Revision as of 20:05, 16 August 2005 editTed Wilkes (talk | contribs)18,934 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 20:06, 16 August 2005 edit undoTed Wilkes (talk | contribs)18,934 editsNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 203: | Line 203: | ||
2) ''adroitly following the cultural mores of Misplaced Pages, all the while working to subvert it in order to trigger some misleading keyword searches on Google related to Elvis Presley. This is exactly the sort of thing that drives knowledgeable and scholastically rigorous editors away from WP''. '''Wyss 00:10, 15 July 2005 (UTC)''' | 2) ''adroitly following the cultural mores of Misplaced Pages, all the while working to subvert it in order to trigger some misleading keyword searches on Google related to Elvis Presley. This is exactly the sort of thing that drives knowledgeable and scholastically rigorous editors away from WP''. '''Wyss 00:10, 15 July 2005 (UTC)''' | ||
- ] 20: |
- ] 20:06, August 16, 2005 (UTC) |
Revision as of 20:06, 16 August 2005
This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Elvis Presley/Archive 23 page. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
|
Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
Archive: Discussion prior to August 11, 2005
An event in this article is a April 21 selected anniversary (may be in HTML comment)
Answer: On April 21, 1956 "Heartbreak Hotel" becomes Elvis Presley's first song to reach No.1 on the Cash Box magazine music charts.
Cleanup of prose
I've done some badly needed cleanup of the prose throughout the American phenomenon section which was impossible before because of the constant unilateral reversions. The only content I removed was an allusion to the decline of country and western music in the US during this period. While EP certainly brought rockabilly and rock and roll to the white mass youth audience and early rock and roll gradually siphoned listeners away from traditional country music broadcast outlets, it is not appropriate to imply Elvis Presley himself "severely imacted" the country music industry, which had systemic problems related to widely shifting demographics and social mores (the very ones which made the talented Elvis' timing and reception so successful), never mind the arrival of television in the rural US. Much of this was later addressed by the introduction of the so-called "Nashville Sound" and other demographic re-targetings. Indeed, several rockabilly performers stayed with their core country audiences (Conway Twitty is an oft cited example). Wyss 16:05, 10 August 2005 (UTC)
Was Elvis gay?
I've put 141's material in this sub-section. Since there is zero evidence to support Bret's or Dee Presley's claims (which seem motiviated by money more than anything else), I think the title is apt and the hard disclaimer ending the section is called for. However, I support the inclusion of this material. The rumours are widely known and published, and readers coming to WP for information on them are helped by seeing them presented in encyclopedic context with their sources characterized. Unless over-ridden by unambiguous consensus (which I'll watch for), I'll revert any attempts to delete this material. Similarly, I will revert attempts to imply that the Memphis Mafia was Elvis' private gang of "gay fuck buddies" (a wholly unsupported notion), or to divide the relationships section into "straight" and "gay" parts. Wyss 14:20, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
- There is now a section entitled "Was Elvis gay?". In view of the critical remarks by Professor Wall (see ), the following passage should also be added to the end of this section: "Despite such statements that Presley may have been bisexual or gay, most other authors, writing in the vein of the worldwide Elvis industry which has a tendency toward supporting only a 'favorable' view of the singer, describe Elvis as heterosexual." Onefortyone 14:35, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
- I did a word search of that document and it contains no instances of the words "homosexual" or "heterosexual," only one instance of the term homophobia which is unrelated to any later tabloid claims Elvis was gay. The cite does not support your assertion that authors are specifically supressing claims that EP was gay, therefore I can't agree with the wording you suggest. If you can come up with a cite directly supporting your assertion, I'll support including it. Wyss 14:42, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
- Here are again the relevant passages of Professor Dr Wall's critical article:
- It is clearly stated that one of the strategies of the worldwide Elvis industry is " 'community policing' to achieve governance at a distance and typically effected through the various fan clubs and appreciation societies to which the bulk of Elvis fans belong. These organisations have, through their membership magazines, activities and sales operations, created a powerful moral majority that can be influenced in order to exercise its considerable economic power. Policing by mobilising the organic ‘Elvis community’ – the fan and fan club networks – has been achieved in a number of different ways, for example, when Dee Presley, nee Stanley, Elvis’s former step-mother, wrote a supposedly whistle blowing account of Elvis’s last years. The fan clubs refused to endorse the book and condemned it in their editorials. The combined effect of this economic action and negative publicity was poor sales and the apparent withdrawal of the book. With a combined membership of millions, the fans form a formidable constituency of consumer power. Dee Presley subsequently wrote an article in the National Enquirer about Elvis’s alleged incestuous relationship with his mother. This action invoked an angry reaction from the fans; for example, the T.C.B. Gazette, journal of the Looking for Elvis Fan Club in Mobile, Alabama, published an open letter by Midge Smith to encourage all fans to boycott the Star, a US tabloid: ‘s Elvis fans, we all feel compelled to protect Elvis from those that profit from his name and image, only to turn the truth into trash’. Smith’s stance was supported by the fan club, which appealed to ‘‘‘Elvis’’ fans world-wide not to purchase the Star magazine any more’.
- Another interesting, but slightly complicated, example of the de facto ‘community’ policing of Elvis occurred after the organisers of the Second International Elvis Presley Conference, held at the University of Oxford, Mississippi in August 1996, invited San Francisco-based Elvis Herselvis, a lesbian Elvis impersonator, to perform at the conference. The conference organiser, Professor Vernon Chadwick, sought ‘not to provoke controversy gratuitously’, rather, ‘to test the limits of race, class, sexuality and property, and when these traditional strongholds are challenged, controversies arise from the subjects themselves’. Furthermore, as an official University event, the conference must comply ‘with all applicable laws regarding affirmative action and equal opportunity in all its activities and programs and does not discriminate against anyone protected by law because of age, creed, colour, national origin, race, religion, sex, handicap, veteran, or other status’. Whilst these intentions were widely known, a number of local Baptist Ministers complained to the Mayor of Tupelo about the inclusion of Elvis Herselvis on the conference programme and sought to block funding for the conference. The church’s concerns were supported by the organiser of the Elvis birthplace and Museum, then EPE followed suit. Conference organiser Chadwick argued that these actions ‘really get interesting when you throw in all the indigenous racism, homophobia, and class distinction that Elvis suffered in the South and throughout his career’. Chadwick received a formal, but diplomatic, letter from EPE’s licensing officer which formally POLICING ELVIS withdrew support for the conference. It referred specifically to the controversial nature of the ‘performers’ invited to the 1996 conference and alluded to the ‘possible media exposure of this controversial event’. Indeed, it seems probable that the estate’s own actions were themselves forced by the broader community view. Whilst the withdrawal of Graceland’s support was not critical to the survival of the conference, the organisers were disappointed because of the event’s cultural affinity with Graceland." Onefortyone 14:46, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
- Here are again the relevant passages of Professor Dr Wall's critical article:
Ok, let me have a go at re-wording the line so that it flows with the article but preserves what you're trying to impart. Wyss 14:49, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
- Done. I'll support the section as it is, including the harsh disclaimers, since there is no documented or even credible evidence supporting those tabloid assertions. Readers will benefit from seeing this gossip-fodder presented in a reasonable context IMO. Wyss 15:16, 11 August 2005 (UTC)
If I may add some additional comments. Suggesting that a "worldwide Elvis" industry prohibited the "truth" about Elvis' sexuality from coming out is bordering on the paranoid. Goldman's book which was scathingly critical about Elvis did exceedingly well. Goldman, however, made no reference or inference that Elvis was gay or bi-sexual. Indeed, no credible source has ever made that sort of assertion. The claims that Elvis had a sexual relationship with his mother or that he was gay are without merit and come from a lunatic fringe. Without any legitimate sournce to back them up there is no need to put this manufactured controversy on the page. Why not just detail how Elvis is actually an alien or how he currently lives with JFK? It adds nothing to someone's understanding of Presley as an artist or as an icon so why muckrack? (This was posted by User:Lochdale)
- That section is the result of long-running efforts by Onefortyone to enter the material into this article. Most of the editing dispute took place at Nick Adams and Natalie Wood. Ultimately, I informally mediated a series of compromises with Onefortyone regarding the conclusion of the tabloid material (for which there is no documented evidence of reality). As I stated above, in absence of editor consensus, I will support the inclusion of citations to published versions of these rumours. If a clear consensus of several registered users emerges to delete the section, I'll defer to consensus. In the meantime, the article has been stabilized in reference to the gay rumours, which do exist, although I believe them to be unfounded. Wyss 15:59, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
Allow me to apologize. I deleted the section in its entirety before I went to the discussion page. I made some additional changes to the section which I have just saved. To be frank, I think this is a profoundly unfair discussion. The burden should be on the poster claiming that Elvis was gay. An overwhelming amount of evidence points to the fact that Elvis was neither gay nor bi-sexual. It seems intellectually and morally untenable to accept the claims, made after Presley's death, that the man was gay. There have been over 2,000 books written on the man and only two of them suggest that Elvis may of had a gay affair. Albert Goldman never suggested that Elvis was gay. The two authors in question have a history of muck-racking and deception. Until real evidence is presented I'd argue that the entire section should be deleted. It's akin to using the National Enquirer as a reputable source. Misplaced Pages is not a tabloid and I guess I don't think we should entertain these so of rumors. (This was posted by User:Lochdale)
- I agree. If enough registered users post similar comments here we can declare an overwhelming consensus and remove the section entirely. Until and unless that happens, however, it should stay IMHO.Wyss 16:42, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
- I, for one, fully support the inclusion of the "Was Elvis Gay" article. And also, there is some truth to the claim that the Elvis community tries to suppress the truth.
- In how many of those 2,000 books about Elvis is the word "constipation" mentioned? And why, when I first got here, wasn't it mentioned in this article, despite it's long existence? (129.241.134.241 17:36, 12 August 2005 (UTC))
- I also support the inclusion of the "Was Elvis gay?" section, as the accusations have been discussed not only in newspaper articles but also by fan groups. Onefortyone 12:15, 13 August 2005 (UTC)
- Hi, Lochdale and everyone else. Please Misplaced Pages:Sign your posts. This talk page is confusing enough as it is. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 16:51, August 12, 2005 (UTC)
Sorry about that, I'll add my signature from now on (I hope!). I guess I'm a little surprised that we would need a consensus when there is so little evidence (read: none) about his alleged homosexuality. Elvis was probably constipated because he was a man in his 40's who did excessive amounts of drugs at at nothing but fried food! That'll do a number on your colon. There have been many scathing books written about him so I just don't see how the Elvis community supresses the truth. Sure, they defend Elvis but that's what people do when they admire someone. This suppression didn't stop the information about his philandering, drug abuse, over-eating, strange sleeping habits and general craziness getting out now did it? Does anyone really think that Albert Goldman would have passed up an opportunity to mention Elvis was gay if there was any truth to that rumor? Why didn't it ever come out when he was alive or right after his death? Would a respected journalist like Peter Guralnik really avoid mentioning this if there were a shred of evidence to support it? It strikes me that one reader has an agenda and is pushing that agenda despite all reasonable evidence to the contrary.Lochdale
- I have to agree with Lochdale when he says "Elvis was probably constipated". I'll find a way to include that in the "Death and burial" section, maybe under the section "Did Elvis have constipation
problems?".
- I'll try to find literature that supports this claim, because it's much more likely than the homosexuality claim which, after all, got it's own section. Any comments about this? Any suggestions? ::Why don't we all reach a concensus without starting an edit war? (129.241.134.241 04:18, 13 August 2005 (UTC))
User:Wyss, as soon as you and partner User:129.241.134.241 are done "tweaking," let me know then I'll do a little editing myself accompanied of course, as always, by the documented facts posted here on the Talk page. Take your time, most folks want a little weekend rest so maybe I'll wait until Sunday evening – or maybe Monday.Ted Wilkes 19:47, August 12, 2005 (UTC)
- I've removed a personal attack from the above. Wyss 21:01, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
Your charge that my reference to you and User:129.241.134.241 is a personal attack is duly noted. You have recourses if you believe that to be true. However, do not alter my text to hide what was actually said. Please follow Misplaced Pages:Etiquette and Misplaced Pages:Civility. Ted Wilkes 13:04, August 15, 2005 (UTC)
- Note: Ted Wilkes has been blocked at least twice for violations of 3rr and has surreptitiously altered user comments on this talk page. Wyss 22:33, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
User:Wyss - Please do not alter user comments. Thank you. Ted Wilkes 00:02, August 13, 2005 (UTC)
- WP policy permits the removal of personal attacks on sight. I always taken the additional steps of plainly noting I have done so and signing my change. Wyss 14:37, 13 August 2005 (UTC)
I've been lurking on this discussion page for a while so I thought it was time to add my two cents. Under any objective criteria, there doesn't seem to be any evidence supporting the notion that Elvis was gay. The published material is so obscure and salacious that it is only reasonable to question its credibility. Noone else has ever suggested that he was gay so it just seems unfair to me (and poor practice) to leave this section in his bio. Steve Grogan
I agree. However, my efforts to keep these rumours out of Elvis Presley, Nick Adams and Natalie Wood have so far come to naught, owing to lack of overwhelming support (consensus in the form of edits) from other editors. Since the rumours have been published they can't be removed as straight vandalism (although they're on the line) and Onefortyone has been single-mindedly persistent about including them. Wyss 02:48, 15 August 2005 (UTC)
- We can summarize the section on gay rumors about Elvis as: "Was Elvis gay? There's no good reason to think so." To me, that's analogous to "Was Elvis a birdwatcher/sommelier/flintknapper/archer/stereophotographer/knitter? There's no good reason to think so." I see no reason to include such stuff. It might be worth pointing out that the notion was baseless if the notion were widely believed, but it seems not to be -- I suspect that the appetite for Elvis gossip among the kinds of simple soul to whom National Enquirer (or Hello) appeals has already been glutted by talk of the prodigious input and problematic output of Elvis's digestive tract, of his relationships with young girls with improbable hairdos, his momma, and his "Colonel", etc. (For me, his movies, his outfits, and a lot of his songs are already more grotesque than most sexual allegations could be.) Sorry, Wyss, I'd have helped you out there, providing a little something toward the "overwhelming support" required, but for the last few days I've been connected slowly and expensively via modem (as I shall remain for the next few days).
- We have no reason to think that Elvis was gay. But occasionally, since I first became aware of Onefortyone's efforts to persuade me that the American yoof "icons" of the fifties were gay , I've tried imagining that he was right and yes, they were all gay. I find myself saying "So what?" Really, I don't see that where celebs either played or hoped to play "hide the salami" matters or even is interesting. Does this disqualify me from editing WP? Should I care? -- Hoary 23:08, August 15, 2005 (UTC)
- For what it's worth, I don't care either. However, I do care if an article presents wholly unsupported gossip as either fact or plausible possibility, which defeats everything an encyclopedia would be about. Wyss 11:11, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- Yes, absolutely; I totally agree with you there. I was just wondering, though: why would anyone think that Presley's (occasionally alleged) bisexuality would be significant? It's not as if he had been a homophobic politician, bible-thumper, etc. -- Hoary 14:20, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- IMHO? Other axes to grind, anything from obsessed jealousy to conflicted homophobia to straight sabotage of the project or all of the above. It plainly has nothing to do with encyclopedic narrative. The only cites are transparently faked tabloid fodder (although the passing reference in the Gavin book, mentioned in Natalie Wood, seems more like Gavin's sloppy research/laziness to me). However, I haven't been supported by a consensus of edits in my efforts to keep that stuff out of the articles so the alternative has been to skive it into separate sections... Was Elvis Gay?, Rumours etc. At least readers who have heard them can see the sources here in all their dodgy context. Wyss 14:35, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
Wikipedians working together
User:Wyss, I'm truly sorry that you seem to have difficulty in allowing others to edit something you work on. Remember, at the bottom of the page when you edit there is a reminder that says: If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, do not submit it. Editing is part of the process on the road to achieving Misplaced Pages:credibility through the combined effort of many contributors creating quality articles. You've been working very hard on articles today with exhaustive edits . Why not take a short break, recharge the batteries and I will welcome you back. I want to extend an olive branch and assure you that I will go out of my way to work with you to achieve the quality and factual encyclopedia all sincere Wikipedians want. Thank you. Ted Wilkes 00:40, August 13, 2005 (UTC)
- I've had plenty of experience with User:Wyss and she seems like a good Wikipedian, which is more than anyone can say about you, Wilkes. And don't bluff anyone with this "let's take a break" thing, we all know that you're banned. (129.241.134.241 04:22, 13 August 2005 (UTC))
Tom Parker
Oneforty inserted some stuff about Elvis' "evil" manager Tom Parker, who took a lion's share of Elvis' money and who "forced" Elvis to play in low-budget comedies.
Well, on the surface all this sounds like music to my ears - Elvis is portrayed like a complete idiot. However, is there any truth to this whatsoever, or is this unsupported gossip? (129.241.134.241 15:28, 14 August 2005 (UTC))
I wouldn't say "complete idiot." However, Elvis came from a socio-economic and educational background that made him ripe for a manager like TP (many of Elvis' contemporaries were similarly exploited). Nonetheless, altough Elvis' post-army movies were for the most part dreadful, even with Parker's compensation EP had steady income from them during a time (the 1960s) when his recordings weren't much in demand. 141 has a motive for inserting this material into the article- the unsupported "Elvis was gay" canon includes a spin that TP "knew" EP was gay and thus extorted control and compensation from him. I don't think that's at all supported, however the general context of the new paragraph is widely documented and it wasn't until years after Elvis' death that Parker was finally squeezed out of the equation. Personal managers, however, can play crucial roles in musicians' careers and while one can certainly criticize Parker, it's more than dodgy to speculate on their relationship as an utter scam (or blackmail scheme) based on easy wolf/lamb dynamics. Wyss 19:12, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
- In his book, Colonel Tom Parker: The Curious Life of Elvis Presley's Eccentric Manager (2001), James L. Dickerson goes as far as to write, "One thing, however, meets with general agreement: whatever Elvis's other problems may have been, his biggest failing was his utter dependence upon his manager, Colonel Tom Parker. When they inked their first contract, Parker took an unusual 25% commission; by the time of the King's death, three-fourths of Elvis's income went into Parker's pocket, seemingly without Elvis's knowledge. If Elvis was Faust, selling his soul for the riches of the earth, Parker will always be Mephistopheles, paying with a mess of pottage..." Onefortyone 22:48, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
- I'd never heard it was as high as 75% but wouldn't be surprised if that was at times some sort of net result. Wyss 22:56, 14 August 2005 (UTC)
Article dispute notice
I have inserted a dispute notice into this article that relates to more than one part but primarily to the sub-Section: Elvis Presley#Was Elvis gay?. I dispute this sub-section in its entirety. However, to keep things straightforward, I am posting each disputed statement below in order of relevance and one at a time along with the reasons for why I have deleted it. Based on comments by all, the statement will either remain deleted or inserted back into the article. After several hours, I will post the next disputed text in a similar fashion. Ted Wilkes 15:31, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
First disputed item:
THE ARTICLE'S SUB-SECTION STATED:
- "In her unpublished but often cited manuscript book The Intimate Life and Death of Elvis (and an article in the National Enquirer) Elvis's stepmother Dee Presley also claims Elvis had sexual encounters with men and alleges an affair with his friend Nick Adams."
RESPONSE:
Misplaced Pages:Verifiability, an Official Misplaced Pages Policy, requires information that is verifiable and from sources that at are unimpeachable. Note that this had repeatedly been asserted by User:Onefortyone aka ANON 80.141. etc. as having been a "published book" until he was called on it as an untrue statement. He then immediately reinserted the same statement but gave it his new designation of "manuscript book." As to the manuscript being "often cited," the contents of an unpublished manuscript cannot be verified and is not an acceptable reference. Dee Stanley-Presley has published only one book 25 years ago, "Elvis, we love you tender" as registered here at the United States Library of Congress.
The broad assertion that there exists a Dee Presley article in an unknown issue of the National Enquirer that "claims Elvis had sexual encounters with men and alleges an affair with his friend Nick Adams" is neither a proper reference or an acceptable source. See Misplaced Pages:Verifiability# Dubious sources. Ted Wilkes 15:31, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- The Madison Entertainment Group, Inc., a subsidiary of Madison Group Associates, Inc., a now defunct company formerly based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, once acquired the worldwide rights to "The Intimate Life and Death of Elvis Presley," a "very private and revealing manuscript" documenting "never-before-released accounts" of Elvis's life, including the said claims. Here is the source which proves that the manuscript exists: The accusations have also been discussed in newspaper articles and by Elvis fan groups. I remember that there was even a statement by Ann-Margaret who refused to believe Dee Presley's claim that Elvis may have been gay. If David Bret and Dee Presley are right this would explain a lot, for instance, the strong influence of Colonel Parker on Elvis. So it is of some importance to have a small, critical section relating to these claims in the Misplaced Pages article on Elvis. Onefortyone 16:34, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- OneFortyOne, as we are talking about verifiability problems, please refrain from phrases like "I remember that there was even a statement"; please use sources to back up any speculation. Besides that, your link only proves that a manuscript of that name exists. Can you provide evidence of the content, as well as the academic/journalistic integrity of the source? The fact that it was never published speaks very poorly for its suitability as a source. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 16:42, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- As far as I can remember, there was an interview with Ann-Margret concerning these matters. Sorry that I cannot provide the exact source. As for the manuscript by Dee Presley, its content has been widely discussed. Even Professor Dr Wall is mentioning it in his critical article on the world-wide Elvis industry (see above). The new facts Dee Presley presents have also been discussed by other authors, for instance, Greil Marcus, in the book, Double Trouble: Bill Clinton and Elvis Presley in a Land of No Alternatives (2000).
- 1) sign your post. 2) OneFortyOne, I've tried to be neutral here, but your last post is extremely misleading. Dee Presley is only mentioned once in Greil Marcus' book; she is only included in a mention of a "National Enquirer" article in which they claim that Elvis slept with his mom. It doesn't mention homosexuality at all. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 17:08, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- It should be taken into account that there are different claims by Elvis's stepmother in her manuscript book. Not all authors are discussing all of these topics. I have now detected a webpage which summarizes the interview with Ann-Margret and her statements concerning all these claims by Dee Presley, including the gay accusation. See So it is clear that these accusations really exist and that the topic was widely discussed, presumably shortly after Dee Presley's newspaper article had appeared. It is no wonder, however, that Ann-Margret rejects all these claims as she was one of Elvis's girlfriends. Onefortyone 18:57, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
User:Onefortyone/ANON 80.141 asserted above (and previously on the archived talk page) that "The Madison Entertainment Group, Inc., a subsidiary of Madison Group Associates, Inc., a now defunct company". Note that he didn't insert the (Nasdaq: MADI) –
REALLY?
- Nasdaq: MADI
- Company website: http://www.madisonsystemsinc.com/
- Corporate Offices:
- Madison Systems Inc.
- 750 Oakdale Road, Suite 60
- North York, Ontario
- M3N 2Z4 Canada
Mail:
- P.O. Box 70
- Gormley, Ontario
- L0H 1G0 Canada
- Phone: 905-927-9113
- Fax: 905-927-9114
- Donald McNally
- 12275 Woodbine
- Gormley, ON L0H 1G0
- Phone: 905-927-9113
- Fax: 905-927-9114
- Email: dmcnally@madisonsystemsinc.com
- Ted Wilkes 17:34, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- That doesn't seem to be the company he's referring to (if that one even existed), this is a different name, different country (physically in Canada)... Madison is a rather common name. Wyss 17:39, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- However... Madison Entertainment Group appears also to have been Canadian, and a guy named Louis Dion has run both companies. So... it's not the same company, but looks like the same people (no mentions I can see of them ever having published any EP content btw). Wyss 17:43, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
Go to the link he gave here . The NASDAQ symbol (MADI), as I specified above, is given as part of the name but ANON etc. deliberately left that out. Under U.S. and Canadian law, companies change their name by Supplementary Letters Patent all the time but their NASDAQ trading symbol never changes with it. Ted Wilkes 17:47, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- And... the reference above given by 141 is PR Newswire, which accepts virtually any press release and distributes it as is, with little or no editorial selectivity. Wyss 17:50, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
And, by the way, a great many Canadian companies are listed exclusively on the NYSE or NASDAQ or simultaneously with the TSX etc. Ted Wilkes 17:56, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
That press release is ten years old and I can find no sign the manuscript (if it even existed) was ever published. The only references are in WP and its mirrors btw. Wyss 18:02, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- I do not understand this discussion. There is an article by Dee Presley in the National Enquirer which summarizes most of the claims in her manuscript book. See the critical statements by Ann-Margret: Onefortyone 18:57, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
I only posted this to add to my long list of deceptions by User:Onefortyone/ANON 80.141. The issue is, no one knows what is in an manuscript. It is not, by any standard, a source for Misplaced Pages. It is about as farfetched as it gets. See Misplaced Pages:Verifiability# Dubious sources. I too can claim to have a copy of all or part of it. In fact, I'm certain somewhere in my desk drawer is a page or two from that unpublished manuscript that says Elvis Presley is working at a Burger King. Ted Wilkes 18:06, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- I thought there was a basis (however dodgy) for inclusion based on 141's claim an excerpt had been published in a tabloid. Now that we seem to have only the single, solitary citation for Bret, who plainly made stuff up as he went along (according to most reviewers), what sort of consensus do we have here for removing the Was Elvis Gay? section entirely from the article? Wyss 18:15, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- As stated above, there is Dee Presley's newspaper article and a comment by Ann-Margret. Onefortyone 18:57, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- Note, in the cite 141 provided above, Ann-Margret says of Dee Presley: All her claims are lies and based on hearsay. Wyss 19:05, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- Please provide the date of the National Enquirer article and if possible, a quote from that article containing Dee Presley's assertion that Presley and Adams had an affair. Wyss 19:01, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- Sorry, Wyss. This is too much of a good thing. I am not a subscriber to the National Enquirer. The sources I have cited already show that the claims exist. Life is just worth living without Misplaced Pages and the Internet. I have definitely wasted too much time on this site. Onefortyone 19:26, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
He can't provide the source but it does not matter. Neither the National Enquirer or a fan website is an acceptable Misplaced Pages source. (See: Misplaced Pages:Verifiability#Dubious sources). Sorry too, but let's not get sidetracked. That has been User:Onefortyone/ANON 80.141's game to never answer direct questions but to keep raising new unfounded issues every time he gets caught in a lie. User: DropDeadGorgias asked him already above to "provide evidence of the content, as well as the academic/journalistic integrity of the source? " Ted Wilkes 19:30, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- OK, but as he just stated above that he's moving on, and was the only editor pushing for inclusion of the Dee Presley material, I think it's safe to say that consensus has been reached to discount the manuscript as non-verifiable. The trickier material is the Bret book; though it may be considered poor journalism, it was at least published. Right now, the article acknowledges Bret's claims and then notes that the claims are unlikely and not taken seriously by historians. Are people ok with the status of that section now? --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 19:38, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
Absolutely not. The Bret book reference is not acceptable. As stated at the outset of my dispute notice, I intend to deal with all matters in that sub-section which I stated I disagreed with in its entirety. Ted Wilkes 19:43, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
Meanwhile I've removed the Was Elvis Gay? section. Bret is widely discredited and out of over 2000 authors who have published material on EP, giving space to this single assertion of Bret's in the article is inherently misleading. Does this article have any remaining items in sufficient dispute to keep the dispute tag up? Wyss 19:45, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
I think it needs to be dealt with in full. There is nothing to prevent User:Onefortyone aka ANON 80.141. etc. from coming back and reinserting the Bret stuff. Ted Wilkes 19:53, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
- OK, then dispute it. The form you used above for the Dee manuscript was quite effective, if you can prepare something similar for the Bret book, and show that it doesn't conform to Misplaced Pages guidelines, then that would be fine. --DropDeadGorgias (talk) 19:56, August 16, 2005 (UTC)
Thank you, DropDeadGorgias. I will do the second disputed issue a little later today. In the meantime, I think it extremely important to deal with every disputed item because User:Onefortyone/ANON 80.141 has an unacceptable POV history and of reinserting his text at Misplaced Pages and I want to put an end to it once and for all. As noted at User talk:Trey Stone#Mail:
- "Our current thinking is that we will ban aggressive POV editors from the articles which they impact. This policy has been refined somewhat from our former general bans and includes Misplaced Pages:Probation. – Misplaced Pages:Arbitrator Fred Bauder"
What has happened here is that one person alone has hijacked specific Misplaced Pages content with an orchestrated violation of precepts and distortion of facts. User:Onefortyone aka ANON 80.141. etc., with his singular agenda, has dedicated himself to a few articles all of which lead to his claiming Elvis Preseley was homosexual and seeding pages with key words to show up in Google seaches that lead to David Bret and his book. This person has caused hundreds of hours of needless debate all because of his unproven and non-encyclopedic assertions tied into his outright and repeated fabrications. Those who attempted to correct his false or unsubstantiated claims have been reverted by him as many as 100 times or more on the Elvis Presley, Natalie Wood, and Nick Adams articles. On these three articles, the talk page on this subject alone as of two days ago (14.25 UTC) amounted to more than 71,000 words -- that is a full sized book.
And, I am not the only one who thinks that is a fact. Take note what User:Wyss stated on Talk:Natalie Wood concerning the edits of User:Onefortyone/ANON 80.141:
1) The anon is trying to place as many instances of the terms homosexual and gay as possible into these four articles, I speculate in order to trigger misleading keyword search results in Google, which is significantly influenced by Misplaced Pages and its mirrors. Wyss 21:41, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
2) adroitly following the cultural mores of Misplaced Pages, all the while working to subvert it in order to trigger some misleading keyword searches on Google related to Elvis Presley. This is exactly the sort of thing that drives knowledgeable and scholastically rigorous editors away from WP. Wyss 00:10, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
- Ted Wilkes 20:06, August 16, 2005 (UTC)