Talk:Freaky Friday (2018 film)

Songs?

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Do we really care about the songs? Do they merit their own section? Do we care if they don't even list the performer?... We certainly didn't do that with Descendants (2015 film). I say we cut this section (as basically WP:TRIVIA)... --IJBall (contribstalk) 20:24, 11 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

As the one who inserted the table, I actually really don't have any strong opinions. (I meant to add one to Zombies, but never got around to it.) However, by that same logic, shouldn't we remove the "Music"/"Songs" sections of Austin & Ally and Liv and Maddie? Amaury (talk | contribs) 02:10, 12 August 2018 (UTC)Reply
Pulled... And no for removing from the series – it's a little different for the music-based TV series. --IJBall (contribstalk) 14:25, 13 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Ratings

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Hello Amaury, I'd like to point out that WP:BLUE is for patently obvious things, and a blanket and definitive statement like "the lowest ratings ever...", frankly isn't patently obvious. A couple of other things I'd like to point out, as well. There's quite a few "N/A"s in that list article you pointed at. Besides that, as you likely know, Wikipedia is not a WP:RS. Thanks for your time. Waggie (talk) 06:27, 16 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

The statement likely is true. But I can't find any RS to confirm it. (Disney certainly won't be bringing that up in the press release!) One of these days, somebody will look at the ratings for all 100+ DCOMs, and when that happens this one will certainly be at the bottom. But, until that happens, the statement probably needs to stay out... However, I'm thinking that a statement like "...making it the lowest-rated DCOM of the last decade." probably is supportable as per WP:BLUE or WP:CALC... --IJBall (contribstalk) 06:31, 16 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Amaury's BRD request

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@Amaury:,

  1. First Twitter is a (limited characters) blog thus not a high RSource. Second it is duplicate to the Deadline source over the premiere date of the show on the Disney Channel as explained to you in an edit summary. There is not much more information in the support texted.
  2. What is your need to remove sourcing that indicates Disney Theatrical Production (DTP) and Bad Angels Productions, Ltd. as production companies and that it is DTP and the Disney Channel's first work together?
  3. The deadline article covers the casting and staff in the production section thus the Disney-ABC source is duplicate and should not be used per RS.
  4. Minor support cast are trivial. # Minor support cast are trivial. Unexplained removal of this is appropriate since it isn't sourced.

Spshu (talk) 16:32, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

1) The Twitter is a verified Twitter account and is therefore reliable. 2) Those come from the film's own credits and do not need to be sourced per WP:PRIMARY. 3) There is nothing wrong with using more than one source to source a single statement, and Disney ABC Press is a perfectly reliable source. 4) IJBall agrees with removing non-notable cast; however, it was sourced by the film's own credits. Amaury (talk | contribs) 16:40, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
In addition, your #2 is not lede-worthy – in the 'Production' section is fine, but it doesn't merit being in the lede. And the sourcing for that should be in the prose, not in the infobox (as per MOS:INFOBOXREF). --IJBall (contribstalk) 17:02, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
Amaury, yes but there was another source and Twitter is the least RS source, per PRIMARY they are not "perfectly reliable source". Fight against removal of another source is not constructive and not a reason to start an edit war. 2) WP:PRIMARY does NOT allow you to not indicate what your source is, you are violating WP:Verifiability. Once removed, you must WP:PROVEIT. 3) You then allow people to "snow" you (WP:OVERCITE - I know it is an essay) - basically create more work for you. I could understand if it was establishing notability, but primary sources don't do so. I have editor(s) drop multiple former "mini-major" studios into a list of them with multiple sources. So I had to hunt through all the sources they put in there to confirm that no they were never considered mini-major. Given its primary source status, it should yield to a news source because a) better per RS b) likely Disney-ABC doesn't make it possible for their pages to be archivable (archive.org) and gets rid of the pages as they want you to see more current works that they pushing. Thus making using them almost as bad as a TV schedule, no one would be able to confirm what you saw. 4) Another reason for not using primary for cast is the fact you run into making an indiscriminate list (WP:CASTLIST).
IJBall, Disney Theatrical's and Disney Channel's first work together falls into "explain why the topic is notable" at MOS:LEAD. Should be DTP's first film too, but the source doesn't support that. No, MOS:INFOBOXREF states that if it is not sourced in the body then a ref/cite in the infobox is appropriate. Spshu (talk) 19:19, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
You were the one edit warring and being disruptive, not us. After the very first revert, you should have raised the discussion then, not waited until you were right at the border of 3RR, as the onus is on you. I have no idea what you're talking about, but film credits fall under WP:PRIMARY, and as such don't need to be sourced, and using two sources to source a single statement is hardly over-referencing. The production company in turn doesn't need to be sourced in the infobox, even though it's not mentioned in the body, since it's covered by WP:PRIMARY. Amaury (talk | contribs) 19:30, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
If Spshu wants to mention this production info "partnering" stuff, that should be mentioned in the 'Production' section, and it should be sourced there (not in the infobox). That part is fine. But it should not be mentioned in the lede – none of that is what makes Freaky Friday (2018) notable (itself) as a TV film... --IJBall (contribstalk) 20:00, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
Also, to be clear, I agree with Amaury: there is absolutely nothing wrong with having both a WP:SECONDARY source and a WP:PRIMARY source to reference the film's premiere date – the latter does not need to be removed. --IJBall (contribstalk) 20:02, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
I was typing here while the both of you were being distributive as you were removing information and trying to get a BRD for what I could explain in an edit summary. I have just pointed out that the onus was on you per PROVEIT, so you are the distributive one. Please stop making up what WP:PRIMARY states. Per WP:V/WP:PROVEIT, you must source it if you don't and it is removed then you must sourced it. Per WP:FACTS#Over-citing: "Citations should be evaluated on the qualities they bring to the article, not on the quantity of citations available." Two sources might not constitute over sourcing having two did not add anything to the release date, nor was a candidate for additional information. Read WP:CITATIONBLOAT.
" If Spshu wants to mention this production info "partnering" stuff, that should be mentioned in the 'Production' section, and it should be sourced there (not in the infobox)." What are you talking about, IJBall, I gave a correct to this perception already. If you don't understand what is going on then don't involve yourself. The partnering stuff is a "FIRST" partnering other wise, I would agree with you that it only belongs in the production section. O, but their is, too much primary gets you a hatnote (Template:Primary sources) that it is a problem. The article as you like it has 3 primary source to 3 secondary sources thus making it clear that it should be tagged with the hatnote as relying on primary sources. With my version, removing two primary sources allow a primary source only available information to be added back while reducing dependence on primary sources. Asserting both of these brings the notability of the subject into greater question. Spshu (talk) 21:30, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
And that's exactly the problem. You don't try to explain yourself with edit summaries as that is edit warring to try to push your way against consensus. You clearly have not read WP:BRD, a policy; otherwise you would understand why you're wrong. You were bold. Your edit was then reverted At that point, the WP:ONUS was on you to provide a reasoning and discuss why that content shouldn't be there, not mindlessly revert to try to force your point of view. And you're the one with no understanding of WP:PRIMARY here. If John Smith is shown as a director in a film's credits, the film's credits are a perfectly reliable source. We don't need to go and source that John Smith directed a film with some WP:SECONDARY. It is unnecessary. If you can't understand these simple concepts, then you shouldn't be editing here. Amaury (talk | contribs) 23:55, 24 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

←No the problem is that you don't understand PROVEIT and PRIMARY. BRD is not a policy per BRD: "The BOLD, revert, discuss cycle (BRD) is an optional method of reaching consensus. This process is not mandated by Wikipedia policy..." Second, I did explain in my revert, which then acknowledge then still demanded BRD for a legitimate removal of the lesser characters. I have shown that ONUS has been on you per PROVEIT. You are the ones mindless removing sourced information because you have some beef over a primary source in another part of the article. But your example of John Smith director is not the same as this issue. The editor should have at least looked for a secondary source before using a primary source. The situation is that a primary and secondary source were both included, sourcing rules indicate that primary are problematic thus secondary are the preferred source. You want to retain a source just because what and spend hours minimize PRIMARY to what you think it is then waste yours, mine and IJBall's time over it. It isn't like I am removing that John Smith as director. I initially remove Bad Angels Productions, as it was unsourced, then returned it with the only source that I could find for it, a primary source. Removing the primary source for the release date reduced the article's dependence on primary sources without leaving unsourced. Spshu (talk) 14:50, 25 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

If you think that following WP:BRD is optional, then you really don't understand how Wikipedia works. As such, no, the onus is not on us to prove the sources are reliable, it's on you to prove why they're not reliable. And I've explained to you before, the production company is not required to be sourced since it's in the credits and is covered by WP:PRIMARY, regardless of your misunderstanding of that. If you can't understand that, that's your fault. I'm done discussing this with you. Amaury (talk | contribs) 14:55, 25 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
So, I should set around and discussion the matter with vandals? The onus is on you when you do not provide sources. Onus is on you to show why a second source is need to source the same information. Yes, you have "explained to you before, .... is not required to be sourced since it's in the credits and is covered by WP:PRIMARY", which you promptly disregard quotes from WP:V. how about quotes from WP:PSTS "Wikipedia articles should be based on reliable, published secondary sources and, to a lesser extent, on tertiary sources and primary sources" and WP:SECONDARY: "Wikipedia articles usually rely on material from reliable secondary sources." Thus secondary sources should be kept over primary source when sourcing the same thing. It is up to you to show that it adds any thing to the article, which you have not. Spshu (talk) 21:04, 25 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

Editing this

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Doesn't Disney employ people to write this stuff? Why don't they edit it?

Scribley (talk) 01:25, 2 January 2019 (UTC)Reply

Disney does not own this website. Disney employee editing their article is considered a Wikipedia:Conflict of interest as they would likely make the article a "puff" piece. Spshu (talk) 17:16, 7 January 2019 (UTC)Reply

Sarah Willey/Marlowe Percival (the role of "Kitty")

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An edit dispute is going on concerning the inclusion of Marlowe Percival, taken as the new name for Sarah Willey, in the cast list, whereas that name doesn't appear in the film's credits ... Sarah Willey is the name listed. The latest IP reversion (at the time of my post) is using WP:OSE argument for their reasoning ([1]), which is clearly not valid, nor is the YouTube reference cited to back the claim. Still, if we were to include the name, how would we go about it? (Very likely not how the IPs are doing it.) MPFitz1968 (talk) 17:56, 24 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

We should not include anything but the credited name – we have not gone back and retroactively changed all crediting of Bruce Jenner to Caitlyn Jenner. There were even WP:RfC's about this, and that was the conclusion. --IJBall (contribstalk) 18:07, 24 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
Kind of reminded me about when J.J. Totah, who portrays Stuart in Jessie, had a name and gender change, which he/she reported last year. Then edits were made wherever that name appeared to change it from J.J. to Josie, which is not how the name appears in the credits of the episodes Totah appeared in. Definitely should stick to how credited in the works they appeared in, regardless of what happens later. MPFitz1968 (talk) 18:23, 24 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

Good Evening

It was not my intention to disrupt an article, merely to provide correct information.

However I would ask, for my own information as the person who was undoing the changes originally didn't explain in why that allowed for people who transition/change their names entirely.

Can you explain why, after providing a reliable source, the correct information (both common name and credited name) and precident on 2 other pages where this format has been allowed, that this simple revision is still being struck down? As far as i can see it more than follows the terms of use.

If this change cannot be made then can you advise me of a more appropriate way for this information to be conveyed. The page is inadvertantly deadnaming the actor involved so to be able to credit them under their correct name would be a more accurate statement.

As I said, I had no intention of disrupting a page and would like guidence in methods of better updating the information so this type of misunderstanding can be avoided in the future.

Many thanks

84.64.129.90 (talk) 18:25, 24 June 2019 (UTC)Dave WReply

Thank you for moving this into the correct place. I understand the conversation above, can you confirm how the youtube video isn't a valid source? Also even if I did get a valid source whether any changes are likely to be made or if this will continue to show the actors previous name? 84.64.129.90 (talk) 18:57, 24 June 2019 (UTC)DaveWReply

There are several issues here. The first is: What is appropriate level of detail at this article – this article is simply about the movie. Anything not directly relevant to the movie is out-of-WP:SCOPE, and thus not appropriately covered here. This issue is, IMO, outside the scope of this article and should not be dealt with here. Basically, as per both WP:TVCAST and WP:FILMCAST, we simply report cast lists from the credits, verbatim and without embellishment, so as to avoid controversy, editor conflicts, and WP:OR. As MPFitz1968 has said – what happens after the film is released is irrelevant to the cast listing/crediting for the film itself.
The second issue that you are getting at is – What is an appropriate source to use in terms of WP:GENDERID? As per WP:ABOUTSELF, a reference in which the subject refers to gender identity themselves can be used as a reference to support this. Based on this, I would say just linking to the Twitter account would not be acceptable, but linking to a specific Twitter post on the subject would be. In terms of the YouTube interview, I didn't actually view it, so it would depend on what was said (note: including the specific timestamp of the relevant portion of the interview is always a good idea in cases like this...). Now, all that said – this part of the discussion is relevant if there was a separate article on the subject themselves. But there is not (and I don't believe the subject is notable under WP:BASIC or WP:NACTOR yet, so a separate article on the subject would be inappropriate/WP:TOOSOON in this case...).
But, here, we're just talking about the cast list of a TV film, so whether the sourcing establishes WP:GENDERID sufficiently or not is rather besides the point – that isn't relevant to the WP:SCOPE of this article. --IJBall (contribstalk) 20:37, 24 June 2019 (UTC)Reply