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I've marked the stores list with the NPOV tag, which may seem like a somewhat unorthodox move, but here's my rationale: What constitutes a "major" store? Anchor stores can be fairly easily determined based on names. If I were to guess, I'd say that the anchors are probably Dillard's, Penney's, Macy's, and Sears. Anchor stores are fairly easily to define, and should be sectioned off on their own. The definition of "major" troubles me somewhat. What is the objective criteria here for defining a store as "major"? It seems that there is none. Is it based on square footage? Sales? Customer traffic? Who knows. We need to determine "major" in this case. Besides that, the "major" section is bifurcated, as there are two sections for "major" retailers. So let's rectify this...
SchuminWeb (
Talk)
06:11, 27 November 2006 (UTC)reply
I Agree with Schuminweb
Perhaps the word to use is not "major". I think the wording should be "flagship". However, you should only use the word "Flagship" if the company considers it a flagship store. Please don't be mad at me but I'm going to re-edit the page to maje or look like a NPOV stand.
Mystify85JEC19:18, 16 December 2006 (UTC)reply
Changes ahead
Some major changes, perhaps long overdue, to the operation of Valley View Center appear to be about to get underway. Here's a link to an article that spells out part of what could be the beginning of the end. (Yes, that's a lot of weasel but I'll err on the side of caution here.) -
Dravecky (
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10:02, 4 July 2011 (UTC)reply
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As one user has said, far less notable things have been included on Wikipedia.
I fail to see how a video that is rapidly gaining over 100,000 views a day (897,000 since its release 4 days ago) is “non notable”. I would argue that that is a rather significant moment for a dead and demolished mall that hardly anyone would have given any thought about if not for the video.
Not0nshoree (
talk)
04:49, 13 October 2023 (UTC)reply
@
Not0nshoree: The
YouTube video added to the "in popular culture" section appears to be a low-quality video filmed by someone trespassing in the abandoned mall. I would support adding this video as an external link, if not for the extremely low-quality filming technique, which makes it unencyclopedic. Moreover, there is nothing to support that this low-quality video has had any cultural impact, per
WP:IPC. It should be removed.
Magnolia677 (
talk)
10:37, 13 October 2023 (UTC)reply
The video is actually of a 3d render of the Mall: it's entirely computer generated and tells a fictional story. I guess you only watched a little bit of it, but it's a fictional found footage horror movie set in the Valley View Centre, not a video of the real mall. The creator, Kane Parsons, has said he worked 16 hour days to complete the film, and he is mentioned on another wiki page regarding his notable computer rendered horror films (he is currently producing a film with A24 in the same style as well). Although I wouldn't say it should be added until the video receives attention beyond YouTube, it's certainly not irrelevant or low quality.
AlisterSinclair (
talk)
12:00, 13 October 2023 (UTC)reply
The footage is not real, if that is what you are implying. It was made to look like low-quality phone-held video. The video is part of a fictional YouTube series.
Not0nshoree (
talk)
12:00, 13 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Take the time to view the video in its entity and understand the plot. The film depicts the mall as it was prior to closure (albeit as a high clarity digital recreation) as featured in several prominent media outlets, including The Dallas Morning News. As others have pointed out, the director of this video (Kane Parsons) is himself notable, and has been featured several times including ABC News (US) and has his own IMDB profile. The video itself is arguably of high quality, and what one would expect from a high-definition handheld camera (one's personal opinion on what constitutes "quality" is frankly irrelevant here anyway; The perceived video quality doesn't change what the film depicts). Rightfully so, the "In popular culture" section should remain and indeed be expanded on.
2404:E80:4FA7:16:61AD:D05C:6782:FBA0 (
talk)
05:24, 16 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I'll also add that the fact that this film has brought significant attention to Valley View Centre, from people outside of the USA (for what was otherwise a rather unknown mall), goes towards demonstrating its increasing notoriety.
2404:E80:4FA7:16:61AD:D05C:6782:FBA0 (
talk)
05:27, 16 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I agree with this. Although I would support adding for reasons of popular culture (the film has undoubtedly drawn attention to the mall among the public that it would not have otherwise recieved) it needs sources other than the youtube video, and as far as I can tell it has not received any as for now. If/when it does I think it would be a reasonable addition to the page, but the single sentence currently on the article is all that is necessary. This is a page about a mall, not about youtube horror trivia
AlisterSinclair (
talk)
14:33, 20 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Exactly. If there was a secondary source about the YouTube video (such as a news article on it), then this content would stay. But since all that's being cited is the video itself, then it fails
WP:NOR.
Panian51314:23, 24 October 2023 (UTC)reply
Those unsourced/poorly-sourced/indiscriminate "in popular culture" sections used to be popular, but the project has mostly moved on. Anything mentioned should really be supported by reliable, secondary sources. (That excludes
WP:RSPTVTROPES.)
Woodroar (
talk)
17:00, 3 November 2023 (UTC)reply
"The most-talked-about new horror film of the season isn’t in theaters or on a streamer, but on YouTube. Which is why you should turn off the lights and get lost in the viral CG nightmare “The Oldest View,” the latest cinematic brain-melter from 18-year-old prodigy Kane Parsons."
2001:9E8:2D02:900:9408:AD3A:BF7B:3BD0 (
talk)
17:43, 3 December 2023 (UTC)reply
This video by YouTube channel The Film Theorists (12.8M subscribers) offers a critique and interpretation of The Oldest View. At the time of this writing, this analysis video was viewed 2.2M times. It mentions the Valley View Center at length.
"it's important to note that the Valley View Center doesn't actually exist anymore (...) by 2012 the mall was bought out by an investment group called Beck Ventures who didn't plan to save the dying mall but instead demolish it and rebuild the land into a completely different shopping district known as Dallas Midtown. In fact you can see part of Beck's plan to do this inside of The Oldest View as Wyatt is exploring the office space you can spot several artistic renderings and publicity images displayed on one of the walls that he walks by the very same ones that you can find in real life if you go to the actual website for the Dallas Midtown project"
I'm wondering if we are talking about the same video. The video by The Film Theorists
[1] linked above mentions the Valley View Center by name 5 times and a significant amount of the runtime is dedicated to the history of the Mall. If it is acceptable as a secondary source, it would increase notability for The Oldest View.
89.204.135.143 (
talk)
12:39, 17 January 2024 (UTC)reply
The Film Theorists is an entertainment channel, like all of MatPat's Theorists channels. I've never seen it taken seriously as a source on or off Wikipedia.
Woodroar (
talk)
23:59, 17 January 2024 (UTC)reply
That is fair, though I believe there is some nuance to it in this particular case. Based on the above exchanges, it seems the discussion is hinging on the following questions:
1. Notability: is Kane Parson's series The Oldest View culturally significant?
2. Significant Coverage
WP:SIGCOV: Does Kane Parson's series The Oldest View have a strong enough thematic connection to the Valley View Center?
3. Reliable sources
WP:SOURCES Do the citations come from reputable sources?
On 1 and 3: There seemed to be an agreement that LAT article calling The Oldest View "The most-talked-about new horror film of the season" was enough to establish notability and comes from a reputable source. However it was considered insufficient to establish 2 for not explicitly mentioning the Valley View Center mall.
On 2: The show is set almost entirely in a hyper-realistic CGI reconstruction of the Valley View Center mall and its plot is largely inspired by the history of the location. The video from The Film Theorists makes it pretty clear in case the show itself didn't already. Is a high level of reputability really needed here?
Could we agree that the combination of these two sources, one reputable establishing the show's overall notability and the other—arguably less reputable—confirming its rather self evident thematic connection to the Valley View Center, should suffice??
I understand there is some reluctance to include "In Popular Culture" sections which can get out of control but it seems rather unlikely that this would happen here.
Not really.
WP:N (our Notability policy) and
WP:SIGCOV (its "significant coverage" subsection) are about whether or not a subject is considered important ("notable") enough to warrant its own standalone article. So they're not applicable here. The relevant policies covering what belongs in an article are (mostly)
WP:V (all claims should be directly supported by a reliable source or sources) and the related
WP:NOR (articles shouldn't include claims based on original research, where no reliable sources exist). There's also
WP:NOT, which goes into why Wikipedia doesn't include certain kinds of information or detail; one of those is
Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information. I think the essay
"In popular culture" content does a good job of tying all of them together.
But to answer your question, we're not able to combine multiple sources to support a claim that none of them make. We call that
synthesis on Wikipedia. All claims need to be directly and explicitly supported by a reliable source. So yes, the Los Angeles Times is generally considered a reliable source, but it doesn't mention Valley View Center so we can't consider it. (As an aside, I'll also mention that there's been a great deal of pushback against those listicle-type articles over the past decade or so. They're seen as something that a lot of media companies have had to do to pay the bills, along with
clickbait headlines, unmarked
churnalism, and pumping out low-quality content like a
content farm—but we typically ignore them as sources. If a reliable source considers something noteworthy, they'll probably devote a dozen or so paragraphs to it. That is what we're looking for.) And, as MatPat isn't considered a reliable source, we have to exclude that source entirely. (Another aside: I'm not a subscriber to MatPat's channels but I've watched plenty of their videos over the years. It's all interesting stuff, but they're not the subject-matter experts that we look for. You can read about our reliable sources guideline at
WP:RS.)
I really don't think we could call this reliable. It's a local(ish) radio station, the author ("Grizz") doesn't seem to be a recognized subject matter expert, and there's no apparent editorial structure. The piece itself is rather amateurish, mostly summarizes what's in the videos (meaning there's little actual content in his own words), and I spotted quite a few mistakes and typos (which speaks to their lack of editorial control).
Woodroar (
talk)
16:49, 28 April 2024 (UTC)reply
It seems rather strange...
It seems odd to me that I've seen so many analyses about The Oldest View mention the Valley View Mall and yet when I come to Wikipedia, the vaunted repository of knowledge, the only mention I see of The Oldest View on here is in the discussion section. Now, I don't know if this is some issue with where in the structure of the article it might go, if some of the detractors of adding it have gotten a little backed into their positions, or if it is perhaps some issue of site policy; but to me it seems entirely clear that The Oldest View is more than worthy of mentioning in the article. It seems that it's the most probable reason why someone from outside of the DFW Metroplex would be on this page at all.
If you read the discussions above, you'll see that it's entirely due to the lack of coverage in reliable, independent, secondary sources—which is what all Wikipedia articles should be based on. At least one reliable source (The Los Angeles Times) does cover The Oldest View, but it says nothing about the Valley View Mall. Other sources do connect the video with the mall, but they're not reliable. If you know of sources not mentioned above, please let us know so we can research them.
Woodroar (
talk)
15:40, 28 April 2024 (UTC)reply
If that doesn't meet the guidelines, I must unfortunately note that everything else I've found is on Reddit and YouTube. While these sources contain original research, it's all extremely well supported, beyond all shadow of a doubt. Surely the number and quality of these posts should merit some sort of notability, I think.
George Mucus (
talk)
08:43, 29 April 2024 (UTC)reply