Message: 9 Date: Sun, 13 Nov 2005 11:20:59 -0600 From: Kelly Martin kelly.lynn.martin@gmail.com Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] Totally unscientific investigation... To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@wikipedia.org Message-ID: bd4c411e0511130920l16ce374dk30a584fd7b43d67f@mail.gmail.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
On 11/12/05, Jimmy Wales jwales@wikia.com wrote:
It'd be a fine thing if all the authors of waaaaaay too many Pokemon articles turned their attention to more "serious" endeavors, but there's no way to make that happen.
Well, we can hope that when they grow up and go to college and eventually move into the real world, they will continue to edit Wikipedia, and hopefully not simply to keep the Pokemon articles up to date with the latest release. Even if only a few percent of them move onto real articles, some good will come of it.
And if not, well, we'll have the best encyclopedia of anime and computer games in the world. There's something to be said for that. [[Exploding sheep]] is a fascinating article, for example.
Kelly
Good lord, can we listen to ourselves?? Since when does any one person have the moral authority over deciding what topics are "serious" or not? The articles stand as they are, many are written pretty well, and that's that. Prompting people that they should spend their time on more "serious" endeavors seems to serve no practical purpose. Most likely, they might take it as an insult and just decide to leave or become vandals. Myself, I've read a few of the Pokemon articles, and having no previous knowledge or interest in them really, found them really quite fascinating and enlightening. Clearly, Pokemon is enormously popular, and any cartoon that is in a position to advertise on a Boeing 747 is culturally relevant. The same arguments leveled against Pokemon could easily be leveled against, say [[baseball]]. After all, what purpose does it serve?? It's not really "serious", and as friends have informed me, large segments of the population find baseball as boring as dust and dry as a desert. Should we tell the baseball people (which includes myself) to do more "serious" things?
darin