Radical suggestion: No RD Blurb save for deaths of sitting world leaders

Given the whole mess over the last few recent death blurbs and in principle the endless fighting we tend to have over them, I'd like to propose (to see if this has any traction) the limitation of blurbs for the recent deaths limited only to sitting world leaders (and specifically the head of state and not the head of government which can be more ceremonial in some countries), since that also qualifies under the ITNR related to gov't change. Otherwise, RD is suitable for all notable individuals. It removes the constant fuss we have on these and I feel every time editors want different goalposts (even when quoting the Thatcher/Mandala standard). --Masem (t) 14:22, 24 January 2021 (UTC)

What if he resigned as part of an attempt to hide before it's too late but had bad luck and died 2 weeks later anyway? Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 15:58, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
Is there any name better in the pantheon of world leaders than "Ali Bongo Ondimba"?--WaltCip-(talk) 13:27, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk AKA Father of the Turks? Sounds like wikt:attaboy but means father of the Turks. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 14:21, 25 January 2021 (UTC)

Election head of state / government simplification

Suggest overhauling the heads of state/government section to be as follows:

Changes to the leaders whose offices constitutionally administer the executive of their respective state/government as listed at List of current heads of state and government when:

Changes to other heads of state or government who do not constitutionally administer the executive of their respective state/government are discussed on their own merit.

Feel free to clean up my poor grammar as necessary. --LaserLegs (talk) 20:52, 26 January 2021 (UTC)

Presumably this is an anti-powerless or low powered head of state without fame rule, not aimed at Charles. He would be posted quick whether automatic or not. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 00:42, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
"Changes to other heads of state or government who do not constitutionally administer the executive of their respective state/government are discussed on their own merit." if you really think we'd not post the succession of the British royal family, I'm not sure what to do for you. Also that happens what? Once every 5 or 6 decades? Why is this obvious change so controversial? --LaserLegs (talk) 01:15, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
I'm saying the opposite, the British monarch abdicating would be posted quick whether there's an automatic rule or not. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 02:27, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
And Queen Elizabeth is not the head of state of just one country. Of course it would be posted. I disagreed with removing head of state from ITNR, but it's done, and that does not mean they can't be posted, just that it isn't automatic. 331dot (talk) 01:25, 27 January 2021 (UTC)

Question: What happens to legislative elections that do not lead to changes in whoever is in the List of current heads of state and government? Examples are US and Philippine midterm elections, French and Indonesian legislative elections and Japanese House of Councillors elections. One could argue that the US legislative elections, including the one that led to a runoff in Georgia are no longer ITNR. Are those still ITNR, or ITN will pick whoever has the more white dudes in a country east of the Atlantic (let's face it this is how it'll boil in to)? Howard the Duck (talk) 15:06, 29 January 2021 (UTC)

General elections are ITNR irrespective of the head of government. The vast majority of changes to heads of government were posted with an election, but the recent change covers occasions where the occupant of a position changes outside of an election.(such as Theresea May to Boris Johnson) 331dot (talk) 15:32, 29 January 2021 (UTC)
It can be argued that some of those elections are not general elections. We have ITN regulars opposing US midterm elections (LOL). You could argue that the Japanese House of Councillors elections are not general elections (none have been posted since 2010). I believe French Senate elections are of similar nature but that is an indirectly elected body unlike the Japanese House of Councillors. Howard the Duck (talk) 15:38, 29 January 2021 (UTC)

RD turnover

Not sure if this is due to the WikiCup but not sure if our current RD changes are fixing the issue of having RDs up for <24 hours. In the past 24 hours we've had 11 new RDs posted to the template, and we've flexed to 7 spots as well. I IARed and "stickied" Larry King to the top of the bulleted list due to interest in having a blurb for him and perceived reader interest, but in the future this could be a slippery slope. SpencerT•C 16:32, 24 January 2021 (UTC)

I'm really not keen on assigning "relative importance" to people within RD. After all, that was really the whole point of RD, where all mentions were determined to be exactly equal, and not to assign a super-notability subset. Either blurb or RD, not "super-RD". I suggest we definitely do _not_ do this because this precedent will now be called upon any time someone thinks an RD "deserves" more attention. Slippery slope indeed, and one we absolutely must not go down, please. The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 16:41, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
Agree with TRM, though I know the pinning was done in good faith, the chronological order prevents chaos. --LaserLegs (talk) 17:08, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
Yeah, I'm not suggesting Spencer did anything outside good faith, and perhaps LaserLegs is right, be careful what we wished for when we discarded the chronological order. If this turnover becomes the norm, rather than the exception, we might need to think outside the box (literally). The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 17:28, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
The last time this came up, there was 12 RDs posted on Jan 4.—Bagumba (talk) 01:48, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Time to make itn and dyk longer. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 22:01, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
This would never have been necessary if Fuzheado had just honored the existing consensus.--WaltCip-(talk) 18:23, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
Perhaps the reservoir is the variable that needs adjusting if the inflow is fixed and the outflow is too rapid. C'mon didn't anybody else take 3rd year hydrology? Analogy aside, the number of people with articles on Wikipedia is ever increasing, and as such the number of eligible RDs on any given day is increasing past the point where 6 or 7 covers a 24 hour period of passings. If the container is emptied as fast as it is filled, a bigger container may be in order. - Floydian τ ¢ 18:32, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
Floydian, I have tried making the case for a 'bigger container' as well in the past here and Martin tried here, but, there has not been an appetite for spilling into the third row. So, not sure what else can be done on that front. Ktin (talk) 18:41, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
... which is why (in my now restored post) I suggested "we might need to think outside the box (literally)". The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 20:36, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
Has there been previous consideration into making the right column into 3 boxes instead of two? My personal opinion is that recent deaths are going to draw traffic more than selected anniversaries; perhaps some of that space can be... "annexed" as it were. - Floydian τ ¢ 20:54, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
The right-hand side could be made longer: DYK often switches to two sets of hooks per day to keep their backlog down. Could just as easily have ten hooks per day and give the other side a couple more lines to use. The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 21:01, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
There would have been an RD overflow, even if King had remained a blurb. It would not have drawn as much attention without a notable figure like him.—Bagumba (talk) 01:53, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
WaltCip, if you are referring to Larry King there was no strong indicator of consensus at the time of posting and the comments after the fact confirmed this. It also doesn't solve the long term problem that the current RD system is not scalable. -- Fuzheado | Talk 07:11, 26 January 2021 (UTC)
Fuzheado: What you are inherently asserting is that the admin who posted the item prior to you, in this case 331dot, interpreted consensus incorrectly. That's the problem that I have. It adds unnecessary chaos to the ITN process and diminishes the discretionary power that a single admin should have. It resembles, even if it doesn't appear to be so, wheel warring. --WaltCip-(talk) 13:30, 26 January 2021 (UTC)
I was think more like this. Granted, this was a case where non-EN conventions precluded a complete BLP. But by "biographical details" I mean DOB, DOD, education, family, etc.; things which have nothing necessarily to do with their WP:N qualities. Something like, must contain all of:
  • [DOB and place, DOD and place, 1 juvenile fact]
AND 5 of:
  • [1 post-retirement fact, 2 family members mentioned, 1 educational institution mentioned, military service, cause of death, 4 family members, 1 direct quote, 2 educational institutions]
Some editors put emphasis on professional details in RDs, which is fine, but it sometimes creeps into CVs-as-RDs.130.233.213.199 (talk) 10:31, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
No, I can't agree with this suggestion I'm afraid. If anything the articles should be erring towards what they did during the significant part of their lives, that make them notable. E.g. actions while they were mayor, rather than padding out with irrelevant trivia about their private lives. The discussion process at ITN/C exists precisely so editors can scrutinise and make sure the article meets the required standards, and that's all we need. Anything else is WP:CREEP. Re the OP's point, I think the 24-hour expectation that has crept in lately is misguided. Remember, DYKs only stay up for 12 hours during periods of high activity, and there's no reason why RDs (which sometimes require less work to get up and posted than a DYK) should be any different.  — Amakuru (talk) 10:45, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Me neither. In many cases most of these may not be available or may not apply and for good reasons which ought not to prevent an article being posted. Trying to create seemingly arbitrary objective criteria is exactly NOT what RD's transformation was about. The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 16:04, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Disagree with this proposal from IP editor. Artificial requirements should not be tapered onto WP:ITNRD just because we have not been able to smoothen our outflow rate. There are already homepage levels of hygiene that are mandated on any article that makes it to homepage, and we should stay consistent with those hygiene expectations. Nothing more and nothing less. And, definitely, not look to what can best be described as trivia (e.g. 1 juvenile fact) etc as a requirement for the article to get to homepage. I have maintained for sometime now that the amount of articles that are brought to homepage levels of hygiene as a part of WP:ITNRD is an absolute win for the community / project and if anything we should continue to encourage that and not dissuade that by adding artificial requirements (e.g. 4 family members, 2 educational institutions)! Ktin (talk) 15:59, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
I don't think there is a way to create a broad one-size-fits all requirement of ensuring this; this requires assessment of articles by ITN/C commenters and admins. And I would encourage ITN/C commenters to critically assess the quality of the articles. I won't post articles - even if marked "ready" - if they aren't off sufficient quality of posting. The period when we posted 11 RD in 24 hours, all of them were of decent quality, so this doesn't necessarily fix the underlying issues. SpencerT•C 22:21, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
  • Here you go with the requested data for 2020. At the cost of over-simplifying, to me it still continues to remain an outflow smoothening action. Start from the bottom. Post often. Do not batch. Ktin (talk) 03:42, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
Update 1: Updated the data with 2019 numbers as well. This gets a tad interesting. Clearly there is a jump between 2019 and 2020 and to me that could be attributable to a) more editors coming available with the lockdowns etc. and existing editors becoming more active during this period b) more effort being expended in improving articles as a community here (RD is one of the more collaborative projects that I have seen around here) and c) more RDs coming in due to the pandemic? Either way, it seems like our current situation should be compared to our handling of the outflow in 2020, we have handled high numbers then. I am still staying with my thinking that we stick to the basics. Start from the bottom. Post often. Do not batch. Thanks folks. PS: The number of articles being improved to homepage levels of hygiene continues to remain an absolute win for the community at large. We should not have any doubts or misgivings about that. Ktin (talk) 04:33, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
Expand to see the monthly RD postings data
Month RD Postings
January 2021 104
December 2020 107
November 2020 76
October 2020 76
September 2020 59
August 2020 61
July 2020 84
June 2020 55
May 2020 79
April 2020 95
March 2020 73
February 2020 50
January 2020 46
December 2019 42
November 2019 35
October 2019 46
September 2019 39
August 2019 54
July 2019 48
June 2019 28
May 2019 36
April 2019 37
March 2019 49
February 2019 57
January 2019 46
I'll have a closer look at Ktin's data later, thanks for producing that, but as ever if you want a change in practice you'll have to propose it and get consensus. Speaking just about recent turnover, I'm not convinced we have a particular problem right now. I uploaded 7 RDs on Saturday (5 of which were in a single batch in the morning, and I kept all 7 up until later in the evening), then another 6 last night. All of those ended up with 10 or more hours on the MP though, and most of the initial batch were up for a full 36 hours or so. There's no consensus at the moment for minimum posting times - we asked the community about this here and it was opposed - so I'm not sure what we should be doing differently. I don't agree with Ktin's instructions to "start from the bottom" or "avoid batching". how would that help? In general we should be posting these as soon as they're good to go, irrespective of whether it's a recent or older nom, that was what was mandated by the recent change in procedure. And in the case mentioned above there were no old RDs pushed off that shouldn't have been, so batching 5 at a time was the correct thing to do. Holding some of those back would have just risked the backlog getting full again later on. Cheers  — Amakuru (talk) 10:06, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
Amakuru, hello there. Quick update -- my statement was not meant to be a critique of your action(s) including the decision to batch up postings. I would argue that you did the right thing at that point. The larger point I was making, outside of your action, is that when we are attempting to smoothen (mathematical) the outflow function, a batch post will create a step function change, which theoretically might be alright if that batch post is done at the same time every day (think DYK posts) but not for the way we post here. It will create a situation where an article waited 24 hours to get into that batch but landed on the rightmost position and was immediately out because a single post came in right after, while all the other entries of the batch continued to stay. Cheers and thanks for all that you do. Ktin (talk) 16:30, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
@Ktin: yeah that's fine, and this all just friendly banter anyway. Re batch posting, no doubt you're right that it would be the correct thing to have them trickle through at a constant rate, sounds like a good thing to aim for. But we can only work with the circumstances at hand. I can't make any guarantees to be checking the (Ready) list multiple times a day. I might not even check it at all for several days; like everyone else I'm a WP:VOLUNTEER. And on another point, sometimes it happens that several of them become ready all at the same time because the reviewers also happen to do many all at once. So sometimes it will be necessary to batch them up. That's all really! Cheers  — Amakuru (talk) 17:35, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
Amakuru, agree with every sentence in the above statement. Cheers. Ktin (talk) 17:57, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
Fascinating data, Ktin, thank you for compiling. I think I always assumed "start from the bottom" to mean make sure to scroll all the way down to make sure that older ready noms weren't being ignored, since those sometimes are a little harder to see among all of those that have been posted. I wonder how much could be attributed to the relative ease of getting WikiCup points for an RD, but no judgement from me-- I think the process of article improvement to make something sufficient for RD posting quality has giving many (and based on the data, hundreds) of biographies up to snuff in terms of overall detail and referencing. I think the change to post anything in the past 7 days is suitable and probably accounts for the recent Dec/Jan uptick. I guess for now keep an eye on things and now be okay with ~24 hours on the template (sometimes more, sometimes less). SpencerT•C 23:48, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
Spencer, Thanks for this note Spencer. Yup, in addition, the 'start from the bottom' ensures that RDs appear reasonably chronologically on the carousel, and more importantly when they get bumped off the carousel because of multiple reasons (including batch moves and or sequencing) that we are better off bumping off the older nominations from the carousel rather than the newer ones. I did not give Wikicup much thought, though, I personally did enroll as a participant, literally on the last day i.e. 1/31. I agree with you that the community efforts toward improving these many biographies is an absolute win for the project. The other thing that I really like about WP:ITNRD is that it is an absolutely collaborative space. Think of the number of times that someone nominates an article but someone else steps in on the article improvement actions. I have not seen many other projects display that collaborative spirit. Simple tweaks like what MSGJ made to the updaters field further increase collaboration. Now that we also got the permission to spill over briefly into the third row (by streamlining the COVID representation), I think we be WP:BOLD and afford articles as close to ~24 hours (sometimes a little more, sometimes a little less, but, close to 24 hours) just as an acknowledgement of the efforts that have gone in. Thanks for all that you and the team do! Ktin (talk) 00:14, 2 February 2021 (UTC)

Mini-digression

Can someone rip through the last 12 months of RDs and say how many of them were due to (or at least blamed on) Covid please? The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 08:39, 2 February 2021 (UTC)

The Rambling Man, did this one for January 2021 and the result is 19; details here User:Ktin/sandbox/adhoc_queries#Number_of_RD_deaths_from_COVID_-_January. This one relies on the good folks at Deaths in 2021 coding all covid deaths. For the record, we have had 189 COVID deaths in January from amongst Deaths in 2021 Ktin (talk) 09:06, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
Thanks, 189 Covid deaths out of how many total deaths list in Deaths in 2021 in January? The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 12:02, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
There are 963 lines in Deaths in 2021#January that start *[[. Assuming both figures are correct, Covid deaths were 19.6% of the total. Thryduulf (talk) 12:33, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
Ok, thanks. So that's probably a bit of a general increase at this time at RD because of Covid. It will pass (thankfully) once the vaccinations roll out properly. The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 13:10, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
Anyone got month by month figures on how many deaths there have been in the past year, compared with 12-months previously? That might give you the overall effect of COVID. Bearing in mind that some of the "COVID death" people might have died anyway. Presumably the excess will eventually be cancelled out by lower averages in future as well.  — Amakuru (talk) 15:22, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
Using the same methodology as above:
Month 2018 2019 2020 2019 (%) 2020 (%)
January 743 789 795 6.19% 0.76%
February 597 663 739 11.06% 11.46%
March 658 664 879 0.91% 32.38%
April 577 622 1099 7.80% 76.69%
May 570 620 835 8.77% 34.68%
June 589 628 864 6.62% 37.58%
July 566 639 868 12.90% 35.84%
August 579 581 826 0.35% 42.17%
September 521 566 656 8.64% 15.90%
October 564 590 653 4.61% 10.68%
November 545 598 729 9.72% 21.91%
December 567 652 884 14.99% 35.58%


I'll see about making a graph later if anyone wants (I've not got time right now). However as every month in 2019 was greater than the equivalent month in 2018, I don't know that we can say that the whole increase is due to Covid. Thryduulf (talk) 17:56, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
@Thryduulf:, if you do not mind my doing, I edited your table and added percentage increases to the table above. Feel free to revert. That said, there are two components to the increase -- increased wiki activity by editors due to lockdowns etc., new category of deaths from covid. If you have the source files can I trouble you to do the following for the 2020 deaths, for i in *; do cat $i | grep -i "covid" | wc -l; done. This will give the number of covid deaths in each of those months assuming there is a file for each month. Cheers. Ktin (talk) 18:09, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
Your edits are fine. I don't have source files per se, I just copied the wikitext and did a find/replace in text editor that reports that number of changes. I can do as you ask relatively easily though, but it will take more time than I have right now. One thing to check though is whether the earliest deaths use the term "covid" as that name was not coined until 11 February according to Wiktionary's citations. Thryduulf (talk) 18:17, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
I'm not sure anyone said the "whole increase is due to Covid". I think it's a contributing factor. Also we have at least one regular contributor (Bloom6132) who does a very good job of updating and nominating RDs, often several a day. I don't think that was the case a couple of years back (although I might be wrong). And per Ktin, lockdown certainly afforded me a lot of extra time between April and July.... The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 18:20, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
Per month deaths in 2020
All deaths Covid deaths Proportion Proportion of 2019-20 increase
January 795 4 0.50% 66.67%
February 739 7 0.95% 9.21%
March 879 133 15.13% 61.86%
April 1099 254 23.11% 53.25%
May 835 97 11.62% 45.12%
June 864 59 6.83% 25.00%
July 868 73 8.41% 31.88%
August 826 56 6.78% 22.86%
September 656 56 8.54% 62.22%
October 653 58 8.88% 92.06%
November 729 111 15.23% 84.73%
December 884 167 18.89% 71.98%
Thryduulf (talk) 20:21, 2 February 2021 (UTC)

December at ITN

Sorry for the spam, but, thought this might be interesting to the curious minded. This is a view of articles that we discussed in WP:ITN / WP:ITNRD in December and their relative interest on the mainpage. Thanks to Andrew Gray for his leads toward getting to the source of this information. Ktin (talk) 04:44, 31 January 2021 (UTC)

Caveat 1: This is a monthly aggregate view and hence is not normalized for time spent on the mainpage. E.g. one article could have spent a couple of hours while other could have spent days on the mainpage.

Caveat 2: These are articles that were introduced for discussion in December. Does not include articles that were discussed in late November, but, spent time on the mainpage in the early part of December. Similarly, does not include articles that were discussed in December but, landed on the mainpage in early January.

Click 'show' to expand / see December data
mysql> select * from december_views where target in (select article from itn_list) and referer = 'Main_Page' order by pageviews desc;
+-----------+--------------------------------------------------+-------+-----------+
| referer   | target                                           | type  | pageviews |
+-----------+--------------------------------------------------+-------+-----------+
| Main_Page | Great_conjunction                                | link  |    106300 |
| Main_Page | 2020_Indian_farmers'_protest                     | link  |     78387 |
| Main_Page | Hayabusa2                                        | other |     62045 |
| Main_Page | Valéry_Giscard_d'Estaing                         | other |     60510 |
| Main_Page | Chang'e_5                                        | other |     57153 |
| Main_Page | 2020_World_Rally_Championship                    | other |     31841 |
| Main_Page | Charley_Pride                                    | other |     28819 |
| Main_Page | 2020_Ghanaian_general_election                   | other |     25883 |
| Main_Page | Stella_Tennant                                   | other |     25735 |
| Main_Page | John_le_Carré                                    | other |     23500 |
| Main_Page | Jeremy_Bulloch                                   | other |     22165 |
| Main_Page | Awesome_Again                                    | other |     21405 |
| Main_Page | Paolo_Rossi                                      | other |     20369 |
| Main_Page | Maria_Piątkowska                                 | other |     16874 |
| Main_Page | Doug_Anthony                                     | other |     16625 |
| Main_Page | Fanny_Waterman                                   | other |     14994 |
| Main_Page | Karima_Baloch                                    | other |     14896 |
| Main_Page | John_Barnard_Jenkins                             | other |     14654 |
| Main_Page | Brodie_Lee                                       | other |     14517 |
| Main_Page | George_Blake                                     | other |     14460 |
| Main_Page | Gérard_Houllier                                  | other |     14050 |
| Main_Page | Jerry_Relph                                      | other |     14032 |
| Main_Page | Flavio_Cotti                                     | other |     13852 |
| Main_Page | Soedardjat_Nataatmadja                           | other |     13191 |
| Main_Page | Jack_Steinberger                                 | other |     13166 |
| Main_Page | Òscar_Ribas_Reig                                 | other |     12531 |
| Main_Page | Robin_Jackman                                    | other |     12320 |
| Main_Page | 2020_Petrinja_earthquake                         | link  |     12287 |
| Main_Page | Luke_Letlow                                      | other |     12062 |
| Main_Page | Doug_Scott                                       | other |     12002 |
| Main_Page | Harold_Budd                                      | other |     11976 |
| Main_Page | Barry_Lopez                                      | other |     11956 |
| Main_Page | Walter_E._Williams                               | other |     11838 |
| Main_Page | Huang_Zongying                                   | other |     11727 |
| Main_Page | Phil_Niekro                                      | other |     11635 |
| Main_Page | James_Flynn_(academic)                           | other |     11589 |
| Main_Page | Alison_Lurie                                     | other |     11523 |
| Main_Page | R._N._Shetty                                     | other |     11516 |
| Main_Page | Totilas                                          | other |     11474 |
| Main_Page | Iman_Budhi_Santosa                               | other |     11271 |
| Main_Page | Ann_Reinking                                     | other |     11249 |
| Main_Page | Michael_Jeffery                                  | other |     11178 |
| Main_Page | Jim_McLean                                       | other |     11141 |
| Main_Page | Mohamed_Abarhoun                                 | other |     10761 |
| Main_Page | Betsy_Wade                                       | other |     10602 |
| Main_Page | Donald_Fowler                                    | other |     10549 |
| Main_Page | Paul_Sarbanes                                    | other |     10210 |
| Main_Page | Narinder_Singh_Kapany                            | other |     10192 |
| Main_Page | Maria_Itkina                                     | other |      9668 |
| Main_Page | Roddam_Narasimha                                 | other |      9279 |
| Main_Page | Brian_Kerr,_Baron_Kerr_of_Tonaghmore             | other |      9255 |
| Main_Page | Astad_Deboo                                      | other |      9133 |
| Main_Page | Martin_Lambie-Nairn                              | other |      9042 |
| Main_Page | Romell_Broom                                     | other |      9030 |
| Main_Page | James_Odongo                                     | other |      8915 |
| Main_Page | Gerard_Stokes                                    | other |      8802 |
| Main_Page | Maria_Fyfe                                       | other |      8657 |
| Main_Page | K._C._Jones                                      | other |      8562 |
| Main_Page | Barbara_Windsor                                  | other |      8544 |
| Main_Page | Roger_Moret                                      | other |      8379 |
| Main_Page | Barbara_Rose                                     | other |      8365 |
| Main_Page | Bill_Fitsell                                     | other |      8313 |
| Main_Page | Adele_Rose                                       | other |      7840 |
| Main_Page | George_Ross_Anderson_Jr.                         | other |      7715 |
| Main_Page | Minoru_Makihara                                  | other |      7659 |
| Main_Page | Udyavara_Madhava_Acharya                         | other |      7507 |
| Main_Page | U._A._Khader                                     | other |      7464 |
| Main_Page | Benjamin_Abeles                                  | other |      7422 |
| Main_Page | Ferenc_Tóth_(politician)                         | other |      7176 |
| Main_Page | Dawn_Wells                                       | other |      7114 |
| Main_Page | Fou_Ts'ong                                       | other |      7029 |
| Main_Page | Yuichiro_Hata                                    | other |      6988 |
| Main_Page | Kim_Ki-duk                                       | other |      6685 |
| Main_Page | Elaine_McCoy                                     | other |      6650 |
| Main_Page | Manglesh_Dabral                                  | other |      6550 |
| Main_Page | Paul-Heinz_Dittrich                              | other |      6468 |
| Main_Page | Raymond_Hunter                                   | other |      6465 |
| Main_Page | Hugh_Keays-Byrne                                 | other |      6418 |
| Main_Page | Jutta_Lampe                                      | other |      6411 |
| Main_Page | Joseph_Bachelder_III                             | other |      6329 |
| Main_Page | Pumza_Dyantyi                                    | other |      6282 |
| Main_Page | Tabaré_Vázquez                                   | other |      6152 |
| Main_Page | Muhammad_Mustafa_Mero                            | other |      6137 |
| Main_Page | Dharampal_Gulati                                 | other |      5894 |
| Main_Page | Belinda_Bozzoli                                  | other |      5595 |
| Main_Page | Herman_Asaribab                                  | other |      5585 |
| Main_Page | Lorraine_Monk                                    | link  |      5420 |
| Main_Page | Amelia_Lapeña-Bonifacio                          | other |      5148 |
| Main_Page | Howard_J._Rubenstein                             | other |      4789 |
| Main_Page | Zafarullah_Khan_Jamali                           | other |      4630 |
| Main_Page | Shamsur_Rahman_Faruqi                            | other |      4509 |
| Main_Page | Jack_Lenor_Larsen                                | other |      4426 |
| Main_Page | Sugathakumari                                    | other |      3908 |
| Main_Page | MF_Doom                                          | other |      3407 |
| Main_Page | Brandon_Bernard                                  | other |      2951 |
| Main_Page | Hasu_Yajnik                                      | other |      1291 |
| Main_Page | Joseph_Safra                                     | other |      1262 |
| Main_Page | Garry_Runciman,_3rd_Viscount_Runciman_of_Doxford | other |       836 |
| Main_Page | Kevin_Greene                                     | other |       784 |
| Main_Page | Tommy_Docherty                                   | link  |       766 |
| Main_Page | Aldo_Andretti                                    | other |        23 |
| Main_Page | H._Jack_Geiger                                   | other |        15 |
| Main_Page | John_Fitzpatrick                                 | other |        14 |
| Main_Page | Ronald_Atkins                                    | other |        13 |
+-----------+--------------------------------------------------+-------+-----------+
104 rows in set (0.02 sec)

Cool, and surprising that Great conjunction topped the list, a nom which had a fair amount of opposes on notability.130.233.213.199 (talk) 06:34, 3 February 2021 (UTC)

Personally I think it shows a disconnect between what editors think is notable, and what actually draws reader interest. - Floydian τ ¢ 06:58, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
Huh, people like space. Cool. 🚀  Nixinova T  C   07:05, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
@Ktin: I only did a cursory read of m:Research:Wikipedia clickstream, but wouldn't we be interested more in type=link i.e. links on the MP that are clicked to get to the target, and not type=other?—Bagumba (talk) 07:55, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
@Bagumba: I was originally a bit puzzled by this as well, but it seems this is an artefact of the way the data's generated - it defines link/other on the basis of a single point in time, which seems to be the end of the month. Makes sense for most cases (page to page links are reasonably stable) but gives odd results for things like the main page that rotate frequently.
There seems to be a background level of "main page clicks" for items which aren't linked - you can see it above with Ronald Atkins, for example, which wasn't on the main page until January. These probably reflect people coming to the main page and then using the search box; if they go straight to the target page it'll be logged as an "other" click to that page. I ran the numbers for some "mundane but popular" articles that weren't apparently linked from the MP in this period (eg Roman Empire, The Beatles), and found that their mainpage clicks weren't usually more than about 5% of the recorded internal clicks.
By comparison, 69% of the internal clicks for Charley Pride and 67% for Paul Sarbanes came from the mainpage, so it seems reasonable to conclude that the majority of those do represent people hitting the link while it was posted. Andrew Gray (talk) 22:09, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
Andrew Gray, nicely explained. tl;dr – when looking at the above table, ignore the 'type' column. Cheers. Ktin (talk) 03:21, 4 February 2021 (UTC)

(Closed) What importance does the Super Bowl have outside North America?

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


I see no reason for the Super Bowl to be part of In the news. It is a very localized event to the United States and Canada, and it is at a time where there are far more important event than a sport which is played mainly in two countries. I believe it would not be on the front page if not for one person. It appears the editors have bought fully into the Tom Brady hype machine. OneMMmember (talk) 21:44, 8 February 2021 (UTC)

Loads (and I mean loads) of people stay up to watch it between 11.30pm and 3.30am in the UK. I don't know why, but it's almost like a grim tradition we've inherited, like going "trick or treating". And I also saw it in New Zealand too, loads of folks watching it there. I don't think many people really care about it, but they like the half-time show, the aeroplanes, and the odd wardrobe malfunction. The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 21:48, 8 February 2021 (UTC)
Wikipedia:In_the_news/Candidates#Please do not... oppose an item because the event is only relating to a single country, or failing to relate to one. This applies to a high percentage of the content we post and is unproductive. Just because you don't get the Super Bowl's importance doesn't mean we're gonna stop posting it once per year. – Muboshgu (talk) 21:49, 8 February 2021 (UTC)
OneMMmember (ec) It has nothing to do with Tom Brady or any player. The Super Bowl is on WP:ITNR. If global relevance was a requirement for ITN, very little would be posted. 331dot (talk) 21:51, 8 February 2021 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

What's up with ongoing

Second attempt to remove the Indian farmers' protest. There are five opposes but not a single one of them addresses the staleness of the article. The Wikipedia:In_the_news#Ongoing_section criteria is clear "In general, articles are NOT posted to ongoing merely because they are related to events that are still happening. In order to be posted to ongoing, the article needs to be regularly updated with new, pertinent information." By that criteria, none of the opposes are actually valid. Has WP:VOTE become a substitute for WP:CONSENSUS? Or should the criteria be amended to reflect what has become practice: stale articles festering in the box for weeks or months past their Best by date while a dedicated cabal resists any effort to remove the article from the main page while simultaneously contributing nothing to maintain the article at a standard that would merit featuring.

I'm only using the farmers protest as an example, but there are many others such as the CAA protests, the Belarusian protests, the Venezuelan protests, the Hong Kong protests in each of these cases prying a demonstrably stale article out of the box proved to be nearly impossible. --LaserLegs (talk) 15:55, 6 February 2021 (UTC)

I don't usually agree with you on this topic, but looking at that particular discussion I agree the opposes were weak. In cases like that, admins should consider that there may be consensus the article is not sufficiently updated despite the vote count. Bzweebl (talkcontribs) 04:11, 9 February 2021 (UTC)
Well, you got what you wanted, but as I wrote there is a discrepancy then between how the Indian protest and the COVID-19 pandemic are treated because the latter's article is similarly stale. - Indefensible (talk) 18:30, 9 February 2021 (UTC)
Nominate it for removal if you want. --LaserLegs (talk) 18:39, 9 February 2021 (UTC)
Considering it, but conflicted because I do not think it (or the protest's article) should actually be removed for that logic and guessing that the nomination would fail. - Indefensible (talk) 18:42, 9 February 2021 (UTC)
Propose a change to the criteria then. --LaserLegs (talk) 00:33, 10 February 2021 (UTC)

Masem, Fuzheado - the conversation above at Wikipedia_talk:In_the_news#COVID-19_banner does not address the nomination issue, as the subject above is regarding the previous COVID-19 banner which was removed and replaced with the Ongoing entry. That discussion is now 1-2 weeks stale, and the subject of the new removal nomination was the validity of that Ongoing entry per the criteria and in comparison to the Indian protests entry. They are 2 different issues. - Indefensible (talk) 04:55, 10 February 2021 (UTC)

I'm going to state that we need to use common sense that some ongoing topics start to grow past a single article, and expecting the top level article to be regularly updated at that point is nonsense. This was the case with the HK protests and is absolutely the case with the COVID pandemic, whereas the Indian farmers protests did not have an expanded number of articles and thus we should expect to see reasonable updates to that. This is a common senee thing, not the hard and fast rules that I see some editors trying to champion for. --Masem (t) 05:03, 10 February 2021 (UTC)
Common sense went out of the window when the Covid banner was removed despite evidence showing it was still being used thousands of times a day. Now it's just sitting awkwardly occupying one of the usual Ongoing spaces despite not following the same rules as other Ongoing. I wouldn't argue for removing it, but we've really created a rod for our own backs here.  — Amakuru (talk) 08:44, 10 February 2021 (UTC)
The HK protests "sub articles" were also stale, painstakingly documenting statements on social media and pretending that was a "protest". Honestly the same is true of COVID-19. Look at the ongoing portal every day it's bulked up with COVID-19 updates but it's all numbers: X country announces Y new infections. X country announces Y vaccinations. X country announces Y lockdowns. What new development has taken place in COVID-19? --LaserLegs (talk) 11:07, 10 February 2021 (UTC)
It's possible that editors aren't updating the top-level COVID-19 pandemic article sufficiently with new developments, but they are happening. This week it was discovered that the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is only 10% effective against the South African variant of Covid. Many countries are still under varying degrees of total lockdown. I think most people would accept that Covid is still the overarching narrative today, continuing to completely disrupt normal life for millions across the globe, and therefore is a unique case deserving unique treatment. (And really this feeds back to my argument in the discussion above that all the Covid articles including the one covering vaccines should be restored to their special place in ITN, but people will start accusing me of continually banging the same drum soon!)  — Amakuru (talk) 11:23, 10 February 2021 (UTC)
I mean, if "editors aren't updating the top-level COVID-19 pandemic article sufficiently with new developments", that it's a priori not updated, thus failing the pretty straightforward Ongoing criteria. That doesn't yet seem to be the case; since 10 Feb (a recent date I chose at random), the top-level article has been updated with recent and specific information about variants. It's a little on the weak side, but certainly more than recent Ongoing articles. I disagree with the "common sense" that "sub-articles" (is there even a procedural definition for such?) count towards the edit history of the "top-level article" (another undefined thing). This incentivizes editors to link to active articles within an otherwise unedited article, and given an article large enough there will always be a within-linked article with recent updates. If the COVID-19 Pandemic article really does slow enough to be removed, I'm all for removing it and going back to posting blurbs. Or just re-nominating for Ongoing.130.233.213.199 (talk) 08:19, 12 February 2021 (UTC)

COVID-19 banner

Boldy moved to this dedicated section from above "RD turnover"Bagumba (talk) 04:06, 25 January 2021 (UTC)

Comment the other thing we could do is get rid of the COVID-19 banner. It's been going on for over a year, everyone knows about it, and there aren't any major new developments: just the ebb and flow of infections, lockdowns and vaccinations. We get rid of the banner, link to Portal:Coronavirus_disease_2019 from the ongoing line (which won't go away anyway) and we free up a line for RDs or blurbs or whatever we want. The portal looks fantastic by the way, and has right at the top all the links we're featuring in the ITN box. It's a thought anyway, and if anyone thinks it has legs, we can spin up a subsection to discuss. --LaserLegs (talk) 02:13, 25 January 2021 (UTC)

I don't think the purpose had anything to do with any administration, on this global project. 331dot (talk) 09:58, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Possibly you could convert the links to obscure redirects and count the page views to those redirects; would go against WP:MPNOREDIRECT though. Personally I think a link to the portal in ongoing is fine, as all the other links can be reached from there. So, support as proposed - Dumelow (talk) 16:17, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Dumelow, wow! This is a simple but a brilliant idea! If we can test this out for even 48 hours, this is brilliant -- and will help test our hypothesis before removing! Ktin (talk) 16:21, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Can all 4 be lengthened a line? Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 17:40, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Perhaps, although it might not be that easy to make TFA longer. Probably you'd have to add some length to the blurbs, which would be something the honchos at that project would have to acquiesce to. Might not be a bad thing, as I think TFA blurbs are often a bit on the short side relative to the lead of the article they represent. Otherwise the only other way to do that would be to change the relative widths of the boxes.  — Amakuru (talk) 17:47, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
I guess we could resurrect the perennial 50/50 width split of the main page which is currently (IIRC) 55/45.... The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 17:51, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
I'm sure that additional issues would show up if I looked longer. And I don't want reopen the whole portal wars, but portals are just not how our readers expect information on Wikipedia to be organized, or what they seem to seek out (despite both being linked currently, the portal has gotten only 30k views in the past month, compared to over 1 million for the pandemic page, more than 30k per day. All of this is to say that I think linking COVID-19 pandemic would be a much better move than linking the portal. Linking the article is what we normally do for ongoing events anyways, and it contains prominent links in the lead to the other pages if anyone wants to seek them out. ((u|Sdkb))talk 02:48, 26 January 2021 (UTC)
Axe now, ask questions later! InedibleHulk (talk) 00:42, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
It's about freeing up space for more RD or blurbs. Ongoing will be a permanent fixture with some poor quality article about low grade protests anyway, so we put COVID-19 in there and free up space in the box. That's it. Still on the main page, with room for more stuff too. --LaserLegs (talk) 01:16, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
Article Article hits Redirect hits Percentage
COVID-19 pandemic 39,076 5,485 14.0
COVID-19 pandemic by country and territory 32,827 4,312 13.1
COVID-19 vaccine 21,633 1,788 8.3
Coronavirus disease 2019 19,513 967 5.0
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 6,256 576 9.2
Portal:Coronavirus disease 2019 760 789 103.8
Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic 713 598 83.9
Thanks for those numbers. That's a decent amount of traffic, more than most RDs get. I think that justifies keeping at least the banner entries that are getting a thousand clicks per day. Modest Genius talk 14:38, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
Nah, main page get s more than six million hits per day, so this is peanuts. The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 14:44, 27 January 2021 (UTC)
2-5k per day is more than a typical RD or DYK entry. Modest Genius talk 16:28, 29 January 2021 (UTC)
Modest Genius, Not really. We have just reasonably seen that an RD gets ~2-3K hits per day. We should definitely carry COVID-19 pandemic to the ongoing line. Where I am on the fence is COVID-19 pandemic by country and territory. If there is a way to show it as Ongoing: COVID-19 pandemic (by Geography), or something similar, that might be a good median outcome. Ktin (talk) 16:35, 29 January 2021 (UTC)
mysql> select * from december_views where referer = 'Main_Page' order by pageviews desc limit 10;
+-----------+--------------------------------------------+-------+-----------+
| referer   | target                                     | type  | pageviews |
+-----------+--------------------------------------------+-------+-----------+
| Main_Page | Hyphen-minus                               | other |   2951391 |
| Main_Page | Lists_of_deaths_by_year                    | other |   1130422 |
| Main_Page | Wikipedia                                  | link  |    214705 |
| Main_Page | COVID-19_pandemic                          | link  |    159008 |
| Main_Page | COVID-19_pandemic_by_country_and_territory | link  |    120652 |
| Main_Page | Great_conjunction                          | link  |    106300 |
| Main_Page | Tigray_conflict                            | link  |     81721 |
| Main_Page | 2020_Indian_farmers'_protest               | link  |     78387 |
| Main_Page | Encyclopedia                               | link  |     71174 |
| Main_Page | Hayabusa2                                  | other |     62045 |
+-----------+--------------------------------------------+-------+-----------+
Seems like the great conjunction was the most clicked non-corona ongoing story of the month. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 00:04, 30 January 2021 (UTC)
Sagittarian Milky Way, It seems to have been a story that a lot of our readers have clicked on. I will add one caveat, the pageviews are monthly and not average daily, so, for articles that rotate, they have not been normalized for number of days spent on the homepage. Ktin (talk) 01:28, 30 January 2021 (UTC)
What's up with the hyphen? Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 01:43, 30 January 2021 (UTC)
- is literally a redirect I wonder if it's from collapsing tables or something --LaserLegs (talk) 02:29, 30 January 2021 (UTC)
Calls to ((IsValidPageName)) perhaps. - Floydian τ ¢ 04:19, 31 January 2021 (UTC)
Results of week on week hits comparison
Article Previous hits New hits Change % Change
COVID-19 pandemic 38,879 40,118 1,239 +3.2
COVID-19 pandemic by country and territory 30,897 23,353 -7,544 -24.4
Coronavirus disease 2019 21,888 15,410 -6,478 -29.6
COVID-19 vaccine 21,193 18,713 -2,480 -11.7
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 6,251 5,223 -1,028 -16.4
Portal:Coronavirus disease 2019 1,215 506 -709 -58.4
Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic 1,019 470 -549 -53.9
TOTAL 121,341 103,792 -17,549 -14.5


Oppose - countries are still experiencing heavy casualties because of this pandemic. It's crucial we give the attention it needs on wikipedia. User:Tetizeraz. Send me a ✉️ ! 16:08, 13 February 2021 (UTC)

recent-deaths Limited-time Experiment Requested

Hi All, at this point, I might perhaps be getting a reputation for my annoying persistence in seeking a time guarantee for RDs on the homepage. I will seek your pardon and apologize in advance, while I ask your support in a limited-time experiment here on WP:ITNRD.

Starting statement(s): It just strikes me as unfair that some RDs drop off the carousel in ~4-5 hours e.g. M. Bala Subramanion, Louise Elisabeth Coldenhoff. While there are many that continue to go ~45-50 hours as some on the homepage currently e.g. Anthony Sowell. Yes, the truth of the matter is "it happens, c'est la vie.". I also agree that in the new way of working we do have more articles coming up for the homepage / RD, and that is a good thing, and an absolute win for the project. I thought we brought a consensus or so we thought that spilling to the third row would be alright if it means that we afford at least 24 hours for an article. That was the basis on which the COVID banner was removed. To quote the starting sentence of that thread we free up a line for RDs or blurbs or whatever we want. Now, it seems like we lost the banner, and we are not using the third line as promised. But, in this thread, rather than dwelling into that decision, I am seeking this group's support in a limited time bound experiment in creating a holding pool (if needed) as we at least provide 24 hours to an RD, amongst other things in acknowledgement of the effort that editors put in, in preparing an article for homepage / RD. I can only speak for myself, but, I do invest ~4-5 hours per article at an average to get it homepage levels, sometimes more, sometimes less, and I am sure that other editors are in a similar range.

Duration of experiment requested: 1 week

Experiment details:

  1. Reviewers and Admins work nominations from the bottom of the page. Seems to be happening already.
  2. When an article is ready, an editor marks the article as Ready. Seems to be happening already.
  3. When an Admin evaluates an article from those tagged 'Ready', they check the one that would fall off the carousel and if that article has not spent 24 hours, update the tag as 'Ready; Hold'. If the article falling off the carousel has spent ~24 hours, move the new article to the carousel and mark the tag as 'Posted'.
  4. If the Admin determines the article as not Ready, they update the tag to remove the Ready tag and add their comment as to why the article is not Ready. This is happening already.
  5. The next Admin who comes along, does the same set of activities, but, includes the ones marked 'Ready; Hold' in their post actions in step #3.

Outcomes to watch out for: One line of thinking, as was expressed by a few editors including Spencer earlier was that the holding pattern will create an unmanageable queue / will only exacerbate the problem. We can watch this over a period of the one week. Alternately, this will prove to be a viable model and we can consider going ahead with it for the future.


Thanks in advance for your consideration. Ktin (talk) 21:00, 12 February 2021 (UTC)

  1. Didn't we recently change to putting up RDs in ready order instead of chronological order?
  2. What happens if you have a backlog of RDs (ready) with no sign of slowing down? The LUA module approach is a solid plan (or a bot) but it has the same risk of an unclearable backlog.
I've felt for a while that articles which are "too short" are making it up to RD but I've no way to quantify that. Just some food for thought I guess. --LaserLegs (talk) 22:53, 12 February 2021 (UTC)
LaserLegs, to point 1, yes (don't think this proposal affects that at all). To point 2, then eventually something breaks. I think we could analyse this based on the rate of flow of RDs over the past month or so and simulate what would happen if, say, an admin popped by every six hours to follow Ktin's rules above. That should demonstrate whether the backlog will kill the prospect. To the final thought, we just need to avoid creating a super-notability requirement, but a minimum quality threshold would be fine by me. Length isn't right though, as that brings back in systemic bias against under-represented groups of individuals (i.e. non-English-language RDs). Need to think of something else (which I think is practically impossible). The Rambling Man (Stay alert! Control the virus! Save lives!!!!) 23:03, 12 February 2021 (UTC)
Multiple editors have repeatedly (and correctly) stated that there is no promise to increase the number of RDs and that this has got nothing to do with a "lack of empathy". It's time to drop the stick and get the point – repeatedly badgering admins over not keeping your nom on the MP for a set amount of time or for forgetting to award credit[7][8] (neither of which is actually necessary) is not going to help. The knock-on effect of "leaving an article on the carousel" for 24 hours (or any prescribed minimum time) is that it prevents other articles that are ready from being posted. This would still be a problem even if the number of RD slots were increased. I have no qualms about any article that I update being posted for only a few hours, since the more the merrier as long as the other articles meet the ITN criteria. DYK normally operates on 12 hour cycles (and even 8 hour cycles in the past when there was a big backlog of approved hooks). I cannot see why any good faith editor would be in favour of delaying or stymieing other RD noms from being posted to the MP by wanting any fixed minimum time, let alone double that of the DYK norm. —Bloom6132 (talk) 05:37, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Bloom6132, Please stick to your lane. This comment from you was not needed, nor does it build on the previous comment of mine. Ktin (talk) 06:14, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Stick to my lane?! Anyone is free to comment on a discussion, especially if it pertains to their area of content creation. The only reason why you think my comment "was not needed" is because I'm not in agreement with your stance. Then again, neither are most of the other ITN regulars … —Bloom6132 (talk) 07:22, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Bloom6132, Nope. It is because I do not believe you read my comment above even before replying. While your views are valued, you already expressed them once.[9] My response in this thread was to Spencer's comment and your response was not building on that response of mine (feel free to re-read, if you'd want to). So, yes, with all due respect, stick to your lane. Ktin (talk) 07:31, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Wrong. I did indeed read your comment before replying. I'm free to express my opinions as many times as I want. And I don't need other editors attempting to censor opposing views that they don't like. So no, I will not "stick to my lane". —Bloom6132 (talk) 07:39, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Also, if you're demanding that another editor "stick to their lane", then it would be best if you don't do long-winded rants[10][11][12] on their RD noms. It kinda makes any discussion stemming from those rants "their lane". Just some friendly advice, that's all. —Bloom6132 (talk) 08:18, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Bloom6132, Take a step back and re-read your messages. You clearly are not getting it. In the interest of not spamming this thread any more, I will pause here. But, definitely, reread your messages on this entire sub-thread. Ktin (talk) 16:06, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
"You clearly are not getting it". That's rich coming from someone who operates under the false pretense that there was a promise to increase the number of RDs and that there is a "deliberate lack of empathy" by keeping an RD posted for only a few hours. And as Stephen aptly mentioned above, "There was no consensus for a minimum duration, and you conveniently ignore those that actively argued against any minimum". I repeat – I cannot see why any good faith editor would be in favour of delaying or stymieing other RD noms from being posted to the MP by wanting any fixed minimum time, let alone double that of the DYK norm. You get the last word – be my guest. —Bloom6132 (talk) 23:34, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
Bloom6132, Last word? Here goes -- This sub-thread notwithstanding, I remain appreciative of your contributions to this project. Have a nice rest of your day. Regards. Ktin (talk) 23:42, 14 February 2021 (UTC)