Draft talk:Kasotsuka Shojo
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Seems WP:1E, that too the song, not band.
[edit]Hi User4edits. I'm not sure what you mean? Popityping888 (talk) 16:27, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
- @Popityping888
- WP:1E:
- "When an individual is significant for their role in a single event, it may be unclear whether an article should be written about the individual, the event or both. In considering whether to create separate articles, the degree of significance of the event itself and of the individual's role within it should both be considered. The general rule is to cover the event, not the person. However, if media coverage of both the event and the individual's role grow larger, separate articles may become justified."
- You can read in detail by clicking here, and read more about it here. User4edits (talk) 04:31, 2 February 2024 (UTC)
- I read those rules. It is "that too the song, not band" I'm not sure about. I treated it as adding another J-Pop band to the list at List of J-pop artists. That seems straightforward to me. A new band built on a gimmick. Inventing a single event seems odd, it is not like the JFK assassination.Popityping888 (talk) 08:41, 2 February 2024 (UTC)
Metro_(British_newspaper)== Assessment of references ==
I have reviewed the references and believe almost all meet the criteria of being about the band and from reliable, secondary sources. There are 44 citations in this article from 40 different media articles, books or commercial websites. This is the second-highest number of citations of the first 17 J-pop bands listed at Category:Japanese girl groups - Wikipedia
24 citations are to news or feature stories specifically about the band.
14 articles are from perennial sources regarded as reliable by Wikipedia: Wall Street Journal (3 articles), BBC (3 articles), South China Morning Post (2; regarded as a paper of record), Financial Times, Forbes (not contributed articles), Reuters, Wired, The Verge, CNET.
14 other media sources are used to provide additional facts: Getty Images (photo library), Reuters (photo library), The Week (weekly summary of global news stories published in UK and US), The Daily Beast, Japan Today, Barron’s, France 24, Yahoo Finance (2), Saudi Gazette, Crowdfund Insider (report on Wall St Journal’s crypto experiment quotes the band), Verdict, [[1]], Quartz.
2 sources are books: academic book about masks and pop bands with section about Kasotsuka Shojo (Palgrave Macmillan); book about history of crypto from award-winning publisher with 4 Nobel winners published (Public Affairs).
The remaining sources are to an article by a Singapore academic discussing whether the band and the crypto boom at the time were a “one-hit wonder”; press releases and social media from the band’s owner or member's; the band on YouTube; lyrics websites.
Writers of these articles include prominent journalists, broadcasters and authors such as Bruce Sterling; Peter White; Jake Adelstein; Leo Lewis, Financial Times Tokyo bureau chief; and Laura Shin, a former senior editor of Forbes.
- Draft-Class Japan-related articles
- NA-importance Japan-related pages
- WikiProject Japan articles
- Draft-Class WikiProject Cryptocurrency articles
- NA-importance WikiProject Cryptocurrency articles
- WikiProject Cryptocurrency articles
- Draft-Class Pop music articles
- NA-importance Pop music articles
- Pop music articles
- Draft-Class Journalism articles
- NA-importance Journalism articles
- WikiProject Journalism articles
- Draft-Class Marketing & Advertising articles
- NA-importance Marketing & Advertising articles
- WikiProject Marketing & Advertising articles