Meh.. I think you should be proud to have made a convincing argument on the article's
talk page, and influenced the article to be a better-weighted reflection of the
individual's life/career. I don't think your criteria for success should include
"convincing everybody" -- if so, you're just setting yourself up for
frustration :)
I reviewed the comment linked, and also the [[Talk:Kelly Wearstler]] page, and it does
seem to me that the candidate's statement is an inaccurate reflection of what
happened. He states that the primary reason for changes to the article include the
subject's preferences, and a judgment that being a Playboy playmate is
"negative." I don't see evidence of any of that on the talk page. If
you're concerned about ArbCom having reasonable people, you might consider asking him
about the accuracy of his statements. I'd suggest keeping it short, dispassionate, and
to the point; just ask him to reconcile his characterization with the actual article talk
page.
Or, just take the ArbCom candidacy page off your watchlist, and get back to writing great
articles :)
-Pete
On Dec 1, 2011, at 6:37 AM, Sarah Stierch wrote:
Hi everyone,
A few months ago Kelly Wearstler appeared - I think on this list. I had never heard of
her, but, a small stink was being made on her talk page about whether to feature the
Playboy model infobox for her page. So, I took a look, and of course got sucked in. I
rewrote the article and blahblabhlah. One user was claiming that only claim to fame Kelly
Wearstler has is being a Playboy model.
Someone linked me to an interesting comment on some arbcom case. Now, I'm not into
getting involved in the drama llama known as Arbcom, but I'm a bit irked by this
guy's comments here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration_Committee_Elections_Dece…
And I'm not sure the protocol to going about handling this. It really irritates me,
and now he's making some assumption that Kelly " Wearstler herself would
rather that her Wikipedia page emphasize her interior design business rather than her
Playmate past." Uhhh...I wrote the page, to emphasize that she wasn't just a
Playboy model (and consensus agreed on the talk page that it wasn't her main claim to
fame). I also have NEVER MET KELLY WEARSTLER let alone do I own her books, nor did I know
who she was (I'm just that involved in the fashion industry anymore.)...
So, I'm fairly aggravated that this person is claiming that it was Wearstler doing
the manipulating to the article and that by revamping the page I'm saying (or someone
is) that being a Playboy bunny is inherently bad. It states it in the lead that she was
Playboy of the Month, and there is a section for it -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly_Wearstler
Her clothing and interior design items are sold at Bergdorf Goodman (which is a VERY high
end store - think 1% ;-) ) and she's published a number of books including a LA Times
best seller.
Obviously I'm pissed, so how does one go about saying "Listen dude, I didn't
write it FOR her, and if you don't think there's more to her, you need to
really look a little closer," without getting sucked into an Arbcom drama? I try to
assume good faith, that perhaps he's just misunderstanding something, or I don't
know what...
It also doesn't help that I've had artist biographies I've written lately
speedy nominated because the speedy nominators 1) don't know anything about art 2)
don't do their research properly.
So yeah, I'm grumpy.
Sarah
--
Sarah Stierch Consulting
--
Historical, cultural, new media & artistic research & advising.
http://www.sarahstierch.com
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