Talk:Jo Harvelle/GA1

Latest comment: 14 years ago by Hunter Kahn in topic GA Review

GA Review

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I'll be reviewing this article. It's funny, I've never seen this show, but this is my second GA review for it! lol. Not a bad little article! Below are my concerns, and they won't be hard to address. Please address each one line-by-line and I'll strike them as we go... — Hunter Kahn (c) 16:36, 17 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Lol. Well, it's usually best to have the reviewer be someone not familiar with the subject, as it helps point out flaws. Anyways, I'll try and start the revisions later today. Unfortunately, the show didn't become as news-heavy as it is now until the fourth season, so it will be hard to find news sources on the episodes. Ωphois 16:42, 17 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Lead:

  • There are two elements I'd like to see added to this lead: 1) The fact that she was created by series creator Eric Kripke, and 2) the fact that Kripke felt the conception of the character was flawed from the beginning. You can weave the second item into what's already there about the fact that she went from love interest to a sister-figure...
I've tweaked the lead. Check if you're okay with it. Ωphois 02:52, 23 December 2009 (UTC)Reply
  • I made a few minor changes. The info is the same, but I added an attribution to the quote (which is needed, as per WP:QUOTE) and reworked the order of some things. Let me know if that works for you. Also, you're saying you don't know for sure that Kripke created the Jo Harvelle character? If that's the case, please remove him as the "Creator" under the infobox. If that's not the case, please add it to the lead... — Hunter Kahn (c) 05:17, 23 December 2009 (UTC)Reply
I removed him from the infobox. Ωphois 14:06, 23 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Plot:

  • Careful not to mix your tenses; there were a few examples of past tense AND present tense in this plot summary. I think I've fixed them all.
  • "...when they come looking for her mother Ellen at the Harvelle Roadhouse—a saloon frequented by hunters—after their father, John Winchester, dies." I'm not familiar with this show, so I was a bit confused by whether Ellen was Jo's mother or Sam and Deans, and also whey they would be looking for her mother after Sam and Dean's father died? Alsom why were they looking for Ellen in the first place? Could you reword this sentence to be more clear? Maybe break it into two sentences so there aren't so many clauses?
  • "...though he states that he too has feelings for her, he won't act on them." Any particular reason why not?
  • "...though ends up being saved by them." Can you briefly mention here how she ends up becoming endangered? In other words, what they have to save her from?
  • "...reacquiring the Colt—a mystical gun rumored to be capable of killing anything—and planning to kill Lucifer." Who reacquires the Colt, exactly? Jo and Ellen? Or Jo, Ellen and the brothers?
    • Changed to: "Jo and Ellen once again team up with the Winchesters in "Abandon All Hope...", helping them to reacquire the Colt - a mystical gun rumored to be capable of killing anything - in order to kill Lucifer." Ωphois 15:43, 18 December 2009 (UTC)Reply
  • Can you site the last paragraph in this section? Even if it's just one citation for the "Abandon All Hope..." episode...
  • I'm OK with the sources for this section being the television episodes themselves, especially for a GA, but if you can find a few outside sources you could sprinkle in here that would be good too. Even if you just use a book or news article to cite a few individual facts that are already in here. It's not necessary if you can't, but I think it would make the article appear a bit stronger...
    • Facts like what? Ωphois 15:43, 18 December 2009 (UTC)Reply
      • Like, for example, if the Nicholas Knight book mentions that Jo and Ellen helped the brothers in "Good God, Y'All", or that Ellen left a message on their dad's voicemail in "Everybody Loves a Clown", you could drop a citation in at the end of those sentence. You wouldn't have to add anything more, just beef up what you have already with some additional citations. Again, this isn't going to be hold up the GAN if you can't do it, I just think it would make the section stronger in case anybody raised an objection that it was all cited by primary sources... — Hunter Kahn (c) 17:59, 18 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Characterization:

  • Episode sources are less acceptable here than they are in the Plot section. You have enough reliable secondary sources throughout the article that I think it satisfied WP:N, but I'd still rather see some of those outside sources used here in place of the episode cites if possible. If you can't replace them, I won't fail the article or anything, but can you look through your sources and see if you can try it?
  • "While at one point she had attempted to go to college, she eventually dropped out..." I take it then that this means she actually attended college at one point, not simply attempted to do so? Could you change the sentence a bit to reflect that?
  • "She is also "enthusiastic" and very "girl-next-door in her approach" to hunting the supernatural." This is still Kripke's description of her, right? If you use quotes or partial quotes, you have to identify the source in the sentence itself. Could you change "She is also..." to "Kripke also described her as..."?
    • The sentences before and after both mention Kripke. I think if I did this, it would be repetitive: Kripke said, Kripke also said, Kripke felt. If you still want it changed, I can do so. Ωphois 15:58, 18 December 2009 (UTC)Reply
      • I just added "He also described her as..." so the name isn't used in three consecutive sentences...
  • "..."[harder] and [tougher]". I'm confused by this. Why use a quote box at all if you're replacing everything in it with bracketed words? lol. Did he or did he not say these things? Could you just drop the quote alotgether and change it to "which Kripke felt made her harder and tougher."

Development:

  • "To accomplish this, Tal made use of her experience in the Israeli army, stating..." Whoa, wait, WHAT?! lol. This is a pretty interesting fact here, but it's sort of droped in from out of nowhere. Can you add just a little bit of info about what she did in the Israeli army, and/or how long she was there?
  • "Because of those factors, the character was eventually phased out in the season." Which season are we talking about, the second season? If so, could you change this to "Because of those factors, the character was eventually phased out of the second season altogether."
  • This source indicates that Eric Krikpe was starting to have doubts that he conceived the character in the correct way even before the first episode aired, which is interesting. Could you add that here?

Reception:

  • This IGN source that you use mentions that the "No Exit" interview uses Jo in a bit of a cliché way (the kidnap victim), even though it ultimately works to the advantage of the storyline. Do you think this is worth adding to this section?
  • I was hoping you could expand a bit on the Fan reaction section here. A few suggestions would be to use the quote from Jensen Ackles "The audience [reaction] was, 'No, no, we just want this to be about the boys.'" from this source
    • Changed to: "Fan reaction to the character was generally negative. Jensen Ackles, who portrays Dean, summed up the response as, "No, no, we just want this to be about the boys.""
  • This section lacks anything about reception to Alona Tal's performance as Jo. Can you add it a bit? This source calls her a "terrific actress" and said she did "valiantly and beautifully", which is a start, even though it's coming from Kripke. Can you find anything else on this?

In general:

I'll place this on hold until the concerns can be addressed. Thanks! — Hunter Kahn (c) 16:36, 17 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

A good article is:

  1. Well-written: Prose is good, MOS is good.
  2. Factually accurate and verifiable: Sources are good, no original research.
  3. Broad in its coverage: Covers main aspects, no unneeded detail.
  4. Neutral: Yes.
  5. Stable: Yes.
  6. Illustrated, if possible, by images: Yes.

Congrats, that's a pass! — Hunter Kahn (c) 14:39, 23 December 2009 (UTC)Reply