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==Sources==
==Sources==
Some of the IP editors listed in "Who is Who is" have questioned what are relable sources. [[WP:RS]] was not drafted with the goal of protecting Wikipedia users from a determined individual that seeks to boot-strap himself into celebrity. However, there are several helpful points there including "Primary sources, on the other hand, are often difficult to use appropriately. While they can be reliable in many situations, they must be used with caution in order to avoid original research." The ''Washington Post'' is more reliable than Rauschenberg's blog, unless that first-person statement is an "admission against interest." However, not all published sources are in fact legitimate secondary sources. For example, for a while the article quoted a story that was published in the local Arlington throw-away advertising publication that was written by one of Dane's close friends as a free opinion columnist instead of as a paid independent journalist. We need to watch out for bad sources in situations when someone is trying to document his own fame. The mediation did a good job of shifting through a lot of the bad stuff. [[Special:Contributions/158.59.27.249|158.59.27.249]] ([[User talk:158.59.27.249|talk]]) 18:37, 14 June 2009 (UTC)
Some of the IP editors listed in "Who is Who is" have questioned what are relable sources. [[WP:RS]] was not drafted with the goal of protecting Wikipedia users from a determined individual that seeks to boot-strap himself into celebrity. However, there are several helpful points there including "Primary sources, on the other hand, are often difficult to use appropriately. While they can be reliable in many situations, they must be used with caution in order to avoid original research." The ''Washington Post'' is more reliable than Rauschenberg's blog, unless that first-person statement is an "admission against interest." However, not all published sources are in fact legitimate secondary sources. For example, for a while the article quoted a story that was published in the local Arlington throw-away advertising publication that was written by one of Dane's close friends as a free opinion columnist instead of as a paid independent journalist. We need to watch out for bad sources in situations when someone is trying to document his own fame. The mediation did a good job of shifting through a lot of the bad stuff. [[Special:Contributions/158.59.27.249|158.59.27.249]] ([[User talk:158.59.27.249|talk]]) 18:37, 14 June 2009 (UTC)
==One Event==
I have a proposal for ending this. Rauschenberg is only known for the '''fiddy2''' project and has not done anything notable since. How about following the Wikipedia policy of incorporating him into the [[Marathon]] article and not have a separate free-standing article that is causing so much aggrevation? [[Special:Contributions/158.59.27.249|158.59.27.249]] ([[User talk:158.59.27.249|talk]]) 18:39, 14 June 2009 (UTC)

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Enough with the edit-warring

I have protected the article for a week due to edit-warring. Please use this time to discuss on this talk page what you want the article to and not to say. If when the block expires, edit-warring recommences, blocking may be considered, particularly if you have made no effort to engage your fellow editors on the talk page in the intervening time. Please note I may well have protected the page on The Wrong Version - if so, I am sorry, but I won't change it. Neıl 16:12, 1 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Suggestion from 207.91.86.2

Picking up on Neıl invitation, I suggest that the post-block article contain the following elements:

Lead

  • Only the birth year.
  • Described as a middle of the pack long distance runner with the two refs to the Pittsburgh and Washington papers. No need to use either the word "amateur" or "professional" because they are meaningless in this context.
  • Keep it short and leave out the charity controversy.

Biography

  • Statement of education and fact that he does not practice as a lawyer. I don't know if he ever passed a bar exam, so it may not be accurate to call him a lawyer.
  • A short statement about his running x marathons and that he works as a race organizer in Utah.
  • No awards should be listed unless they can be documented by independent secondary sources. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.91.86.2 (talk) 20:22, 1 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Running Resume

  • It is the same in both versions - we can keep it.

52 Marathon Project

  • Should accurately reflect the sequence of events that a charity was only added several months into the planning.
  • Should accurate reflect his statements about no "monetary" donations, but reflect his in-kind support of "race entry fee waivers, free meals from a local restaurant, free running shoes, free shuttle rides to and from the airport, and a free website.
  • Should accurately reflect when the project ended and that only $32K was raised at that time. You may also add a sentence that an additional $x was collected since.
  • Reflect that Rauchenberg solicited speaking engagements and contributed to "tell your story" blogs.
  • Footnotes should be accurate and not contain the boosterism quotes.
  • A brief comparison to the other projects that went on in 2006, "The project had to compete for public attention with similar efforts also conducted in 2006 where two people ran a marathon distance on 50 consecutive days in 50 different states, and a third person ran 51 marathons in the 50 different states and the District of Columbia."

See also

Both versions have the same one.

Alansohn's suggestion

The pattern of abuse of Wikipedia and defamation of the article's subject is truly despicable. That User:Racepacket can continue this hypocritical charade of sockpuppetry is appalling. That said, I will address the structure of the article, and why the article should stay largely as is.

Lead

    • Rauschenberg's claim to notability is based on his 52-marathon accomplishment.
    • He is an amateur runner (a statement that is properly sourced without contradiction), which enhances the accomplishment and needs to be included.
      • I disagree, because he is making his living from running. The problem is that the lead creates the dicotomy of "professional-guy-who-runs-52-marathons" vs. "amateur-guy-who-runs-52-marathons" -- a distinction without significance because nobody runs 52 marathons as a profession. Rauchenberg characterized Engle as a professional because he sells health supplements to earn a living while he races. How is that different from Rauchenberg organizing races and giving motivational speeches to earn a living while he races? 207.91.86.2 (talk) 18:31, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • You have already disagreed. You have made the rather idiotic analogy that you "could probably come up with a 1959 newspaper article calling Cassius Clay an amateur boxer, but that would not justify a 2008 Wikipedia article claiming that he was an amateur his entire life". The source provided states he's an amateur. He does not make his money by being paid to run. Again, all you have to do is find a source that states that he is a professional and I will back off. Until then all we have is your unsupported demands. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • Just because Rauschenberg erroneously characterized Engle as a professional doesn't mean that we should include the same error in Wikipedia in characterizing Rauschenberg. He's not a professional runner. No one pays him to run races, and he's certainly not getting prize money. While he may be a professional race director and a professional motivational speaker and both of these are related to his running, that doesn't make him a professional runner. That said, I still think we should leave out professional/amateur status, because iit doesn't really add anything useful to the article.CruiserBob (talk) 01:17, 4 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • The characterization as a "middle of the pack" runner is false and misleading if it is the only description included (as User:Racepacket has been trying to impose on the article), but with the other material it may be appropriate if worded properly.
      • I have not been able to find any edits by that user in the article, so I don't follow you, but "middle of the pack" is a fair characterization of the Pittsburgh and Washington newspaper articles cited in the footnotes. What do you want instead "mediocre"?207.91.86.2 (talk) 18:31, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • You are either completely and totally disingenuous or an out-and-out-liar, though clinical schizophrenia might also explain your insistence that you are actually two different people who share the same obsession with one -- and only one -- person, Dane Raushenberg. You may want to read Wikipedia:Requests_for_checkuser/Case/Racepacket which confirmed that you are User:Racepacket. Your alter ago User:Xcstar was permanently blocked, but for reasons that are utterly unreasonable, you have been allowed to edit. As to your demands that he be characterized as "middle of the pack", I think it is a poor description unless balanced by all of the other descriptions of him as a runner. To only characterize him as "middle of the pack" is false, misleading and characteristic of your pattern of defamation and abuse. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • The charitable component was directly relevant to the 52-marathon goal and mentioned extensively in almost all media references, and is directly relevant in the lead. The claim that there is a "charity controversy" is completely false, defamatory and typical of the biased POV User:Racepacket has tried to maliciously insert in the article.

Biography

    • Details regarding his educational background belong in here.
    • NPR source describes him as a patent lawyer, which belongs in this paragraph.
      • This shows that the NPR transcript is just an off-the-cuff remark rather than fact-checked journalism. There is no record of Rauchenberg ever being admitted to the bar. At the very most, it would be correct to say that he was at one time a licensing agent.[1] Even the versions of this article written by Rauchenberg himself (of which there are many) do not describe him as a "lawyer."[2] Whenever anyone introduced him as a lawyer, he was careful to correct them. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 18:38, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • The NPR item is a reliable and verifiable source. If in your professional opinion as a lawyer you believe that "Patent lawyer" is wrong and that "licensing agent" is more correct, provide a reliable and verifiable source to confirm it and you've got the change. Other than that, your word on this matter is as worthless than any other original research, (if not even more worthless, based on your track record). Alansohn (talk)
    • New career as race organizer / motivational speaker belongs here.
    Paragraph 2
    • Details regarding his background as a runner are relevant to describing the steps that led up to his taking on the 52-marathon challenge.
      • I think that people have already observed that you are free to rewrite his biography to include something on this. However, using the strange paragraph written by Rauchenberg does not make sense and is confusing to the reader. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 18:38, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • I don't give a crap who you claim wrote any part of this article, nor should anybody else. If you can challenge the material or the sources provided you might have an argument here. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Running Resume

    • A rare point of agreement.

One marathon per week in 2006

    • The title should accurately reflect the goal; calling it a "52 Marathon Project" misleads as to the nature of the endeavor.
    • As worded, the text already states that the charitable recipient was selected after the project was conceived, but before the first marathon in the sequence was run.
    • The only deadline in the project was related to running 52 marathons. User:Racepacket has repeatedly removed references to the total amount raised and inserted the amount raised as of December 2006. While it is of little relevance how much was raised as of December 31, 2006, the total amount raised is directly relevant, and any updated amounts should continue to be reflected.
      • I can't find the edit which you have reference. If you could provide the diff, it would be helpful. The consensus version has the sentence, "The 52nd and final race was run on December 30, 2006, with at least $32,000 raised by that time.[1]" with a reference to the Sciullo newspaper story. The story had only the $32K figure, which was the correct amount as of December 30, 2006. The use of any other amount in a sentence using the Sciullo story as its reference is bad scholarship. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • Where is this BS from that your sockpuppet version is the "consensus version"? As stated above, you have repeatedly demanded that the only amount that can appear is the amount raised as of December 31, 2006, as if that date marks some sort of deadline. The only deadline that occured on or around that date relates to running marathons. You have repeatedly removed references to the total amount raised in a revolting example of bad faith, and repeatedly claimed that the charity was somehow shortchanged, did not make enough money to satisfy your expectations ans that there is some sort of "charity controversy" which is knowingly false. These allegationsa re false and defamatory. A sockpuppet complaining about "bad scholarship" is a classic. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
          • The consensus version separates the Sciullo December 30 sentence from the total funds raised, which is stated at Ref #24. Please read the consensus version before you criticize it. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 22:11, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
            • You keep saying that word (consensus). But it's clear from Neıl 's perception of a need for intervention that there never has been a 'consensus' version of the article. That's what Neıl is trying to create. Choosing a version you like and calling it a consensus version doesn't make it a consensus version.CruiserBob (talk) 01:50, 4 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • Given false and defamatory statements added repeatedly to the article that make the malicious claim that an inadequate amount of money was raised, the statement from the fundraising target is directly relevant.
      • The above remark is the essence of the problem. Alansohn keeps on reverting and vandalizing the consensus version because of some past slights. Focus on the current version. Encyclopedias in general, including Wikipedia, should not be used for self-promotion or for trumpting fund raising causes. See the discussion under 14.2 Boosterism above.207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • As in-kind support is commonly offered, it should only be mentioned if it is immediately relevant and supported by reliable sources. The blog sources used to support some of the alleged contributions are unreliable and do not support the claims made. Details regarding other efforts to promote the fundraising effort (speaking engagements, blogs, "tell your story" entries, etc.) are already present in teh consensus version of the article.
      • Rauchenberg created a great deal of confusion by telling interviewers that he had sponsorship while he told other interviews he did not get monetary donations. The consensus version covers this with the sentences, "In mid-2005, Rauschenberg sought financial assistance for the project and obtained sponsorship in the form of race entry fee waivers, free meals from a local restaurant, free running shoes, free shuttle rides to and from the airport, and a free website.[11][12] Despite many requests, Rauschenberg reports that he did not obtain monetary donations to offset Fiddy2's costs, and estimated that total travel expenses related to the effort would be $20,000.[13]" 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • Your multi-sockpuppet version includes not a single reliable or verifiable source. It seems that you insist on beleiving that sponsorship meens cash payemnts when your laundry list includes items worth no more than a few dozen dollars a pop. If you can find reliable and verifiable sources to support your allegations, please include them; Without these sources your claims are just bad faith synthesis. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • As there was no Pre-planned marathon on Christmas weekend, the details regarding teh formation of the Drake Well Marathon are relevant here.
      • There was another marathon that weekend, so Wikipedia cannot state that Rauchenberg's Drake Well event was the only one. However, you are accepting Rachenberg's strained frame of reference. We have three marathoners who emphasized "runs in 50 different states" -- two traveled around to the 50 states in 50 consecutive days, and the third did 50+DC in the weekends. Instead of accepting the logistical challenge of 50 different states, Rauchenberg offers the unique challenge of Christmas weekend, which he solves by imposing on his mother and aunt to conduct an event at his hometown high school track. If this were a made-for-TV movie about the Christmas weekend marathon, it would be a situation comedy rather than a drama. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • I have added sources to support the claim that no other marathon had existed, including from Sports Illustrated. Other events appear to have been pushed off to that weekend but you have offered no source, reliable or otherwsie, to support your bitching and moaning about "imposing on his mother and aunt to conduct an event at his hometown high school track". What other people did is completely and utterly irrelevant, no matter how many times you try to push your personal bias and grudge against Rauschenberg. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
          • All Rauchenberg did was run around a high school track repeatedly on Christmas weekend to claim a "win" over his hand-picked competitors. His mother and aunt got stuck implementing the Drake Well Marathon, which is all the more reason to leave it out of the article. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 22:11, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
            • All Rauschenberg did was set up a sanctioned marathon when none existed, so that the 52nd could be completed; These facts are backed up by reliable and verifiable sources. Your fantasy that this was a burden imposed on others is worthless POV and personal bias of the type that keeps on clouding whatever little judgment you have regarding this article. Find a source that supports your baseless claim or stop pushing your own personal distorted version.Alansohn (talk) 22:52, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

By the way, it was "Aunt Monica." Rauchenberg spared Wikipedia the details, but posted a lengthly account here I think it is best to leave the whole Drake Well Marathon affair out of the article. It is no more relevant than any of the other 51 marathons, and the logistical challenges associated with each. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 23:14, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • Thanks for the link. It provides helpful documentation of the fact that there was no marathon scheduled for Christmas weekend, despite your repeated claims to the contrary. Many people run marathons; very few people run 52 marthons, one per weekend; fewer people set up their own sanctioned marathons to complete their one-marathon-per-weekend-for-a-year goal. While your personal bias agianst Rauschenberg leads you to minimize the notability of the event, the media has decided that the fact that he needed to create the Drake Well Marathon and did so is notable, and that source is provided in the article. These details make this one marathon different from all the other 51. Kudos to Aunt Monica, Dane's mom and Coach Henderson for their contributions in making the Drake Well Marathin happen, but the only part of the story that bears mentioning is the one backed by reliable and verifiable sources. Alansohn (talk) 00:40, 4 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • There is no claim that Rauschenberg's accomplishment was unique, set a record, was the fastest, or any to any other comparable endeavor. The see also entry to Competing in a series of marathons covers the topic. The claim that there was this effort had to "compete for public attention with similar efforts" is pure POV and an unacceptable synthesis and has no place here.
      • Unlike Rauchenberg, we should avoid characterizing one set as better than the other, but we can place the Rauchenberg enterprise in the context of what else was going on in terms of 50+ marathon projects that year. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • The see also provides more than ample context. Comparing Rauschenberg's accomplishments to others is complete original research in violation of Wikipedia policy, not that you have not ignored many other policies in this one article. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
          • Noone except you wishes to compare Rauschenberg's accomplishments to the other 50+ marathon projects that year. The context should state that this was one of several, not that one was better than the other. It comes directly out of Rauschenberg's own words, "but for some reason 2006 seemed to be the year where the press finally started paying attention With Dean Karnazes and Sam Thompson doing their 50 states in 50 days"[3] 207.91.86.2 (talk) 16:13, 4 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
            • For months you have been trying to deprecate Rauschenberg by inserting all sorts of details "proving" that Rauschenberg was not notable because other people have run more marathons, run them faster, run them in different states, ran them backwards, etc., including a bad faith merge request demanding that this article be eliminated and that Rauschenberg deserves no more than a mention among multiple marathon runners. If you want to list Rauschenberg's accomplishment under Marathon#Multiple marathons, and create an implied comparison there, go ahead with my warmest wishes. The fact that others have undertaken projects that you have decided bear some relation to Rauschenberg's is your own personal synthesis and belongs nowehere in this article. The see also covers your latest temper-tantrum demands. Alansohn (talk) 17:11, 4 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • Awards are all appropriately sourced.
      • The key distinction is primary source vs. secondary source. I can provide a primary source that Alansohn won a penmanship award in 4th grade. However, no reliable secondary source, with suitable fact-checking, has reported that award, so it does not belong in Wikipedia. If you have a secondary source, an award can go in. (We need to avoid the problem that Rauchenberg attempted to lure us into when he added to the article that he was nominated for RRCA Runner of the Year.[4] As stated in WP:BLP, "biographies should be pared back to a version that is completely sourced, neutral, and on-topic." 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:04, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • If I had an article that deemed me notable as a fourth grade penmapship champion, my award would be completely relevant. In this article, about these accomplishments, these awards are relevant, notable and reliably sourced. As stated in WP:BLP, "biographies should be pared back to a version that is completely sourced, neutral, and on-topic." I have no connection to the subject and wouldn't know him if I saw him; You know the article's subject, have stated that you feel he has threatened (or might threaten) you and have repeatedly pushed some sort of grudge against him here in this article in a rather disturning fashion. How you can call you or your edits "neutral" is baffling. Your involvement here is in complete violation of Wikipedia conflict of interest policy. Alansohn (talk) 21:16, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • Footnotes all contain the information necessary to document the claims made in the article, especially in the face of efforts by User:Racepacket and associated sockpuppets to insert false and defamatory information.

Especially in light of the previous pattern of abuse of Wikipedia process and refusal to respect consensus, this may well be a step in the right direction by User:Racepacket. However, all legitimate editors should be leery of the previously documented abuse, and any proposals need to be viewed in the light of the unfortunate monomaniacal obsession with this one article and the hateful and derogatory claims made in the hundreds of prior edits made to this article by User:Racepacket. Alansohn (talk) 23:36, 1 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Suggestion from CruiserBob

I've been taking a bit of a wikibreak, so I missed the recent round of edit-warring. This is probably a good time to put in another viewpoint on what the article should look like.

Lead

  • I don't think either 'amateur' or 'middle-of-the-pack' belong here. Pulling a paper encyclopedia off the shelf, none of the several runners whose biographies I looked at listed amateur/professional status. With regard to Alansohn's comment that his amateur status enhances the accomplishment, the purpose of the article is to be encyclopedic, not to either puff up or tamp down the accomplishment. Middle-of-the-pack is not a term I'd expect to see in an encyclopedia in any case - I could see mention later in the article that (this is off the cuff and it certainly isn't how it should be worded) he is not an elite runner & his marathon times aren't particularly noteworthy.
  • His notability is due to the fact that he ran 52 marathons in a year to raise money for a charity - he wouldn't have gotten much press at all if he'd just been doing it for the sake of doing it (note, for example, the various other runners whose names have been mentioned as running 52 marathons in a year as part of the various AFDs in connection with this topic - as a runner, I hadn't heard of them or their feats while they were happening, but I heard about Rauschenberg). So the info about the charity certainly should be included along with the 52 marathons.
    • Isn't this further evidence of the amount of energy he put into self-promotion, including the creation of two separate Wikipedia articles about himself? 207.91.86.2 (talk) 22:15, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
      • Is this a further example of self-promotion along the lines of the idiotic claim that a picture of Rauschenberg in an article in The Washington Post was part of a test to get further promotional pieces published about hime in the future. These delusionary interpretations of the article don't belong here or anywhere. If you can't find a reliable and verifiable source to support the continued claim of self-promotion -- the same justification you used in nominating the article for deletion -- you can't use it in the article, as it is your own original "research", nor would it be proper to impose your bizarre conclusion of "self-promotion" as a justification for modifying the article in any way. Alansohn (talk) 22:52, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • Do you want me to get started on his trying to sell the "book rights" to fiddy2? [[Image:Fiddy2Bookcover.jpg]] (catchy file name) I am sure he plans an entire chapter on your fine efforts. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 23:18, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
      • OK, so he's self-promoting - so what? He wanted to raise a bunch of money for a charity - in order to do so, you've got to self-promote, because if he just says to himself "Dane, I'm gonna run 52 marathons in 2006 and give all the money I raise doing it to L'Arche" then L'Arche isn't going to get a dime, because no one's going to notice that Dane's run 52 marathons.CruiserBob (talk) 01:06, 4 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • His current activities as a race director and motivational speaker, while not particularly notable, seem appropriate to include, since it's an article about a living person - otherwise, someone reading the article is left wondering 'OK, he ran 52 marathons in 2006 - it doesn't say anything else - did he die in 2007 or something?'
  • Basically, I think the lead looks good, with the exception of the word amateur.

Biography

&

Running Resume

  • These two should be the same section - his running resume is part of his biography. Since there's nothing running-related after 2006, ending the section with details of his 52-marathon project would provide a good transition to the next section.
  • Education & previous employment (i.e. patent lawyer) should come first in the section, followed by the running info, since that way it'll read pretty much chronologically.

One marathon per week in 2006

  • The first paragraph is a good intro to the topic.
  • What kinds or how much support he got with regard to travel, entry fees, meals, etc. is pretty much irrelevant to the article, unless he was using donations to fund his races, whereas the money-raising goal and the totals that he raised certainly are. I disagree with 207.91.86.2 that the total as of his last race is the amount that should be listed, unless he had a self-imposed deadline as to when the money had to be raised by - the number listed should be the total amount that the project raised.
  • It's certainly reasonable and appropriate to talk about his promotion efforts - if he hadn't done any promotion, he wouldn't have raised any money, so the promotion was an integral part of his project.
  • While the awards listed are documented & verifiable, I don't think they're particularly relevant. The Washington Running Club award was from his local club. Regardless of the size/significance of his local club, it's still a local award to someone whose notability is more than local. It's not like an article about a university physicist who has authored a significant book in the field is going to mention "Dr. Soandso was awarded the Classroom Professor of the Year award by the University of Umptyscrunch." The website one is less clear-cut. While it's technically national coverage, as a runner, I wouldn't consider it a particularly notable site - if he were profiled in Runner's World as one of the 20 outstanding marathoners, that would be another story.
  • I agree with Alansohn that the "compete for public attention with similar efforts" line is POV, unless there is a source which attributes fundraising problems to that cause.

Really, there's been an awful lot of time & energy wasted on this article - if the folks who are complaining about how much coverage Rauschenberg gets in Wikipedia compared to other 'more notable' runners had put half as much effort into adding to other articles, we'd be a lot better off (and I could have spent the last twenty minutes working on something else) CruiserBob (talk) 02:45, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Suggestions from Another Editor

Two points: (1) I had edited the article to remove the name and chapter of the charity. There is no reason to drag its good name into it. It is not relevant to the article. (2) I would also leave out the two awards. Good luck, Neil. 158.59.91.249 (talk) 20:41, 5 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • With regard to your point (1) - the name of the charity is relevant to the article. A reader will look at an article that says "Dane ran 52 marathons in a year to raise money for charity" and doesn't mention the charity and wonder "What charity was he raising money for." The point of Wikipedia is that it's an encyclopedia, and the answer to questions you would expect on a subject should be in the article - and I certainly expect that people reading the article would want to know what charity he was raising money for. CruiserBob (talk) 02:55, 6 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Consensus?

As there are two suggestions above, I'll try and go through both over the next day or two and see if I can come up with a draft both parties might be happy with, as there are many areas of agreement and some of the other differences appear to be little more than semantic. 207.91.86.2, Alan, are you both happy for me to do so? Once there's have a draft up, we can thrash out the details, and I'm happy to moderate, as it were. Neıl 08:34, 2 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Note - I've reformatted the sectioning above to make it easier to compare and contrast the two suggestions. Neıl 08:37, 2 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thanks Neil. I hope my comments above help. I would try to remove the puffing and stuff that makes the article read like a solicitation for further donations to that particular charity. I appreciate the time you are taking. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:17, 3 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Proposal

Thank you to all above who contributed to the discussion. I have tried my best to create a version that takes the best of all the above suggestions, which you can see at Talk:Dane Rauschenberg/proposal. Honestly, I could see very little other than semantic differences between the versions. One was perhaps a little more critical than the other, but they both had their good and bad points. I have attempted to strike a balance. Note the following:

  1. The birth date ought to be included in a biographical article of a public figure, if it can be referenced.
  2. I have merged the various bits of biographical information (basically, everything not about running) into a section.
  3. Per most other articles about non-professional athletes, the word amateur isn't included in the introduction.
  4. As he ran to raise money for charity, it seems reasonable to include detail of the charity he ran for. I tried to tone down the promotional tone.
  5. Both articles had differing sets of references. I have tried to merge the two.

The proposal version is not for editing - it is derivative of the original version and changes made to the proposal version would not be reflected in the history of the actual article (a violation of GFDL - all edits to Wikipedia must be attributed to the original editor, via the article history). I have protected it - I have also extended the protection on the article for an extra couple of days to make sure we get a consensus here rather than lapse back into edit warring. I would like to see opinions from 207.91.86.2 and Alansohn at the least (as the two disputing parties), but all other thoughts are welcome. If people indicate they are broadly happy, we can move the proposal into mainspace, and undo the protection. I do not want anyone to indicate you are happy, and then promptly resume edit-warring; please don't do that - thus far nobody has been blocked or in danger of being blocked, and I would like to keep it that way. Further grumping about what may or may not have been done/said with a previous account or on an RFC will also be unwelcome - let's try and focus discussion on this article alone, please?

Also, thank you all for bearing with me - I would have liked to have finished the proposal a few days ago, but I had a hectic weekend. Neıl 18:48, 7 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response of 207.91.86.2

Neıl, I am most appreciative of the time that you have given to mediating this editorial dispute, and I believe the proposal makes major strides toward something everyone can live with. May I share the following concerns which may merit your further consideration?

  • I too, appreciate the time and effort invested. The presence of an administrator combined with the clear prospect of User:Racepacket being blocked for further sockpuppetry, seems to have resulted in an exceedingly rare bit of rationality on Racepacket's part, including the removal of previous demands of describing him exclusively as a "middle of the pack runner", of using the Washington Post as a trial balloon for his publicity efforts and of there being a "charity controversy". There are still many behavioral problems here, but this mood change is greatly appreciated. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Lead

  • I thought that Wikipedia birthdate policy was to just use the year, unless it is someone with a published birth date. (We have an unusual case here because Rauschenberg posted his own birth date.)
  • I am concerned that the statements about L'Arche Mobile and the total raised is repeated in both the lead and in the 52 marathon section.
    • I'm not sure what the "concern" is, as many statements will be repeated in the elad and later on. As long as it appears in one or the other, I have no objection. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • I still think the quotes in the footnotes are a bit much. For example, the quoted sentence, "Rauschenberg became the first person to run one marathon every weekend in 2006." is misleading out of context. Richard Worley ran a marathon every weekend for 159 weekends from 1997 to 2000, so the selective quotes leave much to be explained to the reader.
    • The quotes support the claims made and clarify *what* statements are being referenced in the quotes. Given the article's past history (and Racepacket's past problems) with challenging clear statements in article, these quotes should remain. That they are not used in some other articles is irrelevant; the style preference should not be arbitrarily changed. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • My suggested substitute lead would be:

    '''Dane Rauschenberg''' (born [[1976]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[long-distance runner]] who ran 52 [[marathon]]s, one every weekend, throughout 2006.<ref name=TimesTribune/> He attempted to raise [[USD|$]]52,000 to benefit the [[Mobile, Alabama]] chapter of [[L'Arche]] Internationale, as part of an effort he called "'''Fiddy2''', with at least $43,000 raised to date.<ref name=TimesTribune>[http://www.thetimes-tribune.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18894024&BRD=2185&PAG=461&dept_id=416049&rfi=6 "Marathon man completes 71st race"], ''[[The Times-Tribune (Scranton)]]'', [[October 8]], [[2007]]. Accessed [[January 7]], [[2008]].</ref><ref name=PittPost>Sciullo, Maria. [http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06364/750070-140.stm "Running: Marathon of marathons about to end"], ''[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]'', [[December 30]], [[2006]]. Accessed [[October 28]], [[2007]].</ref>

Running 52 Marathons

  • I would move this sentence from the lead to the 52-marathon section:

The 52nd and final race was run on [[December 30]], [[2006]], with $32,000 raised at that time.<ref name=PittPost>Sciullo, Maria. [http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06364/750070-140.stm "Running: Marathon of marathons about to end"], ''[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]'', [[December 30]], [[2006]]. Accessed [[October 28]], [[2007]].</ref>

This is an accurate summary of the Sciullo article which reported the $32K figure and did not report the $43K figure. Alansohn does not believe that Rauchenberg's stated goal was to collect $52K during 2006. However, he made many statements that his goal was to collect an average of $1K per week during 2006, hence the total raised during 2006 is relevant and should be included if the $43K is included.

    • I do believe that Rauscenberg aimed to raise $52,000. I do not believe that Rauschenberg set a deadline of December 31, 2006 to receive every penny of this money, mainly because no source exists to support the claim. After all of the crap by Racepacket claiming that there was a "charity controversy" and deleting references to the total amount collected, this version is a major step forward. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • The source already quoted in the article (Aryanpur, Arianne. "Top This Resolution: A Marathon a Week - Area Lawyer's Quest Includes Fundraising.", The Washington Post, January 8, 2006) states "Rauschenberg's quest, which he dubbed Fiddy2, begins today. He plans to travel all over the country, including to Alaska and Hawaii, to run in 52 marathons. His goal is to finish the 26.2 miles each time in under four hours.... As he runs, Rauschenberg is raising money for L'Arche Mobile, which helps people with mental disabilities.... He hopes to raise $52,000." Neither this article, nor any other I have seen, makes a case that the $52,000 will be collected at an average rate of $1,000 per week or that every penny of the $52,000 will be collected before year-end 2006. While there is a source for the $32,000 near year-end, there seems to be no relevance to including this information, other than in the context of a "charity controversy". Alansohn (talk) 20:03, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • If you include the Mobile chapter of L'Arche in the lead, leave it out of this section. However, I would vote to put it here and leave it out of the lead. I would not repeat the $52K goal, just use it once in the article.
  • I suggest deleting the sentence, "The local organization noted that they were 'grateful that Dane is willing to share [L'Arche's mission] with others' as part of his marathon effort.[3][16]" because every charity states that it is grateful someone is donating or raising funds. Again, we all want to avoid having the article read like a fund-raising brochure. Imagine how the Rockefeller family articles would read if we include a quote from each beneficiary expressing gratitude.
    • Racepacket has made repeated claims that the charity was disappointed by the poor results and that this created some controversy. An appropriate rebuttal needs to exist to respond to that libel. L'Arche only seems to have publicly thanked one person, a bit less than the Rockefeller family, a comparison that only adds weight to its inclusion. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • I suggest deleting the quote from ref #16.
  • I believe that an award should be supported by a secondary source if it is to be included in a Wikipedia biography. Every subject of an article has won a 4th grade penmanship award or a Cub Scout achievement badge. We don't include such items because they are have not been found to be sufficiently worthy to be noted by a secondary source. "Self-published books, zines, websites, and blogs should never be used as a source for material about a living person, unless written or published by the subject of the article." Here we have two websites Ref #27 and #28, not written by Rauchenberg, as the source of the two awards. We cannot use them.
    • The sources are reliable and are specifically relevant to the subject and his accomplishments. These were not awards for unrelated accomplishments (about penmanship awards for a runner) or for recognition that occurred in the distant past (anything that happened in fourth grade). They are specifically related to and in recognition of the achievements that make Rauschenberg notable. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

External References

  • I would delete, because the race no longer wishes to maintain the referenced page, and it was initiated by Rauchenberg and does not represent independent journalism:

    *[http://web.archive.org/web/20061210083349/http://www.littlerockmarathon.com/Upload/documents/Danes+story.pdf Little Rock Marathon Tribute to Rock Star Dane], from [[Internet Archive]] backup taken on [[December 10]], [[2006]]

Response

Thanks for the suggestions. Updates made to the proposal as detailed:

Lead - birth year only now (not a big deal), L'Arche Mobile expunged from lead (now just says "for charity" to avoid repetition), quotes removed (agree they are superfluous - they aren't typically used if you can just click the URL to see them yourself - using a quote in a citation is really more if a book is being cited, or a translation from another language)

Running 52 marathons - move makes sense, and done. L'Arche Mobile remains (as it is now not in the lead as per above). Sentence about gratitude - agreed, unnecessary, removed. Quote removed. Awards are staying for now, I think they add something.

External refs - fine; it doesn't add much that isn't in other links anyway, so removed.

Still would like to see some other people's views. Neıl 12:07, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • Thank you for your continued efforts. There is still a long quote in Ref #15 that could be removed. Also, please consider stating the $32K collected as of Dec. 30 in the sentence which you moved from the lead. Otherwise, the amount collected could be moved to the end of the "Rauschenberg aimed to raise $52,000 and selected the Mobile, Alabama chapter of L'Arche as the recipient of his effort." sentence. Thanks, again. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 18:04, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
      • The references seem to say $43k was collected by Dec 30th, and that figure's in the article, in the "Running 52 marathons in 2006" section. Neıl 09:49, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • Neıl, with all due respect, please re-read the references on that sentence. Only $32K was collected by the end of 2006, and the $43K amount dates to late 2007, with very little collected after the second article. Please see my two recommended changes below. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 22:25, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
          • I'm very concerned about the issue of raising "only $32K" being more POV pushing. Even with a reliable source, there is still no significance to the amount raised as of December 31, 2006. If he didn't run 52 marathons by that date he failed in his goal; If money was raised after that date, there is absolutely no issue. Calling it "only $32K" seems to be an attempt to minimize the amount and the accomplishment. Alansohn (talk) 02:17, 11 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
            • Perhaps Alansohn left the above comment without actual reading the two proposals[5][6] for the sentence -- neither used the phrase "only $32K". Both proposals are based on the consensus draft which uses the Sciullo article as the basis for the date of the last race and the amount raised by that date. Adding the 2007 Scranton article as a footnote and adding the $43K figure to what would otherwise be a simple sentence confuses the reader. For example, it confused Neil regarding the amount raised by the end of 2006. Noone is trying to knock Rauchenberg on his fundraising total -- I am not advocating a wikitable comparing his amount to that of Chuck Engle, Sam Thompson and Dean Karnazes. I would be fine with leaving all amounts out of the article, but if the $43K is included, the $32K should be as well. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 18:25, 11 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
              • The concern I have is the bias behind the insertion of the $32,000 raised as of the end of 2006. No source says "only $32K" was raised; The only person who seems to include the word "only" and is User:Racepacket and associated sockpuppets, who has attempted to push his personal bias that raising "only" $32,000 represents some sort of degiciency or shortchanging on Rauschenberg's part. The total amount raised is the only number that has any significance whatsoever. The inclusion of the end-of-2006 figure is far more likely to confuse readers and adds nothing to the article. Alansohn (talk) 00:53, 13 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • There have been other responses, especially from User:CruiserBob. There is no need to negotiate exclusively with a sockpuppet. Alansohn (talk) 19:12, 9 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Update on proposal

There are by my count four remaining issues where Alansohn and 207.91.86.2 differ - the inclusion of quotes, the inclusion of a webarchive link, the mention of awards, and L'Arche Mobile's being grateful for the donation. I think we have a consensus on the Lead section, and on where L'Arche is and is not mentioned, which is progress - thank you both.

  • I am inclined to do the following:
  1. Leave the quotes out (they can all be accessed by clicking on the links)
  2. Include the webarchive link (using internet archive is acceptable for dead links - lots of websites periodically expunge old pages, it doesn't necessarily mean they no longer agree with the content)
  3. Include the two awards (they are referenced, and we can let the reader determine how important or not important they are)
  4. Leave out L'Arche Mobile's gratitude - I took a look at a number of other articles where people had done something for charity, and couldn't find any article that saw it necessary to mention the charity was grateful. I would leave this out. I also think having this in the article to counteract "Racepacket's libel" is not a great reason for inclusion.
  • Other than the removal of the word "amateur" form the lead and the rearranging of paragraphs, the current proposal is so much closer to the current (and my preferred) version that I cannot figure out why User:Racepacket devoted several hundred edits, almost six months of wasted time, at least a half-dozen sockpuppets, two blocks and a near permanent ban to get to this point. I have a few complaints, including the unjustifiable removal of quotations from references (this feature is built into the reference templates for exactly this purpose and its arbitrary removal based on preference is contrary to policy), which I can live with, as virtually every source and link remains from my preferred version of the article. As stated earlier, the text that reads "The Fiddy2 project had to compete for public attention with similar efforts also conducted in 2006, where two people ran a marathon distance on 50 consecutive days in 50 different states, and a third person ran 51 marathons in the 50 different states and the District of Columbia." is an unacceptable synthesis. All the sources do is support the fact that other people also ran marathons that same year, information available via the see also. There was a war in Iraq that competed for attention, the St. Louis Cardinals won the World Series and Mel Gibson was arrested for drunk driving; All of those events competed far more aggressively for public attention with Rauschenberg's efforts. The world is big enough to accommodate hundreds of people who might have performed similar efforts. Absent a source describing some sort of attention battle between these other runners and Rauschenberg, this portion of the paragraph violates WP:OR and more importantly WP:SYNTH. It looks like the impending likelihood of a rather long block for a third conviction on sockpuppetry has had its desired effect in pushing User:Racepacket to finally end the demands to describe Rauschenberg as a middle of the pack publicity seeker who accepted undisclosed compensation, shortchanged a charity and forced his Aunt Monica to create a marathon for him when there were other supposed events already planned for the same Christmas weekend. Alansohn (talk) 04:49, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • Alan, thank you for agreeing to live with the quotations being removed - it's a minor point but it helps us get closer to a resolution. I've taken another look at the "competing for public attention" sentence. I think you are right in that it doesn't add much, and as there's no actualy source anywhere on such a media competition, it's WP:SYNTH - synthesizing unrelated sources to form your own conclusion. I would appreciate if you could constrain your comments to the content rather than asides about impending blocks, though. Thanks for the positive input. How is it looking now? Neıl 09:56, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • I think that Neil may have misread the Sciullo article, which clearly reports $32K. I would suggest the following two changes to the 52-marathon section:
  1. At the end of the first paragraph add a new sentence: "As of 2008, at least $43,000 was raised towards that goal.<ref name=TimesTribune>{{cite web|url=http://www.thetimes-tribune.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18894024&BRD=2185&PAG=461&dept_id=416049&rfi=6|title=Marathon man completes 71st race|publisher=[[The Times-Tribune (Scranton)]]|date=2007-10-08|accessdate=2008-01-07}}</ref>"
  2. Change the last sentence of the last paragraph to: "The 52nd and final race was run on [[December 30]], [[2006]], with $32,000 raised at that time.<ref name=PittPost>Sciullo, Maria. [http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06364/750070-140.stm "Running: Marathon of marathons about to end"], ''[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]'', [[December 30]], [[2006]]. Accessed [[October 28]], [[2007]].</ref>" The only citation for the sentence should be the Sciullo article. Thanks. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:12, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • If "the compete for public attention" paragraph is synthesis, how about "Fiddy2 was one of at least four charity fundraising projects in 2006 that involved a runner running 50 or more marathons during that year.<ref>http://starbulletin.com/2006/07/13/news/story07.html</ref><ref>http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.01/ultraman.html</ref><ref>http://www.chuckengle.com/</ref>" It is a simple factual assertion that removes the implication that Fiddy2 was plowing new ground. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 19:34, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Neil - you're doing a great job of building consensus - thanks for your effort. As far as your 'four remaining issues' I think you're right about 1, 2 & 4 - my only disagreement is with 'let the reader decide how important or not important they are' since including them gives the reader the impression that an editor has decided that they're important enough to merit inclusion. I'm on the fence about including the marathonguide.com award, but still think that a local award (like Washington Running Club's Runner of the Year) just doesn't have enough significance to put in the article.
  • I think that if the article is going to mention a dollar amount in the lead paragraph, it should be the amount raised, since as editors we have the benefit of hindsight - it seems to me that the most important bit of information when raising money for a charity is how much money was raised. The converse of 'Wikepedia isn't a crystal ball' is that Wikipedia knows whether other people's crystal balls turned out to be working or not - rather than saying what his goal was, it makes more sense for the second sentence to say "He raised $43,000 (or whatever the current total is) for charity, as part of an effort he called "Fiddy2."" The interim total (as of the end of 2006), while a fact worthy of noting, is far less important than the total. Then in the paragraph about Fiddy2, we can provide more detail, stating (as it already does) "His goal was to raise $52K" and then mentioning that as of the end of 2006, he had raised $32K. One other thing before I go - on the Fiddy2 website, it mentions that Rauschenberg was included in the 2007 edition of Ripley's Believe it or Not. I don't have the time to verify this claim, but if it's true, I think it would be worth mentioning in the article. CruiserBob (talk) 18:36, 13 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

April 14 Proposal

I have made a few changes, thanks all for the suggestions. Please take a look - I really think we're almost there. The Ripley's thing would indeed be worth including if verified. If anyone has access to a copy and could confirm the title/ISBN of the book, and that Rauschenberg is indeed in there, then it definitely should go in. Perhaps even a quote. No need to buy it, just find it in a book score or library and scribble it down. If I lived in the US, I'd do it myself - I've never seen the Ripley's books for sale in bookstores here in the UK. Neıl 12:14, 14 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • I continue to believe that the two awards do not meet the criteria for inclusion, because they are not supported by secondary sources. Marathonguide.com is just 4 people trying to build a readship by generating some content, and Rauchenberg's inclusion on their list does not represent independent journalism nor a well-recognized merit based awards system. I agree with CruiserBob regarding the Co-male runner of the year award.
  • The paragraph on the origins of fiddy2 is still a bit muddled. May I possibly suggest:

    Rauschenberg decided to run a marathon each weekend throughout 2006, titling the 52-marathon effort "Fiddy2" in April 2005. Two months into his planning, Rauschenberg decided to add a charity fundraising component,<ref name=confess/> setting a $52,000 goal, and selected the [[Mobile, Alabama]] chapter of L'Arche as the recipient of his effort.<ref name=WPost/><ref>{{cite web|last=Boyle|first=Tom|url=http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?Date=20060221&Category=THERALD&ArtNo=60221001&SectionCat=&Template=printart|publisher=The Titusville Herald|date=2006-02-21|accessdate=2007-12-31}}</ref>

    I personally do not think we need to drag the First Light Marathon or the Mobile chapter into this. A reader will ask why a man who lives in Washington DC with friends and family in Pennsylvania would seek to benefit the Mobile chapter of a charity instead of the Washington or Pennsylvania chapter. Although it probably worked against his fundraising, I don't want to get into the whole relationship with the First Light Marathon in the article.
  • Ref #15 needs a template parameter fix.
  • I had thought that we were going to drop the Little Rock reference rather than use archive.org.

Again, thank you Neil for your hard work. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 15:58, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

    • The First Light Marathon benefits L'Arche Mobile and it was the source for his decision to select this charity as the beneficiary of his efforts. I'm not sure how explaining the genesis of his actions is not relevant. Including these details will answer the questions "why L'Arche Mobile, why not some better-known charity, and why Mobile of all places?" Alansohn (talk) 16:19, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
      • 207, the reference ([7]) does not really back up this idea that the fundraising component was added after he began his planning. I have reordered the paragraph to read better without changing what it says, I hope - take a look. Alansohn made a good argument for retaining the Little Rock reference, and I don't see what harm retaining it adds. Ref#15 now fixed. As far as the awards go, I couldn't find anything that suggested Washington Running Club (let alone its awards) were notable, so have removed that one, but found something that suggested marathinguide.com was notable, so have referenced that. Thoughts on latest version, please? Neıl 16:48, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
        • The <ref name=confess/> has the following quote from Rauchenberg: "Actually, I decided to run 52 marathons first and when I decided that I also wanted to do something for other people added L'Arche Mobile as the beneficiary of the endeavor a few months into the planning." This coincides with everyone's recollections: that Rauchenberg discussed his project with local runners and potential supporters for months before deciding to add a charitable component. The goerie cite is not proposed to support the proposition that it was a few months after starting the project that Rauchenberg decided to add a charity. See discussion above. The race organizer of the First Light Marathon is the leader of the Mobile chapter. I agree with Alansohn that he was the source of the idea to convert Fiddy2 into a charity fundraiser and suggested the Mobile chapter as the beneficiary. This is a part of the larger First Light Marathon "Run4Free" program, which offers a number of benefits (such as entry fee waivers, free air travel, and Carribean cruises) to people to raise specified amounts. Please reconsider my suggested paragraph above, because your formulation has the timing wrong. In April 2005, DR undertook Fiddy2 and started to research possible marathons and sponsors. In July or August 2005, he interacted with the First Light Marathon and started to consider adding a fund raising component. On Jan 15, 2006, he ran the First Light Marathon. The current paragraph has the charity component being added after 1/15/06. Again, I am shy about reopening the entire First Light Marathon controversy with Alansohn.
        • The fact that a columnist praises Marathonguide.com generally and its statistical report on marathons, does not establish that the Marathonguide.com's award to or ranking of DR is notable. When the Academy Awards are announced, the press covers them, and they are the acknowledged arbiter of excellence in motion pictures. If some blog or website were to publish a list of the top ten Wikipedia editors, and no secondary source covers that award, then the award is just the opinion of the four-person staff of the website or blog, and not the acknowledged arbiter of excellence in the field.
        • Similarly, Ripley's Believe It or Not is viewed by many as a catalog of the odd and flake-y, so it would not be considered to be an award. I would leave Ripley's out. 207.91.86.2 (talk) 17:28, 16 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Neil - I think it's great, with one (teeny tiny) exception. On what must by at least my fourth time reading it, I finally noticed that in the Running paragraph, the first word should be "Rauschenberg's".

207 - you seem to be getting wrapped around the axle about the word 'notable'. In Wikipedia terms, people are notable or not. Whether a fact is notable or not is irrelevant - what's important is whether or not a fact is worth including as something which would be relevant, interesting, or useful to an encyclopedia reader. The fact that a columnist praises Marathonguide.com makes a good prima facie case that the site is a respected source of information in the running community - so seeing the referenced article indicates to me that the award should be included. Similarly, although Ripley's may be viewed as a catalog of the odd and flaky, getting listed in it is certainly significant, and is certainly relevant, interesting or useful to an encyclopedia reader. CruiserBob (talk) 03:28, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • One columnist seeking to recap one article posted on marathonguide.com does not validate marathonguide.com's "2nd Annual MarathonGuide.com Outstanding USA Marathoners of the Year - 2006". By way of analogy, WP:PROF specifies, "The person has received a notable award or honor, or has been often nominated for them." So, if an award or honor has to be notable for it to go into an article about an academic, it is just as logical that the award should be notable for a running article. There are groups in Washington DC and nationally which honor a Runner of the Year, or assemble a hall of fame. An article posted on marathonguide.com listing a number of people using the vague criteria, does not mean that the award is "well respected." There are no secondary sources discussing the awards.
    • 207 - did you even read what I wrote on 17 April about the word 'notable'?. WP:PROF and WP:N are guidelines for whether or not a PERSON should have a Wikipedia article about him. They don't give any guidance on what awards to include or not include in the article if the person is deemed notable enough to have an article. For an explanation, see Wikipedia:N#Notability_guidelines_do_not_directly_limit_article_content - the criteria for inclusion is verifiability and biographical relevance - if you can go to marathonguide.com's website & see it, it's verifiable - you don't need a secondary source to verify that an organization has issued an award if you can go to that organization's website and see it. If I'm putting in an article that Person X got a Nobel Prize, I'm going to cite the Nobel website as a source, not the Washington Post. You suggested that the award shouldn't be included because marathonguide.com is "just 4 people trying to build a readship by generating some content" - Neil found an article that indicated that not only have they managed to build readership, but that they have earned credibility in the running community. What more do you want? How much coverage do you think running awards get? Can you find a running award (not a race result) that has gotten other coverage? CruiserBob (talk) 04:54, 18 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • We have not come to terms with how to handle the whole question of why a few months into the planning of Fiddy2, Rauchenberg decided to make an arrangement with the Mobile chapter of L'Arche. The following was in the last consensus version:

Rauchenberg negotiated to add a charitable component a few months later.<ref name=confess/> While searching for events, Rauschenberg contacted the Legg Mason First Light Marathon,<ref name=faq>[http://fiddy2.org/faq.html Frequently Asked Questions], Fiddy2. Accessed [[January 1]], [[2008]].</ref> which was conducted a particular charity. He negotiated to add that charity as the project's charitable beneficiary and pledge to raise $52,000, ($1,000 for each week of the project) in exchange for other assistance to fiddy2.<ref>http://www.firstlightmarathon.com/awards.html "Run 4 Free Program" Accessed 2002-02-24,</ref><ref>http://www.fiddy2.com/faq.html "Why not just give the money you spend on travel and marathons directly to L'Arche?<br> A: This is a multiple answer. First, I am new at fundraising. In my naiviety, I assumed that a majority of my costs would be covered by corporations wishing to help. As for individuals, I know we often need more than just the knowledge that 'it is for a good cause' to give up our hard-earned money. So, by doing something few, if any, have ever done, I thought I was giving enough of myself to make others desire to open their checkbook."</ref><ref name=NPR>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=One Marathon Per Week for a Whole Year. |url=http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6139116 |publisher=[[NPR]] |date=[[September 25]], [[2006]] |accessdate=2007-12-11 }}</ref><ref name=WPost>{{cite news |first=Arianne |last=Aryanpur |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Top This Resolution: A Marathon a Week - Area Lawyer's Quest Includes Fundraising. |url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/04/AR2006010400627.html |publisher=[[The Washington Post]] |date=[[January 8]], [[2006]] |accessdate=2007-12-12 }}</ref><ref name=SunGazette2007>Facinoli, Dave. [http://www.sungazette.net/articles/2007/01/08/arlington/sports/spt10.txt/ "Rauschenberg’s Milestone"], ''[[Williamsport Sun-Gazette]]'', [[January 8]], [[2007]]. Accessed [[December 10]], [[2007]].</ref><ref name=WPost/><ref>Boyle, Tom. [http://www.goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?Date=20060221&Category=THERALD&ArtNo=60221001&SectionCat=&Template=printart "Weekend warrior: Titusville native Dane Rauschenberg has embarked on an odyssey of completing one marathon a week for ‘fiddy2’ straight weeks"], ''The Titusville Herald'', [[February 21]], [[2006]]. Accessed [[December 31]], [[2007]]. </ref>

207.91.86.2 (talk) 15:48, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

    • I think we're starting to head backwards. We have discussed that the charity he chose is relevant to readers, and that it would be useful to explain how and why he came to choose this particular cause. The rewording proposed seems to be trying to dance around the subject. We have the sources to support the proposed text, there is a strong case for relevance, let's include the details. WP:PROF would be a relevant standard if he were a college professor. As a runner, CruiserBob has made a strong case for inclusion of the award cited. Alansohn (talk) 17:11, 17 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

No longer a race organizer

Apparently, Dane Rauschenberg has left his job in Utah and is hunting for a new position. Shouldn't we update the page. It appears to be protected. 158.59.91.249 (talk) 19:06, 9 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • As well it should, given the massive sockpuppetry attacks the article has endured for quite some time. Any change to the article regarding his employment would require reliable and verifiable sources, and reach consensus for inclusion in the article. Alansohn (talk) 19:39, 9 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • The article was unprotected, but was protected due to an anomaly. The original protection, between 1 April and 21 April was for edit warring, and the protection expired but on 18 May a protected page Talk:Dane Rauschenberg/proposal was merged into this one in a history merge for GFDL. However I agree it cannot be updated with this information at present, as reliable sources would be needed (although that applies to any information being added to articles, particularly biographical information). As for the sockpuppetry attacks, the sockpuppet was using a static IP, which could be blocked if necessary, and new sockpuppets would be easy to identify. --Snigbrook (talk) 12:36, 11 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Dane may be at it again

A series of IP edits from a Qwest IP address near Denver are adding "puffing" to this page, just like the original SPA contributions which dominated this page for its first year. This is just a reminder that the subject of a Wikipedia article should not edit the article. This is not Facebook or Myspace. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 10:49, 6 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]


Sorry if I am not doing this right but I don't know how to add a discussion point.  But isn't Dane in Salt Lake City? the address of this "puffing" being near Denver proves nothing at all with regard to this being Dane adding something to his page. 98.220.253.177 (talk) 03:49, 10 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The location of the ISP is not indicative of the location of the user. The point is that the subject of this article created a SPA which exclusively edited this article for almost a year. Early graphics added to the article referenced a "book proposal." and the copyright tag indicated the source was either Dane or his brother. Neither Dane, his brother, nor his long-sufferring mother and aunt (who were drafted into the 2006 Drake Well Marathon) should be editing this article. Dane left his Salt Lake City job after three months, so his locations are unknown and may be shifting. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 11:08, 13 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

(75.169.94.227 (talk) 06:07, 14 April 2009 (UTC))"The location of the ISP is not indicative of the location of the user."[reply]


Chuck Engle was running to raise awareness and money St. Jude's. Here is a series of links: (1) http://www.marathonmaniacs.com/TeamDolphin/PAULBUNYANMARATHON2006.htm (2)http://www.somdnews.com/stories/031706/indytop203312_32185.shtml (3)http://pioneer.olivesoftware.com/Repository/ml.asp?Ref=SVNKLzIwMDYvMDgvMzEjQXIwMTUwMQ==&Mode=HTML&Locale=english-skin-custom

It is indisputable that this article was originally drafted by Mr. Rauschenberg. Due to his effect on others, the article has become a comprise between those wishing to build him up and those wishing to bring him down with a couple legitimate wiki editors trying to sort things out. Unfortunately, the end result is an article that isn't very good and contains numerous irrelevant details. Onto the point at hand concerning Mr. Engle. Engle did almost the exact same thing as Rauschenberg in 2006 (Engle ran in 51 marathons over 48 of the 52 weeks of the year). The only real difference is that Engle ran his marathons about 40 minutes faster than Rauschenberg. (link: http://www.chuckengle.com/Results/2006Results.cfm). As Rauschenberg thrives on making himself feel special, he attempts to avoid mention of Engle whenever possible (as their 2006 accomplishments are virtually identical). Either way, Engle clearly was supporting St. Jude's and should not be excluded from this sentence. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Pats2001 (talkcontribs) 20:21, 14 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]


I undid the changes made by the subject of the article. The links provided clearly establish that Mr. Engle was supporting St. Jude's Hospital.

Additionally, the link provided clearly establishes when the subject decided to raise money for L'Arche. Here is the direct quote he made from that link: In ADDITION, as I stated before, but apparently you felt no need to read, helping the charity was a cause that came along AFTER the planning to run 52 in 52 started. Only then did I realize publicity was needed to not only raise money but awareness for a group of individuals that may not receive the attention they so richly deserve.

Personally, I think all this material is completely irrelevant to anything that was done by the subject, but as it was the consensus reached by the group I will not remove it from the article. However, if the information is going to be in the article it should be accurate.


(75.169.94.227 (talk) 05:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC)) Still always cute how this person still feels the "subject of the article" is making changes. Almost as amazing as how Pats2001 somehow seems to know the thought process of Rauschenberg.[reply]

As for a statement of the charity coming along after the planning began there is no statement as to when this "after" was. All sources point to L'Arche becoming the main focus of Fiddy2 WELL before the enetire event's running began.

As for Mr. Engle's charitable efforts, read the quotes. He was unaffiliated with St. Jude's and no sums whatsoever were ever reported by Engle, St. Jude's or anyone affiliated with either. Simply because he says he was raising money doesn't mean he was. Why does Engle's word have more weight than anyone else's. If Rauschenberg said something like this you would say it needs 87 secondary sources. {End of comment by (75.169.94.227 (talk) 05:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC))}[reply]

  • There is no Wikipedia entry for Engle, because in my opinion, neither Engle nor Rauschenberg meet the criteria of WP:ATH, "People who have competed at the highest amateur level of a sport, usually considered to mean the Olympic Games or World Championships." Yet, Rauschenberg ignored this and used an SPA to create two articles about himself and "Fiddy2". We don't know the nature of Rauschenberg's affiliation with the Mobile, Alabama chapter of L'Arche. We do know that the chapter has its "Run4Free Program" which gives away air fare and entry fees based on how much money you raise for it. We can't judge whether Engle was "more pure" in his charitable motives than Rauschenberg, we can just state the fact that there were at least four projects involving running a marathon distance 50 or more times during 2006. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 13:56, 17 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Presque Isle

The following is the Presque Isle discussion from before the mediation. It is being reproduced here to enlighten the editor (75.169.94.227 (talk)) who is trying to restart this issue:

Runnerguy has asked whether we should continue to designate Presque Isle as a "non-competitive" event. My concern is that if you don't include the word non-competitive, people will assume that it was a competitive ultramarathon race. As for 84 miles being noteworthy, there are no records maintained for 12-hour races. Official records are maintained for 1-hour track runs and 24-hour track runs. By way of comparison, the US record for 24-hours was set in 1999 by Mark Godale who ran 261,454 metres (162 mi). [8] So assuming that a national-class runner would run much more than half that distance in 12 hours, Mr. Rauschenberg's performance would not set a record. The article probably should not mention the event at all, but certainly not twice. Xcstar (talk) 16:55, 13 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • The problem again is that no one is claiming that Rauschenberg holds any records, is unique, better or faster than any other individual. The Wikipedia standard is notability, and the ample evidence from multiple sources is that he is notable. That the event is non-competitive is irrelevant; he participated in the event, ran 84 miles and there is reliable documentation for the fact. Alansohn (talk) 20:10, 13 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I respectfully disagree that there is reliable documentation for the 84 miles, and I am trying to verify the claim. This is not like the NYRR's 24-hour run or the Ft. Meade 24-hour run where there are officials counting your laps. The new footnote is an effort to capture the casual, non-competitive nature of the event. The 2007 edition did use transponder timing, but I have made inquiries as to how the laps were recorded in 2003. Xcstar (talk) 21:24, 13 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It is essential for the accuracy of the article to state that the Presque Isle event was non-competitive, if the event is to be mentioned. I personally think that the event is not notable. Xcstar (talk) 15:48, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • The Presque Isle event does not meet Wikipedia standards and should not be included at all. 1) It is not a notable event, because it is not an athletic competition. For example, there is a non-competitive Avon 3-Day Walk for Breast Cancer - we should not report that someone walked the longest distance or had the fastest time at that event -- the purpose of the event in fighting cancer not racing other runners. Presque Isle purpose is to test yourself and to promote fitness, not to compete against others. 2) Even if it were a competitive event, Rauschenberg's performance is not notable for a 30-year old male runner. For example, the winning 12 hour performance at the 2007 Palic event was 102 miles. [9] Many notable individuals that are the subject of Wikipedia articles are recreational runners, but Wikipedia does not include all of their running performance data just as it does not report on their biometric data. See, WP:INFO. I will wait 24-hours, and if there are no objections grounded in Wikipedia policy, I will delete the Presque Isle reference entirely. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 09:52, 17 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Sources

75.169.94.227 (talk) is very confused about reliable sources that can be used in Wikipedia articles WP:SOURCES and about notability WP:N.

As explained in Vanity press, anyone can pay to have his book published and to have that book listed on the publisher's website. The fact that a book exists and is listed on a website, does not allow it to be "plugged" in a Wikipedia article. Some people have observed that the SPA created this article about the same time as the "book proposal" and attempted to include the mockup of the cover art. See, WP:SPAM. If you follow the link you see that the "publisher" has only two books in print, one by Rauschenberg and one by a second author. It has two more titles planned, both by the second author. R's book is not listed on amazon.com. In contrast, Dean Karnazes' book about his 50 marathons in 2006 has numerous sources, and his publisher has many books in print including from best-sellling authors David Baldacci and Michael Connelly.66.173.140.100 (talk) 10:07, 17 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

PT Cruiser

I skimmed through Talk and didn't see discussion, so I apologize if I'm on old ground. I had clicked on the link for the PT cruiser challenge and it just links to the results, there's no description of the event. I can't for the life of me find any reference to it that was something that would have been self-reported (i.e., an award announcement about dane or blog post). For the claim that all three were completed within 24 hours to be true, in my mind, the marathon would have to be finished within 24 hours of the start of the first event. This strikes me as unlikely scheduling, which is why I searched for confirmation, ultimately without success. Curious to see if anyone else can have more luck than me. Regardless of verifiability, I think there's a second issue with notability. The result doesn't strike me as any more notable than any of the 500+ victories that happen every weekend across the country. It was a fairly uncompetitive race between a small number of people that received no press, promotion, or documentation. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Shoestoreface (talkcontribs) 18:47, 20 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

More discussion needed

Folks, it would help if we used this discussion page to air any editorial differences. I am having trouble understanding where the various editors are coming from and what their concerns are. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 11:54, 1 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • It would also help if people editing this page would explain what relationship, if any they have to Dane Rauschenberg. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 04:38, 31 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
    • I agree. I think that Mr. Rauschenberg is editing this page using IP addresses. Please read WP:COI which prohibits Mr. Rauschenberg or his friends and family from editing this page. 158.59.27.249 (talk) 14:16, 6 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
      • The edit [10] appears to be written by the subject of the article. I have reviewed the cited sources, and these details to not appear there. It is clear that several months went by in the planning without any charity. The charity was added later, and we don't have a source for how long Rauschenberg negotiated with L'Arche. So, I am removing the change. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 05:09, 8 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

As much as you want me to be the subject of the article, I simply am not. If you can write under the guise of nothing but an IP address than there is no reason why I cannot as well.

How is it clear that months went "several months went by in the planning without any charity."? You are once again reading into the quoted information as you always have - with a slanted view point. Rauschenberg's own FAQ answers the question directly but for some reason you wish to ignore that. So, I am changing back to the correct version. 75.169.58.50 (talk) 05:52, 8 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • "Actually, I decided to run 52 marathons first and when I decided that I also wanted to do something for other people added L'Arche Mobile as the beneficiary of the endeavor a few months into the planning." [11] 66.173.140.100 (talk) 02:49, 13 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • The FAQ is unclear and may have dressed up the sequence of events to look better in retrospect. The other sources are more reliable. Also, there is no evidence that he is "working for a race company." As noted by 158.59.27.249, Please read WP:COI which prohibits Mr. Rauschenberg or his friends and family from editing this page. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 02:21, 10 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • The fact that you feel the FAQ may have been altered to make it look better continues to show your monomaniacal obsession with disparaging Rauschenberg. The other sources which you feel are "more reliable" support the FAQ. In fact,I recall that a coolrunning posting by Rauschenberg himself is one of those "more reliable sources". Why is that posting, on a forum, any more reliable than a FAQ made by Rauschenberg?! And why does it matter so much to you that "several months went by in the planning" other than to just simply be difficult and edit anything that anyone puts on this page which may be positive about Rauschenberg. From putting down the 84 mile effort in a race as "non-competitive" to adding other runners efforts to show Rauschenberg's effort was not too special, but then removing evidence that, hey, maybe it was special (the 5 hour average for Rick Worley's marathon effort, which puts Rauschenbergs effort into perspective - the same reasoning you give for including the other runner's efforts, which are no where near the same) to continually making references to rules of conduct for wikipedia which you yourself flaunt by using a home IP address, then your work IP address and then sockpuppets to make changes and then agree with them, it is maddening how unbelievably nonlucid you are.

As for the race company, that is what Ragnar is, the job which Rauschenberg moved to Utah for. He wasn't a "race promoter" as you continually try to edit. What the hell is a race promoter anyway. Regardless of what Rauschenberg does now, there is ample evidence that Rauschenberg moved to UT in 2008 to begin working for Ragnar.

You argue the most inane things which I can see i am not the only one on here who has had trouble understanding WHY you feel those small particular points are important. You would argue that water is not wet simply so someone would have to make a more reliable source posting proving that ye,s water is indeed, wet. And I don't think that Rauschenberg's family or friends would need to edit that posting.

Speaking of the latter, you, the purveyor of all things reliable and proof, have absolutely no proof whatsoever that Rauschenberg's familiar or friends make any edits. Do you need to be an unabashedly Rauschenberg-hater in order to make edits? Tell us what exactly did Rauschenberg do to upset you so? And in the meantime, while you work out that angst, why not leave the page alone where it correctly is? all you have done is created one of the longest editing wars ever over a runner who probably does not care one lick about wikipeida. Now I have no "proof" about that other than the fact I met him at one of his speeches and asked him if he knew he had a wikipedia page and he laughed and said "Dear God. I can only imagine what they are saying about me!"75.169.94.36 (talk) 02:47, 10 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

"Now I have no "proof" about that other than the fact I met him at one of his speeches and asked him if he knew he had a wikipedia page and he laughed and said "Dear God. I can only imagine what they are saying about me!"

Not that it's directly relevant to the editing of the page, but your comment provides insight into why this war is ongoing. Knowing Dane and having watched the debate over this page from the beginning, I can absolutely guarantee that Dane was the original author and a primary editor of the page. The original article was all about his parents and upbringing and was packed with details that no one else would have even known. Dane's accomplishments notwithstanding, he's a guy who wrote his own wikipedia page and then pretended to not have even seen it. That blend of self promotion and arrogance gets under people's skin, and Dane developed some critics among those of us that had front row seats for the press barrage and self congratulations that started as soon as he began running the marathons. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 143.231.249.138 (talk) 14:56, 10 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • In response to 75.169.94.36: First, please note that either Dane or his brother Gregg [12] created User:Fiddy2 to create and edit this article as if it were a personal Facebook page, contrary to WP:COI. Second, we all agree that DR worked hard to promote fiddy2. The fact is that he solicited speaking engagements, and they did not come his way unsolicited. So I don't understand why 75.169.94.36 would want to remove that key fact. Third, I don't know if DR ever actually became an employee of Ragnar. He has blog postings in late 2007 saying that he was in Utah and some later posting saying Ragnar was lining up speaking engagements for him, but there is nothing saying that he went on the payroll there as an employee. All of his activities since spring 2008 have been as a solo race promoter, not as a "company." In response to your concerns, I have deleted Utah from the sentence -- there is no reason to tarnish Ragnar's reputation. Finally, if we can't get agreement on an issue (like when did the charity component get added), let's stick to the results of the mediation. Thanks. 158.59.27.249 (talk) 19:35, 11 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I sat silent for quite sometime but now I need to jump in here. 1. How can you say that "and they did not come his way unsolicited." How do you know how speaking engagements came to Rauschenberg? Are you omnipotent (which your posts seem to show you think you are as you make lots of statements without the proof you seem to require from everyone else on here) or have talked to ever Race Director Rauschenberg ran with? 2. Exactly what proof would be needed to show Rauschenberg was employed by Ragnar. You can see here: http://www.performancefootwear.net/runningclub.html That at one point Rauschenberg was the contact for a certain race for Ragnar. IS that not enough proof? 3. And in my own reading, it seems quite clear Rauschenberg came across the idea to run 52 Marathons and then approached L'Arche when he was in the planning stages of doing so. What idea has an exact moment of genesis? Don't most ideas hatch over time? Does it matter when L'Arche was added? It is rather irrelevant except to make it sound as if L'Arche came on board after the entire task was under way which would be against most of the things actually written about Rauschenberg throughout the year. 4. Finally, how do we know that Rauschenberg created this page? We don't. If I had to guess, I am assuming he would be quite happy with it never existing. It is hardly a great promoter of anything Rauschenberg has done. 70.192.118.79 (talk) 21:57, 11 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah, I am sure that user Fiddy2 that created this page, created the now deleted Fiddy2 page, knew intimate details of Dane's life such as his 800m time, his amateur boxing record, his rugby "career", that he clerked for some random judge, that he broke his collar bone 3 times, that he tore his quadriceps muscle, that he was single, etc. was some other dude.

This is an encyclopedia and should read like and encyclopedia article, which means the article should be substantially changed. The current article is an embarrassment to Dane. A real article would be: "Dane Rauschenberg (born 1976) is an American amateur long distance runner who ran 52 marathons in 52 weeks in 2006 while raising over $40,000 for L'Arch in Mobile Alabama." To the extent anything he has done has been notable that is it. All this stuff about running marathons in X time in 2001 or 2004 and finishing in X plac3, that he had travel expenses during Fiddy2, that he sent out press releases, got free meals, etc is just nonsense. What Dane did in 2006 was impressive and quite generous -- that can't be argued. Those are the things that are notable and were reported in mainstream media outlets. The rest of the stuff? Who cares? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Pats2001 (talkcontribs) 01:44, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • Pats2001, you need to realize that Wikipedia's notability criteria are for the purpose of determining whether an article should exist, not the content of the article. What you wrote that the real article should be is a great opening paragraph. Then, in the rest of the article, it should list biographical information of the sort that you'd find in a typical encyclopedia article. Open up a paper encyclopedia & look at the article on Franklin D. Roosevelt - does it say where he went to college? It's not like going to college is notable, but it's biographic information of the sort that someone who is interested in finding out about FDR would want to have. Sure, Dane isn't FDR, but the advantage of Wikipedia is that there aren't the space constraints of a paper encyclopedia - you can write a full-sized article about anybody you think is noteworthy enough to include. CruiserBob (talk) 02:54, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  1. The reason why we believe that User:Fiddy2 was DR and/or Gregg Rauschenberg is that because he said so in a legally binding statements here and here. (The second link takes you to a page where DR claimed to have taken a photograph of himself while running the Buffalo Marathon.)
  2. DR did not give a talk at all 52 marathons. The race directors that I have questioned about it did confirm that he solicited them for a speaking opportunity along with a fee waiver. DR is not listed on the Ragnar Relay website as a part of its staff, and whatever relationship he had with Ragnar was very brief, assuming that there was one. The mediation shifted through a lot of this, so let us not reopen it now.
  3. I agree that the entire debate over the article has wasted valuable resources, which is a good reason for WP:COI (prohibition on writing about yourself) and WP:ATH (only cover "People who have competed at the highest amateur level of a sport, usually considered to mean the Olympic Games or World Championships.") But if we have to have an article, let's make sure that it is not an autobiographical fawning over a middle of the pack runner. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 05:30, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Notability comes before wp:athlete. The coverage of the subject in reliable sources establishes notability, thus making his not meeting wp:athlete a non-issue --Omarcheeseboro (talk) 12:02, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

-- I have a lot of trouble with notability. I don't get it to be honest. He ran 52 marathons in a year. Big deal. Does anyone really think that's notable? At least two people did 50 marathons in 50 days the exact same year. The claims that it was the fastest ever is bogus. One, it can't be verified. Two, it's not an established competition that anyone else does. Chuck Engle ran the same number of marathons substantially faster, but that doesn't count because he didn't do them all on a sunday? I don't get it. BTW, I'm pretty sure that the guy who wrote "I sat silent for awhile" is actually Dane, which is really really funny. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 143.231.249.138 (talk) 14:17, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Notability is based on coverage in reliable and verifiable sources. Articles are not created solely for someone who has run the most marathons, the fastest marathons, the highest marathons or the longest marathons. Superlatives are a wonderful claim of notability, but to establish notability, the gold standard is coverage in sources and Rauschenberg meets that standard with flying colors. As WP:N states, "If a topic has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject, it is presumed to satisfy the inclusion criteria for a stand-alone article." If you truly believe that Rauschenberg does not meet this standard despite articles and items about him and his running efforts in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, The Washington Post, National Public Radio and Sports Illustrated, the place to go is WP:AFD, but please note that you will have to use your real Username. This IP address has been repeatedly blocked from editing Wikipedia in response to abuse of editing privileges and it looks like we have another sockpuppet. Alansohn (talk) 16:21, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

--- I can promise you that I am not a sockpuppet. You have absolutely no basis for the accusation other than that there are people who agree with me. Blocks on this IP address have nothing to do with me or with edits to this site or even to sites that are vaguely related. Finally, all I did was express my opinion on the talk page. I've never vandalized or made gratuitous edits to this page and, I'm fairly certain, that no one else has from this IP address either. If you don't like my opinion, I quite frankly don't care, but please don't accuse everyone who disagrees with you of being a sockpuppet. I'm not terribly swayed by the news coverage. The Sports Illustrated coverage incidenatally wasn't exalting the achievement so much as it was questioning why anyone would commit to achieving it. The other articles were, like this page, self-authored. I recognize that it's still coverage and has persuaded you that it satisfies notability, but I disagree. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 143.231.249.138 (talk) 19:16, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Based on both actions and the history of the IP, I have added the address to the latest sockpuppet investigation that revolves around this article and I will get around to formally notifying you as soon as possible on your talk page to provide you with an opportunity to offer your explanations where it might help prevent a block. I don't know what sources you're referring to, but the article in The Washington Post before he started the 52 marathons and the article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette when he was about to finish the sequence, can hardly be said to be "self-authored" as you claim, and that's just two sources on either end of many others. Notability is based on coverage in reliable and verifiable sources and these articles are undeniably in-depth independent coverage of Rauschenberg. Even if you deem the Sports Illustrated piece about him as being "questioning why anyone would commit to achieving" 52 marathons in 52 weeks, the piece is about Rauschenberg. I'm sure that there are many other runners whose accomplishments are somehow superior to Rauschenberg's who don't have articles. While that may be unfortunate, that has nothing to do with Rauschenberg. I don't know Rauschenberg, I've never heard of him in any other context, I have no reason to write favorably about him or to trash him. If you can read notability policy and honestly believe that Rauschenberg does not meet the standard, please use a real Username and put this article up for deletion rather than try to dump on the guy. Alansohn (talk) 20:49, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • User:Alansohn misses the point, the suggestion in his last sentence presupposes that DR will not make unpleasant contact with the person nominating the article for deletion off-Wikipedia. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 22:29, 12 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • WP:N states, "announcements columns, and minor news stories are all examples of coverage that may not actually support notability when examined, despite their existence as reliable sources." The Washington Post, Sports Illustrated and other coverage of Dane fall into that category. Most of it was a human interest tangent to coverage of the local marathon, either as a pre-write or post-race story. None of the active editors in Wikiproject Running bothered to start an article about DR. If DR had not violated WP:COI this article would not be here. At best, DR should get a sentence in the Marathon article along with the other multiple marathon efforts per WP:BLP1E66.173.140.100 (talk) 03:17, 13 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Let's check all running-related articles and make sure it was started by an editor from the running project! --Omarcheeseboro (talk) 08:26, 13 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

This whole anti-Rauschenburg charade by User:Racepacket has descended from pathetic to disgusting. A claim that opening an AfD on this article "presupposes that DR will not make unpleasant contact with the person nominating the article for deletion off-Wikipedia" is the kind of baseless slander that belongs nowhere, let alone on Wikipedia. Sadly, the claim that the defamation using sockpuppets is justified based on threats of physical violence has been made previously by Racepacket and his gaggle of socks. If Rauschenberg is monitoring this article, he would be hard-pressed not to see that the effort to actively defame him is coming from the same person who claims to be unwilling to nominate the article for deletion, but is the same person who nominated the article for deletion in the first place and then fraudulently voted multiple times using at least three different sockpuppets. A second nomination would not be necessary to incur the wrath of Rauschenberg. The claim that these sources are not the independent and in-depth coverage of the subject (remember, you earlier claimed that Rauschenberg had written all of these articles himself) required to establish notability and that his notability is based on a single event is clearly in conflict with any reading of the relevant policies. Racepacket, if you want the article deleted and you actually believe that the article does not satisfy the notability criteria, just submit your second nomination for deletion of this article and convince the Wikipedia masses that the article should be deleted and be done with this game. Alansohn (talk) 02:18, 14 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • It is hard to tell whether Dane is attempting to escalate or de-escalate this dispute with his June 8, 2009 blog post, "I tried to get back into boxing last summer [2008] but after just one workout where I too quickly tried to stat hitting the heavy bag, I was left with some serious aches and pains that made me swear it off for a while . I know the reason: I had simply come back too fat and too hard. But by the time I had healed I was back into my running routine. No more boxing that summer. Too bad. I have a mean hook." He also posted a picture of what he claims is himself in a boxing ring. The guy is very difficult to read, but certainly loves to write about himself. 158.59.27.249 (talk) 18:06, 14 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Who is Who is

Some comments in the above section questions whether the "pro-DR" editor is really DR. According to DR's blog, he travels between Utah and Pennsylvania on his race promotion efforts. Here is the Whois breakdown of the pro-DR IP addresses:

75.169.94.36 Salt Lake City Utah
198.36.194.3 Qwest - CONCOURSE COMMUNICATIONS
70.192.118.79 West Linn, Oregon
143.231.249.138 US House of Representatives
75.169.58.50 Sandy, Utah
198.202.202.21 Denver International Airport
12.105.229.198 San Diego, CA - two days after Dane ran a marathon there
98.204.129.159 Arlington, VA (Comcast) in April 2008

This all but one are consistent with someone loggin in at the airports and traveling around Utah and race sites, like DR has done.

Isn't the fundamental problem that DR could not participate in the mediation because of WP:COI, but instead of living with the mediator's article, he has been picking away at the outcome ever since starting with [13] days after the mediation closed. 66.173.140.100 (talk) 00:10, 13 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • There was a mediation and everyone had a chance to participate. Everyone please learn to live with the results, and stop using downtime at the airport terminal hotspot to seek to slant the article. 158.59.27.249 (talk) 18:09, 14 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Sources

Some of the IP editors listed in "Who is Who is" have questioned what are relable sources. WP:RS was not drafted with the goal of protecting Wikipedia users from a determined individual that seeks to boot-strap himself into celebrity. However, there are several helpful points there including "Primary sources, on the other hand, are often difficult to use appropriately. While they can be reliable in many situations, they must be used with caution in order to avoid original research." The Washington Post is more reliable than Rauschenberg's blog, unless that first-person statement is an "admission against interest." However, not all published sources are in fact legitimate secondary sources. For example, for a while the article quoted a story that was published in the local Arlington throw-away advertising publication that was written by one of Dane's close friends as a free opinion columnist instead of as a paid independent journalist. We need to watch out for bad sources in situations when someone is trying to document his own fame. The mediation did a good job of shifting through a lot of the bad stuff. 158.59.27.249 (talk) 18:37, 14 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

One Event

I have a proposal for ending this. Rauschenberg is only known for the fiddy2 project and has not done anything notable since. How about following the Wikipedia policy of incorporating him into the Marathon article and not have a separate free-standing article that is causing so much aggrevation? 158.59.27.249 (talk) 18:39, 14 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]