apple and the new iPhone, or does it say something about the type of people who are and are not on Wikipedia? I’ll leave you with that thought.

Image courtesy queenkv on Flickr.

McCain Salutes Russert, Obama Makes The Ask

Two e-mails landed in my Gmail inbox late last night, the first from the McCain campaign and the second from Obama’s team. Notice the order and the subject matter:

Gmail inbox: Russert vs. Obama store

In case your eyes are as bad as mine (or you aren’t using Firefox 3.0’s nifty zoom feature) how about we blow up the relevant detail of that image:

Detail of Russert vs. Obama store e-mails

So John McCain’s staff sends out a tribute (complete with video) to the too-soon late, great “Meet the Press” host and NBC Washington bureau chief Tim Russert, and 45 minutes later, Barack Obama’s staff sends out a commercial solicitation. Remember the Titans vs. Buy More Stuff.

I’m reminded of WashingtonPost.com’s botched e-mail alert the morning Sean Taylor died, and just a tiny bit that recent Sunday e-mail from Newsweek that somehow managed to omit that edition’s only negative story about the Obama campaign. This one is a bit more esoteric — how many outside the Beltway are on both candidate’s e-mail lists?

Well, just about any reporter covering national politics. They matter, right? And unlike WPNI’s newspaper and magazine, the Obama camp at least has a rapid response team. I have no doubt this e-mail alert was prepared and schedulded well in advance of Friday afternoon’s terrible news. But because e-mail alerts can be timely, they must be timely. The Obama campaign must know this — after all, they beat all other presidential candidates with the first campaign e-mail of the New Year.

Would it have been so difficult to recycle a few of the candidate’s comments from earlier in the day? They needn’t even go as far as the McCain campaign did — the specially-recorded tribute video is a little more personal than McCain’s tarmac remarks early Friday afternoon, reflecting on the fact that he made 52 appearances on Russert’s “Meet”. [Update: As Sean Hackbarth notes in the comments, this was clearly something McCain himself wanted to do.]

Checking my inbox archives, I see this is the first time the Obama campaign has flogged its online store in an e-mail subject line since the last Christmas shopping season. But they have sent no e-mail acknowledging (let alone mourning) Russert’s untimely passing, and I can’t even find a release on the website. I know the Obama campaign is sort of running against insider Washington, but wasn’t Russert pretty much the best kind possible?

For anyone who bothered to open up those e-mails in succession last night or today, the juxtaposition looks like this:

McCain letter about Russert Obama store e-mail pitch

Especially when you consider that national political reporters who worked alongside or in competition with Russert are the most likely to have noticed this discrepancy, the advantage here goes to McCain.

P.S. The McCain e-mail could use more color and better design, but they should get credit for rendering the text in actual ASCII/Unicode characters.

P.P.S. A personal favorite “Meet the Press” episode was the morning of May 27, 2007, where Russert’s calm, methodical questioning laid bare Bill Richardson’s surprising inability to defend himself on almost anything, from the serious to the trivial. Russert managed to do gotcha without seeming gotcha, and the hour-long interrogation was one of his most effective. That was the real end of Gov. Richardson’s presidential campaign. The transcript is here.

All the Rage #11: Britain’s Got Wikipedians

For the third time in four weeks, an article about a British television show takes the top spot in our exploration of the top 10 most-edited articles on the English-language Wikipedia for the week of June 1 to June 7. Hat tip as usual to WikiRage creator Craig Wood for making this feature possible. Let’s get started:

  1. Article: Britain’s Got Talent
    Britain’s Got Talent on Flickr via garretkeough.Why: Simon Cowell’s latest show actually named its winner in time for last week’s edition, but apparently there was more to stay about it. Sustained editing and discussion of how best to organize the article continued until June 4, but now the edits are trailing off as the article stabilizes.
    Detail: I think for the first time, we have the same #1 two weeks in a row, although if not for week nine’s asterisk edition, I think Indy IV would have preceded it.

  2. Article: Harold Innis
    Why: Featured Article on June 1. Heavily vandalized
    Detail: I had never heard of the guy, but the article certainly demonstrates that he was interesting. But what’s more interesting to me is what appears to be no mere vandalism, but a hacking of the MediaWiki software. But be careful clicking on that link, especially if you have a large monitor. The heavily pixelated background is NSFW in the extreme, though it takes a moment to realize the fact.

  3. Article: Yves Saint Laurent (designer)
    Why: The French fashion designer whom I would not have won an “alive or dead?” guessing game until his death on June 1 was announced.
    Detail: It’s actually a surprisingly short article for a business celebrity or a most-edited page. My guess is that Saint Laurent didn’t do much publicity. The article’s two photos are from when he was fairly young. I can’t ever recall seeing him answer Vanity Fair’s Proust questionnaire like Karl Largerfeld has done. Heck, Lagerfeld picked the music and DJs for a radio station in Grand Theft Auto IV. Yves Saint Laurent, not so much.

  4. Bo Diddley in Japan poster on Flickr via timburts.Article: Bo Diddley
    Why: The American rock singer, songwriter and rectangular guitarist died at age 79 on June 9.
    Detail: I wondered what the last version of the page before his passing was announced looked like, so I looked it up. It’s substantially the same and approximately even the same length, but now is more tightly written. One image has been removed, likely because it wasn’t clearly released under a public license. It may be tempting to think of the latter change as making Wikipedia worse, but Wikipedia is quite conservative when it comes to approving images for use, probably to avoid being sued. This actually makes the “information wants to be free” types on Wikipedia strong defenders of copyright, which is kind of ironic.

  5. Article: Ran (film)
    Why: Featured Article (FA) on June 1.
    Detail: The article is fairly long, but apparently its suitability for the front page fell under dispute almost as soon as it went up. The page seems fine to me, and I’m not sure this wasn’t just a case of a user from WikiProject Music sniffing that his work was better.

  6. Article: Confederate government of Kentucky
    Why: Featured article on June 3.
    Detail: You can always count on certain articles which have reached FA status resulting in some debate on the associated talk page, even though these are pages which have supposedly reached enough stability that they’ve been so approved for the front page. Headline on the latest talk page debate: “’provisional government’ or ’shadow government’ a better term?”

  7. Article: 2008 Danish embassy bombing
    Why: The Danish embassy in Islamabad was the site of a suicide car bombing on June 2, killing five. Al-Qaeda reportedly claimed responsibility on June 5, citing the Jyllands-Posten cartoons as motivation.
    Detail: With no natural disasters to meticulously document this week, Wikipedia’s newshounds instead focused on building up this article. With the breakdown of country-by-country responses and substantial number of news citations (48) it certainly looks more than a little like it.

  8. WWE wax figures on Flickr via greggoconnell.Article: One Night Stand (2008)
    Why: It’s a WWE pay-per-view event that aired on June 1.
    Detail: WWE has been dominating the bottom half of these lists for awhile. Long enough now that maybe we should think about it. Apparently one of the entertainment/media subcultures that has really taken to Wikipedia is professional wrestling and its fans. They may be more active than fans of any other professional sport; playoffs and championships pages sometimes show up here when they come around, but the 2008 NBA Finals are nowhere to be found, though it’s not a bad page. I used to have a WWE-related page watchlisted and for awhile, noted the changes each day. Kudos to WP:PROWRESTLING, or WikiProject Professional wrestling (you don’t capitalize “wrestling”). They’ve created 5 Featured Articles, which is pretty good, considering the subject matter.

  9. Article: Giovani dos Santos
    Why: At first I thought he might be Baby Diego from “Children of Men” but apparently he’s a 19-year-old “attacking midfielder or forward, who plays for Barcelona and the Mexican national team.”
    Detail: Why him, why now? Looks like the surge of interest owes to Santos transferring to Tottenham Hotspur in London, a deal worth between four and eight million pounds.

  10. Article: Night of Champions (2008)
    Why: It’s a pay-per-view WWE event coming up on June 29.
    Detail: “The official theme song is “Devour” by Shinedown.[3]”

  11. Holdovers this week: Britain’s Got Talent

    Falling off the list: Among non-featured articles, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Phoenix (spacecraft), Eurovision Song Contest 2009, Deaths in 2008 (just #15 this week), Nepal, 2008 Sichuan earthquake, Eurovision Song Contest 2008

    Recurring themes: Simon Cowell, professional wrestling

    Honorable mention: Clocking in at #25 is Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2008, the name of which makes you wonder if he ran in 2004 or if Obama supporters want to imply there will be a 2012 re-elect.

Images courtesy garretkeough, timburts and greggoconnell on Flickr.

All the Rage #5: Alien Altissima

Like we always do about this time, let’s check in with the top 10 most edited Wikipedia articles of the past week, courtesy of the online statistical tool WikiRage.

  1. Article: Virginia Tech massacre
    Why: April 16 is the first anniversary of the tragedy in Blacksburg, Virginia.
    Detail: As you might expect, there was some controversy in choosing this to be the Featured Article on the very first anniversary. And yet Wikipedian self-importance still manages to shine through. Take this comment from the Talk page: “Has anyone else brought up the idea that MAYBE Virginia Tech ribbon courtesy KeyExpert on Flickr.it might be a bad idea to list this as a featured article? I wonder how many other mentally disturbed people like that man might think ‘Wow, I might even get a featured article out of doing something like this!’” Um, that may be overstating the case. Others have pointed out that stories only can be Featured once, so this will not be on the cover again. Meanwhile, debate continues about whether the article should be called something else, such as “Virginia Tech shootings,” “Virginia Tech Tragedy” or “Virginia Tech episode,” as some feel the term “massacre” expresses too much a point of view.

  2. Article: Mark Speight
    Why: The British children’s television show host committed suicide by hanging.
    Detail: That increasingly rare (it seems) most-edited article which is not a “FA,” in Wikipedia short hand, this is a story so sad I hesitate to even explain it here. But in short, I first heard of Speight in January when his fiancee and co-host Natasha Collins was found dead in the couple’s bathtub. After a night of hard partying — too hard by any standards: lots of cocaine, vodka and sleeping pills — Collins was found dead in the couple’s bathtub. Whether overdose or overheat from the bath, Collins’ body was scalded by the water. Speight was initially arrested, but her death was soon ruled “death by misadventure.” Distraught, Speight quit his television show in late February, went missing a few weeks later, and was found just this week. I said it was sad. Meanwhile, Wikipedians try to figure out how and what to say about it.

  3. Article: Over Logging
    Why: In happier news, the latest episode of “South Park” again returns to the list of most-edited articles.
    Detail: In one of this season’s better episodes, the Internet “dries up” and the show turns into an extended riff on “The Grapes of Wrath” as Stan’s family heads to “Californee,” where the old-timers believe there’s a “whole mess of Inernet.” The Internet itself is represented as a ginormous Linksys router in an underground military facility, and the humans try to communicate with it like the spaceship from “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” Eventually, Kyle figures out they just need to unplug it from the wall and plug it back in. Meanwhile, Wikipedians wrestle with the question of references — “Ghostbusters”? Almost, but not obvious enough to warrant mention. “Moonraker”? No, that too was riffing on “Close Encounters.” The recently-cancelled “Jericho”? Apparently not enough people have seen the show to agree or disagree.

  4. Article: The Fires of Pompeii
    Mona Lisa in Japanese characters, courtesy ciro@tokyo on Flickr. Why: Here’s where the U.S.-centric bias of this list comes into play: this was the latest episode of “Doctor Who” on BBC One.
    Detail: I can speak at great length about “South Park” and not at all about “Doctor Who” but when it comes to who produces the better articles — it’s the Brits. Perhaps this owes something to the fact that “Doctor Who” has been on the air for much, much longer than even the veteran cartoon show, and perhaps this owes something as well to the fact that more people are involved in writing, acting and shooting those episodes. This seems to generate coverage that “South Park” — usually written by Trey Parker and Matt Stone the week before it airs — just doesn’t get. That said, fans of the Doctor are in the habit of breaking the article into sections, whereas “South Park” fans tend to write one big paragraph summarizing the episode.

  5. Article: Prom Night (2008 film)
    Why: This PG-13 horror/thriller was released in theaters last weekend.
    Detail: The what? The who? I hadn’t even heard of it until just now, but Box Office Mojo says it was the number one grossing film in America last week, and this weekend it’s holding on to third place. The plot summary is very long already, so that appears to be most of the editing activity. And like “American Idol” edits in recent weeks, this article is edited by a significant percentage of unregistered users. In this case, they may even be a majority.

  6. Article: Lisa del Giocondo
    Why: FA on April 13.
    Detail: You know the woman who posed for Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa? No? Well, this is her. The article was the target of an unusual level of vandalism, even for a FA. Worse, most of it wasn’t even clever.

  7. Article: Trevor Immelman
    Why: He beat Tiger Woods to win the 2008 Masters.
    Detail: I think it’s interesting to look at his his article on the day before won and the state of the article today. It’s not substantially longer or better, but if you compare the Biography sections, there is no question the writing is much stronger.

  8. Tree of heaven, the ghetto palm, courtesy spike55151 on Flickr.Article: Ailanthus altissima
    Why: FA on April 15.
    Detail: Yes, but what is it? A tree. The tree of heaven, it’s called in China to which it is native. Unlike most topics, this one has acquired a (potentially short-lasting) editor who has given themselves the handle Ailanthus altissima editor.

  9. Article: List of Omnitrix aliens
    Why: If I understand this correctly, there is a Cartoon Network show called “Ben 10,” and in this show he can turn into a variety of aliens to fight a variety of villains. A bracelet-like device called the Omnitrix allows him to transform into these creatures. I think the show has just completed its run, and now another series is beginning, “Ben 10: Alien Force.”
    Detail: All I can tell you is that apparently there is a lot to be said about these aliens. And all of a sudden, I can imagine what my parents must have thought when I once might have tried to explain the game “Mega Man.”

  10. Article: Rob & Big
    Why: Another recently concluded television series I’ve never heard of.
    Detail: This one ran on MTV2 and seems to have been a reality show about a professional skateboarder and his best friend/bodyguard. This article might be of some interest to the philosophical debate between Wikipedia “mergists” and “separatists” (don’t worry, it’s not like racial separatism). Roughly speaking, the issue at stake is whether more information should be included in a main article to avoid creating too many short pages vs. whether to break out information into multiple pages to avoid making the main article too long. In this case, every single episode of Rob & Big’s three-season run is summarized on this, the main page. My preference would be to create three new pages, one for each season. However, that would leave almost no content on the main page. So what we have here is an article without much information besides capsule summaries of each episode. A real dilemma. But also not of any great importance compared to, say, the Virginia Tech massacre. I’ll be an Eventualist on this one and assume someone else with more knowledge will come along and improve the article another time.

  11. Holdovers this week: For the first time in the five weeks I’ve been writing this, there are none.

    Falling off the list: Everything from last week.

    Recurring themes: Nothing really, besides the predictable prominence of FAs and pop culture.

    Honorable mention: Deaths in 2008, a hardy perennial of the WikiRage top-edited articles, is nowhere to be found this week. Either nobody you’ve heard of died this week (which is probably true) or WikiRage occasionally misses some. (This may have happened last week with the previous episode of “South Park.”) Considering that this page has been edited more than 500 times since April 14, that’s my guess. I’ll look into the situation a little more, but it’s a reminder that on the web, frustratingly, no metric is completely reliable.

Images courtesy KeyExpert, ciro@tokyo and spike555151 on Flickr.

Worst. E-mail Alert. Ever

There is no joy in Washington, D.C. today. As virtually everyone with a television set or Drudge Report bookmark knows by now, Washington Redskins star safety Sean Taylor died early this morning from gunshot wounds incurred while confronting a home invasion in his Miami home.

As a District resident and fan of the Potomac Drainage Basin Indigenous Persons, it’s a gloomy day. But as a subsciber to the Washington Post, it’s even worse. Here is an e-mail alert I received barely two hours ago (at 8:48 a.m. to be specific):

Washington Post's grievously outdated news alert regarding Sean Taylor

I realize that this e-mail alert generally aims to highlight news and opinion from the print edition, but this is obviously one of those times when they should have updated it with information from the web edition. Obviously. Methinks the Post will be getting some angry e-mails about this one.

P.S. My fantasy football season is over, realistically if not mathematically. So what the hell. Here’s my act of solidarity:

Posthumously adding Sean Taylor to my fantasy football league

If you find this less a sign of respect than either creepy or funny, well, you’re probably right.

R.I.P.: Craig Thomas, R-WY

Senator Craig Thomas, R-WY, died earlier tonight.

For those deplorable calculators like myself who know that Wyoming governor Dave Freudenthal is a Democrat, let’s not get ahead of ourselves: the seat won’t be changing hands.

Title 22:

(i) If a vacancy occurs in the office of United States senator or in any state office other than the office of justice of the supreme court and the office of district court judge, the governor shall immediately notify in writing the chairman of the state central committee of the political party which the last incumbent represented at the time of his election under W.S. 22-6-120(a)(vii), or at the time of his appointment if not elected to office. The chairman shall call a meeting of the state central committee to be held not later than fifteen (15) days after he receives notice of the vacancy. At the meeting the state central committee shall select and transmit to the governor the names of three (3) persons qualified to fill the vacancy. Within five (5) days after receiving these three (3) names, the governor shall fill the vacancy by temporary appointment of one (1) of the three (3) to hold the office. If the incumbent who has vacated office did not represent a political party at the time of his election, or at the time of his appointment if not elected to office, the governor shall notify in writing the chairman of all state central committees of parties registered with the secretary of state. The state central committees shall submit to the governor, within fifteen (15) days after notice of the vacancy, the name of one (1) person qualified to fill the vacancy. The governor shall also cause to be published in a newspaper of general circulation in the state notice of the vacancy in office. Qualified persons who do not belong to a party may, within fifteen (15) days after publication of the vacancy in office, submit a petition signed by one hundred (100) registered voters, seeking consideration for appointment to the office. Within five (5) days after receiving the names of qualified persons, the governor shall fill the vacancy by temporary appointment to the office, from the names submitted or from those petitioning for appointment;

Personal memory: Senator Thomas was one of those really approachable people who always smiled when he met young folks like myself on the Hill. I remember talking with him about a 5K or something that he was participating in that week. That guy loved to run.

A Little Bit Quieter Now

You know a medium is no longer in its infancy when you start to read obituaries for its pioneers:

Steve Gilliard, 1966-2007

This weekend, another voice leaves the scene with the passing of Steve Gilliard. In fact, Gilliard had been ailing for some time. His backup blogger Jen stepped up and took over the blog until the end — this weekend, she has replaced the site (one hopes temporarily) with a tribute page. Without question, his passing today is the top story in the leftosphere today.

His is not the only notable departure this year:

Cathy Seipp, 1957-2007

In March, longtime Los Angeles journalist, National Review columnist and blogger Cathy Seipp succumbed after a long battle with cancer. She kept blogging right up to the very end, giving no outward sign that she was about to let go. As with Gilliard and his fellow progressives, her passing was a big deal in conservative quarters — for a time after, her name was even the top search on Technorati.

Seipp, alas, I never crossed paths with. Gilliard and I had a couple run-ins — he slammed me pretty hard when I was still with National Journal, and while we were never going to see eye-to-eye, last summer we had arrived at some kind of mutual respect. If he was biting in his public punditry — at times there was no one more controversial — his private words could be much gentler.

These are not the first bloggers to pass on, but so far they’re the best-known. Others, such as the lesser-known but loyally-followed righty blogger Mad Mikey, have come close and lived to blog the tale. Meantime, at least we can reassure ourselves that these things never really do come in threes.