Wikipedia:Wikipedia is not a fan website
This is an essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
Wikipedia is a user-edited website, but it is
Warning signs
Selective, biased coverage of history or critical reception
In some musician or actor articles, fan-oriented editors only cover the individuals' successful singles, tours, films and projects, and only positive
Biased, POV form
The article's form may also be non-neutral. On a biased article, there may be a subheading labelled "accolades", where the artist's awards and positive reviews are listed; however, by the use of this subtitle, there is no place for editors to add in negative reviews (a more neutral subheading would be "Reception" or "Critical reception"). Another way that subtitles can be biased is by using dramatic, positively biased language. An artist's history section may read: "Initial stardom", "Rise to fame" and "International superstardom", as opposed to the more neutral subheadings "1970s", "1980s" and "1990s".
Peacock words
Biased Wikipedia articles may also contain a great deal of
- We don't say:"The album XYZ was an instant, massive success".
- We say: "The album XYZ sold 100,000 copies in August 2015 and was on the Billboard top 40 charts (at #35 for two weeks)".
- We don't say: "Foo Barkley (born 1970) is a legendary Nigerian record producer. She was the founder of the highly-acclaimed Foo label in 2001.";
- We say: "Foo Barkley (born 1970) is a Nigerian record producer. She founded the Foo record label in 2001."
One factor that may be influencing fan-oriented editors to use Peacock words is that they are widely used in actor and musician press releases and even in some newspaper and magazine articles about stars. Press releases are self-promotional material penned by an artist's publicist or media relations team, so they are a biased source, and should not be used in Wikipedia.
When newspaper or magazine articles casually refer to DJ XYZ as "legendary" or "highly-acclaimed", this is arguably low-effort writing, because instead of doing research to find out why this DJ has a "legendary" reputation, the author just pops in the peacock word and is done. If a local newspaper casually drops in the word "legendary" before a DJ, actor or singer's name, it probably doesn't merit using the term in a Wikipedia article.
On the other hand, if a major critic writes a substantial piece arguing why actor/musician X is "legendary", giving examples of her achievements, then using a referenced quotation in the article may be appropriate.
For example: "According to music critic Sue Xshosa's book Celebrity X on Fire, [celebrity X] became a legendary DJ in the club circuit due to her groundbreaking mix techniques, use of world music in a club scene dominated by mainstream dance records and her collaborations with artists such as David Bowie and Brian Eno." Here, using the reliable source-attributed adjective "legendary" is more appropriate because it is sourced to a published critic's book. Nevertheless, even in this case, it would still not be desirable to refer to the artist as "legendary" in the lead. Instead, it would be appropriate to add in the quotation in the appropriate part of the history section.
Weasel words and phrases
Articles edited by fan-oriented editors may also contain a number of
Use of non-independent or improper sources
Fan-oriented editors may use record company websites from a singer's label, biographies posted on an actor's personal website or other sources that are not independent from the article topic, such as press releases issued by an actor's publicist or articles written by the artist's production company. Quotes about a singer or actor should come from a
Moreover, these sources must be independent from the subject. A music reviewer from the New York Times is independent from the subject. A publicist penning a review about a musician who is her client is not independent from the source. Fan-oriented articles may also include laudatory quotes about the greatness of an actor or singer sourced from a fan-edited website. User-edited fan websites where any anonymous person can post any text she wants are not a reliable source, and should not be used on Wikipedia.
We are working to create an encyclopedia, so all quotations and critical comments must be attributed to a reliable source. Ann Powers or Robert Christgau's published reviews are reliable sources. Randy in Boise is not a reliable source (except on matters regarding sword-fighting skeletons).
See also
- Wikipedia:Criticism
- Wikipedia:NPOV tutorial#Accusations
- Wikipedia:Words to avoid
- Wikipedia:Source your plot summaries
- Help:Talkspace draft