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Featured content soaring this week

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By Crisco 1492
This week's "Featured content" covers Sunday 22 – Saturday 28 January
A new featured picture, showing a Buller's Albatross (foreground) flying over the sea east of the Tasman Peninsula. A Short-tailed Shearwater can be seen flying behind it.
African-American rights activist W. E. B. Du Bois, the subject of a new featured article
J. M. W. Turner's The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her last Berth to be broken up, 1838; this depiction of the HMS Temeraire, the subject of a new featured article, was voted Britain's favourite painting in 2005.
The tracks of all Category 4 Hurricanes in the Pacific Ocean since 1900, from the new featured list of Category 4 Pacific hurricanes
A new featured picture showing Mark Satin counseling American draft dodgers in Toronto

Eight featured articles were promoted this week:

Four featured lists were promoted this week:

One featured portal was promoted this week:

Eight featured pictures were promoted this week:

The new featured picture of the Parque del Este, in Caracas, Venezuela
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  • Personal preference - I don't like the panorama picture view. It seems to distort the image in an unpleasant way. MathewTownsend (talk) 01:56, 1 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • What stood out to me in the list of new featured articles were the nationality descriptors: American, American, Canadian, Australian, Irish, American, American, British. There were certainly some great topics among them, but they were conspicuously confined to the Anglosphere. —tktktk 04:22, 2 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]
    • en.WP is biassed towards the anglosphere. It could hardly be otherwise. The other WPs are similar, I think, although a brief survey would reveal more. Mathew, I asked for the "widescreen" view at the bottom to be reverted if anyone didn't like it. I guess this was fairly late in the process. Tony (talk) 13:26, 2 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Tktktk, as you say, the topics are various:
  1. rhythm and blue pop song, Grammy Award winner (by African American Beyoncé Knowles)
  2. first female governor of the American state of Kentucky
  3. Canadian doctor and researcher
  4. Australian naval officer, who went down with his ship
  5. Irish composer, teacher and conductor, one of the founders of the Royal College of Music
  6. 1852 novella by American Stephen Crane
  7. sociologist, first African American doctorate from Harvard, peace and civil rights activist
  8. 18th century British warship
  • You could say two women and six men (including Crane) were covered, or you could say two articles were on military topics and five were biographies, or that there were two African Americans covered vs six non African Americans, etc. Seems to me that nationality is only one variable in looking at diversity. MathewTownsend (talk) 15:52, 2 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thank-you for parity in nationality descriptors. It is appreciated. Now if it could be equally applied to the rest of the project, which still sees the US as the default setting... 86.134.50.51 (talk) 15:56, 3 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]



       

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