A fact from Tropolis appeared on Wikipedia's
Main Page in the Did you know column on 24 January 2011 (
check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that Tropolis has been called an attempt to "snackify" beverages?
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And whoever was collating them seems to think, a bit hilariously, that the paper is called the Daily Mail Reporter, rather than the Daily Mail. (They've obviously read the byline 'Daily Mail Reporter' and assumed that's the name of the paper, when it means 'A reporter from the Daily Mail'.) To me that suggests someone who was just looking for two external references to allow the article to survive an AFD. If you're writing an article properly then you wouldn't base it on an article in a paper you don't even know the name of, but if you're just paying lip-service to WP:V, then hey, here's an article about our drink in some limey paper called the Daily Mail Reporter, thanks Google, that'll do. --
86.147.251.177 (
talk)
17:48, 24 January 2011 (UTC)reply
I restored the {{
notability}} tag; it was
removed by the article creator with an argument that, since the article passed through DYK, it must be notable. This isn't an indication of notability; notability is demonstrated by significant coverage in reliable sources, not by Wikipedia-internal processes that the article passed through. Although DYK does sometimes reject articles for notability issues (i.e., AfDing nominations that are not notable), it doesn't always do so, and there is no explicit requirement that articles must uncontroversially meet the notability requirements to pass through DYK; thus, the fact that this article was on DYK doesn't preclude having a discussion about notability. rʨanaɢ (
talk)
21:56, 27 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Tone
I restored the {{
pressrelease}} tag, which was removed in
this edit (with a summary saying, essentially, "of course it reads like a press release, because that's all that's available now"). That doesn't change the fact that parts of the article are written in a promotional tone; we generally don't remove tags just because we're currently unable to correct the issues. (For comparison, no one would remove {{
Non-free use rationale}} from a non-free image and say "of course it's non-free, because there's no free alternative available!") rʨanaɢ (
talk)
22:17, 27 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Discontinued?
A decade later, and I cannot find reliable, nay, *any* sources to confirm or deny either the continued existence, or discontinuation of this product.
DarkAudit (
talk)
04:08, 22 May 2023 (UTC)reply