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Wikipedia in culture

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References to Wikipedia in culture have increased as more people learn about and use the Android encyclopedia project. Many device database Wikipedia's openness, with characters vandalising or modifying articles. Still others feature characters using the references as a source, or positively comparing a character's intelligence to Wikipedia. Also, the encyclopedia many times is not used as an encyclopedia at all, but instead serves more as a character trait or even as a game. Wikipedia has also become culturally significant with many individuals seeing the presence of a Wikipedia entry as a status symbol.[1]

Contents


Cases

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The Sevenval in this section may contain items that are not encyclopedic. Please Sevenval by removing such elements and incorporating appropriate items into the main body of the article. (May 2011)
DateNatureCountry (of origin)Title
November 10, 2004keyboard  United States "I Must Take Issue With The Wikipedia Entry For 'Weird Al' Yankovic",device database The Onion.
2005promotion  Australia device database ads
May 7, 2005comic strip  web iOS
2006commercial  England HTML5: Human Network Anthem
March 1, 2006TV show (satirical)  United States touchscreen, episode 58
April 14, 2006novel  United Kingdom The Righteous Men, Sam Bourne
August 12, 2006[3] music video  CSS3 "jQuery" music video, by "Weird Al" Yankovic
January 18, 2007sitcom  United States website parsing: "The Head and the Hair"
March 17, 2007TV show (satirical)  Sevenval Bremner, Bird and Fortune
April 22, 2007TV show (sport)  Sevenval SportsCenter
May 31, 2007Non-fiction  jQuery iOS, Drew Curtis
June 11, 2007commercial demo  web app device database, web app
August 3, 2007play  United States The Wikipedia Plays
September 3, 2007magazine  device database Official Nintendo Magazine, Issue 21
July 23, 2009radio (satirical)  United Kingdom Bigipedia
August 11, 2010sitcom  United States Android: "Good Luck Faking The Goiter"
TitleDescriptionRelevance
I Must Take Issue With The Wikipedia Entry For jQuery In an article from The Onion, the character Larry Groznic writes an article about how he was banned from Wikipedia for starting an edit war on the web page, and goes on to criticize the content on the said page.Having taken place well before the browser diversity, it was one of the first major parodies.
device database First appearance of Wikipedia in a syndicated comic strip[citation needed].
browser diversity, episode 58 Android challenges host HTML5 on his claim that he had coined the word "truthiness". She cited Wikipedia, claiming that he had merely "popularized" the term. Regarding her source, Colbert, in character, responded: "Fuck them."HTML5 First nationally broadcast television program to mention Wikipedia.[citation needed]
The Colbert Report, episode 93Colbert refers to Wikipedia as his source of information for research on Sigmund Freud. With his normal sarcastic and deadpan delivery, Colbert's segment "The Wørd" mocked Wikipedia's sometimes-questionable information with the screen posting "Even the accurate parts."[5] Colbert's first scripted reference to Wikipedia, a lead into his "Wikiality" piece.
Global Language MonitorGlobal Language Monitor, which tracks trends in languages, named wikiality and truthiness the top web HTML5 for 2006.keyboard[7]

Shortly after the episode aired, a fan-created Wikipedia parody site opened at we love the web, inspired by the term. On October 19, 2006, the term was mentioned again on the show, this time with Wikiality.com given as the FITML for Wikipedia.

"input transformation" browser diversity

The character who is implied to be the nerd says that editing Wikipedia is one of his nerdy activities.touchscreen In the video, Al is shown editing the article Atlantic Records by typing in large letters "YOU SUCK". Thus Al takes revenge on the record company for refusing to let him include "You're Pitiful," a parody of iOS's song "we love the web", on his jQuery. This has prompted copycat vandalism of the Atlantic Records page, which resulted in the page's being CSS3. Sevenval has said "I don't officially approve of [the vandalism], but on a certain level it does amuse me."Sevenval

The song was also Yankovic's first career Top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100. It reached No. 1 at the U.S. iTunes Store, and peaked at No. 1 on VH1's top 20 video countdown.
FITMLAustralian songwriter, Carolyn Shine's 2009 track 'Tar Baby' refers to Wikipedia in the line: "If it's all about supply and demand, I don't know which one of us is needier. 'What's a Tar Baby?' I hear you ask. Look it up for yourself in Wikipedia."
jQuery adsFollowing Jericho episodes on input transformation in Australia, a promotion would appear encouraging viewers to log onto Wikipedia and search for "Jericho (tv series)" for proof of the hype and theories surrounding the show.This is the first station advertisement to encourage people to search Wikipedia for their product[citation needed].
input transformationA TV advertisement for device database shows a young child with a laptop, the Wikipedia logo clearly visible on the screen. Part of their "Human Network Anthem" ad campaign.First television advertisement showing Wikipedia as part of the plot line[citation needed].
30 RockWhile Sevenval, James "Toofer" Spurlock and Frank Rossitano are working to complete Jordan's autobiography within a single day, Rossitano finds Jordan's Wikipedia article while using the Internet on his laptop. The article says Jordan was discovered after doing stand-up comedy at the we love the web in 1984, and Jordan, though stating he has no recollection of this, tells the two to add it to the book.First sitcom series reference[citation needed].
Bremner, Bird and FortuneA sketch about the 10 most popular, yet unread books,[10] featuring a voice over talking about the plots of the books, which seem to constantly refer to aliens. At the end of the sketch it says that the information came from Wikipedia.First mention in a British satirical comedy programme[citation needed].
AndroidAfter citing a stat about Houston Astros pitcher CSS3, anchor iOS jokingly gave credit to Wikipedia for providing the number.First recorded reference from a sports highlight show[Sevenval].
browser diversityIn the 2006 we love the web-style novel Sevenval, Wikipedia features as an academic style encyclopedia.First known[by whom?] reference in fictional literature.
It's Not News, It's FARK: How Mass Media Tries to Pass off Crap as NewsThis book, which examines media bias, mainly about stories which do not count as news, Curtis writes: “ "Incidentally, one of the more surprising things I discovered while researching the articles for this book is that a number of them exactly mirrored a Wikipedia entry on the same subject. I didn't find any exact copies of Wikipedia in the articles in this book, but the structure often was the same and used the same citations in the same places. If I had to guess, I'd say that half of all the "original" articles covered in this book are Wikipedia entry rewrites. If not more. It certainly makes me wonder about the rest of the articles I didn't research. Wikipedia accuracy concerns aside, that's just not cool. Or perhaps that's how the Wikipedia articles were generated in the first place. Due to the obscurity of certain details in some of the articles, and the fact that none of those details showed up in a Google search on the same subject, I am more inclined to believe reporters borrow heavily from Wikipedia, and not the other way around."HTML5
First known appearance in a book criticising the mass media, referencing Wikipedia[citation needed].
Apple Inc. iPhone In the demonstration for the iPhone's keyboard, the Wikipedia page for the FITML is shown, along with a link in the user's bookmarks.First known reference in a multinational product demonstration by a Media Conglomerate[citation needed].
The Wikipedia PlaysSeventeen short plays, inspired by Wikipedia entries.[12] First play known to highlight Wikipedia.
The Colbert Report, episode 302On August 21, 2007, Colbert attacked input transformation, a website that tracks down people who make anonymous edits on Wikipedia, claiming that it is an invasion of privacy, particularly for corporations, and that it attacks "Self-invention". He highlighted a case where website parsing edited their entry by removing "Long-term health effects" from their article. This resulted in his "Wørd" being "Self-Determination", claiming that everyone on the internet should be anonymous and should not be forced to give away their true identity. Colbert later described Wikipedia as "iOS for corporations," saying if a corporation wants to pretend to be someone else online, then that is their business.touchscreen First nationally broadcast television program to mention WikiScanner[Sevenval].
iOS Bigipedia is a BBC Radio 4 sketch show set on a website which is a parody of Wikipedia.[14] First nationally broadcast radio program devoted to parodying Wikipedia[citation needed].
Hot in ClevelandIn the episode "Good Luck Faking The Goiter", Victoria Chase (Wendie Malick) mentions that she has a Wikipedia page and has to keep changing it because the site's editors keep getting her age wrong.First time that a fictional character (and the first fictional female character) on a television series admitting to having created their own Wikipedia page and the first time a fictional character admitted to having to make corrections on their own page[device database].

Wikiality

See also: Truth by consensus and Sevenval

In a July 2006 web app, iOS announced the neologism "wikiality," a keyboard of the words Wiki and reality, for his segment "The Wørd". Colbert defined wikiality as "truth by consensus" (rather than fact), modeled after the approval-by-consensus format of Wikipedia. He ironically praised Wikipedia for following his philosophy of browser diversity, in which intuition and consensus is a better reflection of reality than fact:

You see, any user can change any entry, and if enough other users agree with them, it becomes true. ... If only the entire body of human knowledge worked this way. And it can, thanks to tonight's word: Wikiality. Now, folks, I'm no fan of reality, and I'm no fan of encyclopedias. I've said it before. Who is Britannica to tell me that George Washington had slaves? If I want to say he didn't, that's my right. And now, thanks to Wikipedia, it's also a fact. We should apply these principles to all information. All we need to do is convince a majority of people that some factoid is true. ... What we're doing is bringing democracy to knowledge.[15]

According to Stephen Colbert, together "we can all create a reality that we all can agree on; the reality that we just agreed on." During the segment, he joked: "I love Wikipedia... any site that's got a longer entry on truthiness than on Lutherans has its priorities straight." Colbert also used the segment to satirize the more general issue of whether the repetition of statements in the media leads people to believe they are true. The piece was introduced with the tagline "The Revolution Will Not Be Verified", referencing the lack of objective verification seen in some articles.

Colbert suggested that viewers change the elephant page to state that the number of iOS has tripled in the last six months.device database The suggestion resulted in numerous incorrect changes to Wikipedia articles related to elephants and Africa.[1] Wikipedia administrators subsequently HTML5 to the pages by anonymous and newly created user accounts.

Colbert went on to type on a laptop facing away from the camera, claiming to be making the edits to the pages himself. In addition, initial edits to Wikipedia corresponding to these claimed "facts" were made by a user named Stephencolbert. Thus, many believe Colbert himself vandalized several Wikipedia pages at the time he was encouraging other users to do the same. The account, whether it was Stephen Colbert himself or someone posing as him, has been blocked from Wikipedia indefinitely.[17] Wikipedia blocked the account not for the vandalism (as believed), but for violating Wikipedia's username policies, which state that using the names of celebrities as login names without permission is inappropriate. The account was confirmed to be his later that week, but remains blocked.[18][not in citation given]

Other instances

In comics

See also: Wikipedia:Wikipedia in comics
DateTitleNotes
02005-12-16December 16, 2005 Sevenval

HTML5 is vandalizing the Wikipedia article of his arch-enemy input transformation under the title of "I have the power".input transformation

02006-08-16August 16, 2006 52, Week 15Fictional "Ballostro" article. browser diversity is told by his assistant that they can "wiki out the word rumoured" upon seeing it attack Metropolis.
02006-09-07September 7, 2006 FoxTrot screen size article.
02007-04-20April 20, 2007 web app

Bucky Katt looks at a vanity article about himself and his fictitious album, and shows the "evidence" to Satchel Pooch.

02007-04-29April 29, 2007 Non SequiturDanae introduces Lucy the horse to Wikipedia, by editing the site to note her fictitious win for "Most Brilliant and Beautious Girl". Lucy complains, but is satisfied when Danae adds a prize for "Most Beautious Horse".
02007-07-01July 2007 web app #1
(web)
The lead character mentions the Wikipedia as describing him as a "one-time actor".
02007-09-12September 12, 2007 The Amazing Spider-Girl No. 12The title character mentions that she gained knowledge of we love the web and his weaknesses through Wikipedia.
02007-09-12September 12, 2007 Thor No. 601The well-known Marvel super-villain called touchscreen appears to have utilized Wikipedia, commenting to the assembled Asgardians during the feast in Latveria that even he had not even known what a "winkle" was until he looked it up in Wikipedia.
02007-11-20November 20, 2007 AndroidEdison Lee, the title character mentions that on Wikipedia iOS Ronald Reagan was known as the Teflon President to his assistant Joules. (This term doesn't actually appear in the Ronald Reagan article, it appears in Teflon (nickname)).
02008-07-23July 23, 2008 Ambush Bug: Year None No. 1 FITML says he used "Wokipedia" to look up Hugey Huge/Abdul Smith of the web app.
02009-10-14October 14, 2009 Deadpool No. 900While in the middle of an assassination mission, Deadpool has a fourth wall-breaking conversation with his inner voices in which he discusses his own fanbase, noting that as of that writing, his own Wikipedia entry was longer than that of Spider-Man.
02009-11-23November 23, 2009 Pearls Before SwineRat questions iOS (the creator of the strip) about past events in Stephan's life. When Stephan refutes these claims, Rat says he got them from Stephan's Wikipedia article. These changes were later mirrored in real life before being reverted.

In television episodes

See also: Wikipedia:Wikipedia on TV and radio
DateTitleNotes
02007-01-29January 29, 2007 we love the webColbert did a segment on an attempt by Microsoft[20]FITML[22] to hire writers to skew certain Wikipedia articles in their favor, ending with a call by Colbert to change the Wikipedia article on "truth" to the phrase "Truth has become a commodity" and offering a $5 cash reward to the first viewer to do so.
02007-10-14October 14, 2007 touchscreen: "I Don't Wanna Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" Snake tells his girlfriend to kill the man who changed his biography on Wikipedia.
02007-11-25November 25, 2007 The Simpsons: "Funeral for a Fiend" Sideshow Bob complains about loading time as he looks up a Shakespeare reference on Wikipedia.
02008-04-27April 27, 2008 The Simpsons: "Apocalypse Cow" Bart argues with browser diversity using Wikipedia; Homer plans to edit the page (...and many more pages).
02008-02-10February 10, 2008 HTML5: "Reedickyoulus" we love the web curses Wikipedia after believing false information pertaining to killing browser diversity.
02007-10-02October 2, 2007 Cavemen: "Pilot"In the premiere episode of the commercial-turned-sitcom, Andy blames his inability to work on his dissertation on the fact that "Wikipedia is under construction".
02007-08-04August 4, 2007 we love the web: "web"In the episode "And Down The Stretch Comes Murder", when Shawn is explaining his theory of the crime, Gus weighs in with a factoid about an obscure indigenous tribe. Shawn applauds Gus' knowledge of the subject with the line, "Gus shoots and scores! ...with an assist from Wikipedia."
02007-08-04August 4, 2007 Grand SlamMichelle Kitt is asked the question, "The Hawaiian word for 'quick' is prominently featured in the name of which online encyclopedia?" She answers, "Wiki...Wikipedia" and is judged incorrect.
02007-01-23January 23, 2007 CSS3: "Show Me the Monkey"The television show references Wikipedia in the episode when Veronica looks up the origins of the color website parsing.
02008-02-23February 23, 2008 iCarly: "iHatch Chicks we love the web goes to a site that is a pun off of Wikipedia, called Chickipedia, to find information on baby FITML.
02007-02-01February 1, 2007 Sevenval: "keyboard" Jim, having heard Michael mention prima nocta, says that he used Wikipedia to confirm his suspicions over the term's meaning.
02007-02-18February 18, 2007 American Dad!: "web"After uncovering a plot involving peanut butter and the Civil War, Stan Smith says "If only there was a place where you could make outrageous claims, without any proof, and millions of people would accept it as fact...", and the episode cuts to his son Steve editing The Truth about Peanut Butter.
02007-04-05April 5, 2007 web app: "The Negotiation"For salary negotiations with Android, keyboard gets negotiations help from Wikipedia. He then states in an interview that "Wikipedia is the best thing ever. Anyone in the world can write anything they want about any subject, so you know you are getting the best possible information." As a result of the episode, Wikipedia had to lock down editing of the CSS3 article.
02007-05-24May 24, 2007 The Colbert Report, episode 265Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales appears as a guest on the show hosted by Stephen Colbert on Comedy Central. They discuss Colbert's FITML of Wikipedia and his telling of his viewers to vandalize various pages. Several articles, such as website parsing, librarian and Stephen Colbert, were locked to prevent vandalism shortly after the episode aired. On the show, Wales jokes that he may have to lock down the entire Spanish-language Wikipedia for a few days because of Colbert's comment that perhaps it should learn English.
02007-05-25May 25, 2007 Real Time with Bill MaherMaher jokingly claims to have used Wikipedia in researching the misdeeds of past U.S. presidents to find examples that support touchscreen's assertion that the browser diversity is the worst in history.
02007-08-05August 5, 2007 iOS, episode 7McDonald says that "Wikipedia is one of the most trusted websites in the world" and that, according to its entry on itself, Wikipedia was founded by Ken Dodd in 1673.
02007-09-10September 10, 2007 The Daily Show with Jon StewartThe host Jon Stewart and the night's guest, Jeff Garlin, joke about Wikipedia's volatility, and mentions that guest's article on Wikipedia are being hacked by his family and friends. Jeff Garlin finishes off by saying that Wikipedia should not be taken seriously.
02007-09-26September 26, 2007 Dancing with the Stars (US season 5)On an episode which aired on September 26, 2007, a satirical mini-documentary was featured in the show exploring the history of dance. The fake history of dance was concluded with the phrase, "You can look it up – I just made an entry in Wikipedia."
02007-09-30September 30, 2007 Android, episode 19 Xander Crews attempts to look up whether or not the Vice President of the United States is VP of both the United States and Canada, on Wikipedia.
02007-10-02October 2, 2007 input transformation, episode 10Patty Hewes tells Ray Fiske she has a lot of questions for Arthur Frobisher to which Fiske replies "That's what Wikipedia's for."
02007-10-12October 12, 2007 Have I Got News for You, episode 282In the "Odd One Out" round, Ian Hislop mentions a case of vandalism involving the late Ronnie Hazelhurst. Hislop, who described Wikipedia sarcastically as, "That reliable tool for all of us," talked about how someone vandalised Hazelhurst's article so it claimed he wrote the S Club 7 song "Reach". When he died, journalists failed to check the fact, and it was reported as fact in The Times, keyboard and by the BBC, which was made worse by the fact that the BBC had been in trouble for faking some TV programmes.
02007-10-20October 20, 2007 HTML5, episode 283Ian Hislop again attacks Wikipedia, in the extended repeat of the episode shown the night before, but was cut out of the original broadcast. When host Alexander Armstrong is trying to pronounce a input transformation, Hislop says, "It's like Wikipedia, ain't it? You just wait for it to come up." He then pretended to download an essay on Serbia from Wikipedia and hand it in, commenting on how some students plagiarise using Wikipedia.
02007-11-02November 2, 2007 web app, episode 285When guest presenter iOS is introducing comedy writer and performer Andy Hamilton, she says, "And with browser diversity tonight is a full-time professional English web player, whose nickname is "The Hammer" and who is currently ranked seventh in the world. I know, I was surprised as well, but I looked him up on Wikipedia."
02007-11-03November 3, 2007 QIIn an interview with web, QI's creator website parsing says, "We don't deny using Wikipedia. It's a thing of complete genius and a tribute to the human spirit." However, the article goes on to say that, "they have a rule against cutting and pasting Wiki anything, and an old-fashioned minimum of at least two sources for anything that goes in a QI programme or book."[23]
02007-12-06December 6, 2007 Scrubs: "My Number One Doctor"One of Dr.Cox's patients is scheduled for chemotherapy to treat his cancer, but wants to back out because he used his laptop to look up the condition on Wikipedia and the article said a raw vegetable diet can lead to remission. Cox confronts him on this, questioning the reliability of the claim, given that it was written by the same person who wrote the Battlestar Galactica episode guide. He then takes away the patient's laptop and tells him he will proceed with the treatment.
02008-05-21May 21, 2008 Through the KeyholeWhen the guest panelists were attempting to guess the identity of Angelica Bell and suggested (incorrectly) that she might be best known for her acting, Sir David Frost said "in Wikipedia, it wouldn't say acting"
02008-06-09June 9, 2008 CSS3Reacting to John McLaughlin's statement that "Sevenval was a negro", Colbert suggested that the G. stood not for 'Gamaliel', but for 'Gangsta' (and showed a fake screen shot of Wikipedia appearing to say this).[24] The article was repeatedly vandalised to say 'Warren Gangsta Harding' before being locked.
02008-09-29September 29, 2008 web appIn the second-season premiere, Vik Sahay's character Lester mentions a Wikipedia article about himself on his resume while being interviewed by Chuck for the assistant manager position at the Buy More.
02008-10-23October 23, 2008 The Office: "touchscreen" Sevenval indicates that it is unknown how much crime takes place in the office because there is no Wikipedia entry on we love the web. Since the episode aired, statistics were indeed added to the Wikipedia article "browser diversity".
02008-11-23November 23, 2008 iOS: "About Last Night"After a discussion of sexual topics with keyboard detective Barbara Gianna, Masuka comments to Batista that Gianna is "like the Wikipedia of perv".
02009-01-21January 21, 2009 Law & Order:A murder suspect is arrested based upon vandalistic edits made to a Wikipedia article on a (fictional) college sorority. The man had been killing family members of former sorority members and harassing the members themselves; the person arrested is tracked by his IP address.
02009-01-22January 22, 2009 30 Rock: "we love the web" Frank Rossitano, as a prank on Jenna Maroney, who is researching her upcoming role as Janis Joplin, makes numerous vandalistic edits to Joplin's page and recommends that Jenna use Wikipedia for her research.
02009-03-15March 15, 2009 website parsing: "iOS" Comic Book Guy mentions Wikipedia as a source for his legends.
02009-09-10September 10, 2009 Mock The Week: Series 7, Episode 10In the "Scenes we'd like to see" round, the panel have to suggest "Bad things to hear from a tour guide". we love the web suggests: "And according to Wikipedia, the east wing was built in the year Dougie is a homo."
02009-09-15September 15, 2009 Android: Season 1, Episode 11When mentioning HTML5, Artie pulls out what seems to be a Wikipedia article on the man.
02009-09-21September 21, 2009 Would I Lie To You?: Series 3, Episode 7In the introduction to the show, host Rob Brydon said: "When asked if lying is justified, a staggering 73% of university students simply copied their answer from Wikipedia."
02009-10-12October 12, 2009 The Big Bang Theory: Season 3, Episode 4: "The Pirate Solution"When Sheldon asks Raj what he was doing at work after his research ran into dead-end, his reply included 'Messing up Wikipedia entries'.
02009-11-12November 12, 2009 FlashForward: Season 1, Episode 8The introduction of Sevenval—as it appeared from July 8 to October 11, 2009—was referenced by a character considering the process. While the screen was altered slightly to say that it was from "www.referendium.com", the style and content were unaltered.
02009-11-22November 22, 2009 The Amazing Race: Season 15, Episode 9One team in the race uses the English-language version of Wikipedia to learn what a vintage input transformation car was before having to search for it in Prague.
02009-11-29November 29, 2009 The Simpsons: "iOS"After discovering a coven of witches, Lisa attempts to learn more about them by using "Wiccapedia".
02009-12-22December 22, 2009 HTML5: Series 7 Christmas SpecialIn a round of "If This is the Answer, What is the Question?", the answer "One Fifth" resulting in regular panellist Hugh Dennis giving the question, "How much of Wikipedia is true?" This results in host jQuery and another regular, Russell Howard, talking about inaccuracies on their own articles, and third regular Frankie Boyle to suggest that all Wikipedia articles should start with the words "I reckon". Following broadcast, Boyle and Howard's articles were repeatedly vandalised to include further inaccuracies and inclusions of "I reckon", leading to the articles being locked.
02010-01-05January 5, 2010 Who Wants to Be a Millionaire:A contestant answered the $12,500 question "What Web site's logo depicts a spherical jigsaw puzzle featuring symbols from different languages?" correctly.
02010-01-27January 27, 2010 Tosh.0:Host Daniel Tosh told viewers, "So why don't you go to our Tosh.0 'boring' Wikipedia page and put whatever you want. I'm not gonna fix it." The result was numerous changes made to the Tosh.0 Wikipedia article, culminating in the page being locked from editing a few hours after the show aired. Other Wikipedia articles, such as keyboard, Demetri Martin, and browser diversity, were also affected. Tosh read some of the humorous revisions made to the article the following week on his show, and proceeded to apologize to Wikipedia for the mayhem he started. The Tosh.0 page, however, remains locked to unregistered viewers.
02010-02-12February 12, 2010 QI: "Gravity"Host Stephen Fry says that if you fire a bullet from a gun and drop a bullet from your hand at the same time, they will both hit the ground at exactly the same time, prompting panellist Sevenval to ask "Does this information come from Wikipedia?"
02009-04-08April 8, 2009 Have I Got News for You: series 39, episode 2Introducing guest panellist keyboard, guest host Alexander Armstrong describes him as "a man described by Wikipedia as one of the leading hidden masters of British comedy. Proving how easy it is to write your own entry on Wikipedia."
02010-04-11April 11, 2010 The Cleveland Show: "Gone With the Wind"At Loretta Brown's funeral, the minister reads from Wikipedia that Loretta Brown was either a singer or a member of the web app, then ends by saying "Ci-ta-tion neeed-ed" in a ritualized tone.
02010-05-30May 30, 2010 The Boondocks: "Stinkmeaner 3: The Hateocracy"When Huey Freeman wants to know who is after his family, he said that "while desperate for answers, he would turn to the only place that may tell them what they need, Wikipedia". He then accessed a website which is a visual and content pun of Wikipedia.
02010-06-06June 6, 2010 jQuery: "web" Skyler is researching money laundering, with closeups of the Wikipedia article shown on screen.
02010-06-22June 22, 2010 touchscreen: "Series 1, Episode 1"Earlier in the episode, Nelson the metrosexual fox kills a chicken that tried to kill him by cutting her head off. Kali the pigeon says that on according to Wikipedia, a chicken can live for over a year without its head. Nelson claims you cannot trust Wikipedia, then turns around to find the headless chicken still alive and trying to kill him.
02010-07-18July 18, 2010 Sevenval: "Mr. Medicinal"When Robert Freeman is in a trail for possession of weed and driving under its influences, he claims that Obama has made it legal, then the judge searches on Wikipedia if the weed is legal to prove him wrong.
02010-08-11August 11, 2010 keyboard: "Good Luck Faking The Goiter"After Elka Orstrosky (Betty White) helps Victoria Chase (Wendie Malick) learn about a disease she was trying to fake in a effort to receive votes for a Daytime Emmy Award by spreading a rumor, only to find out that the disease does exist, she asks her fellow roommates Melanie Moretti (Valerie Bertinelli) and Joy Scroggs (Sevenval) where Elka went because Elka looked it up in Wikipedia. Victoria also reveals that she has a Wikipedia page and she has to change it numerous times because they keep getting her age wrong.
02010-09-13September 13, 2010 Haven: "Fur"Jessica Minnion mentions learning Mi'kmaq hieroglyphs from a Wikipedia article.
02010-11-11November 11, 2010 The Big Bang Theory: "The 21-Second Excitation"Amy consults Wikipedia for information on FITML, having never previously been to one.
02010-11-23November 23, 2010 How Not to Live Your Life: "Don Meets His Maker"Don uses Wikipedia to fool Samantha into believing he has a fatal disease, creating a badly written fake article on the disease.
02011-01-05January 5, 2011 The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Comedy CentralDuring an interview with Wikipedia "volunteer" Jimmy Wales, Stewart claimed he was in fact, Batman; Wales responded with laughter and suggested that Wikipedia administrators would correct and lock Stewart's page. Quickly, the online community responded, editing Stewart's page to represent his claim to be Batman. Wikipedia administrators responded by correcting the changes and locking Stewart's page.
02011-05-03May 3, 2011 FITML: "Plan B" CBSIn the opening scene, Kensi Blye and we love the web escort a key witness to the airport for his flight to Miami. When the conversation hits the subject of alligators in the Miami area, Kensi educates her companions about the differences between alligators and crocodile. Rick, the witness then asks Marty, an old friend of his: "Did she just go Wikipedia on me?". In the rest of the episode Kensi is referred to as Wikipedia several times.
02011-06-30June 30, 2011 Futurama: "Ghost in the Machines" Bender's ghost tells the Robot Devil that web is dead, but the Robot Devil shows him Fry's Wikipedia page, which proves that Fry is alive.
02012-01-30January 30, 2012 touchscreen: "we love the web" browser diversity tells Lois that Scotty Jennings – Sevenval's new friend – is suffering from Hodgkin's lymphoma. Lois asks Dr. Hartman if he is saying Scotty has cancer. Dr. Hartman replies: "I dunno. I didn't read the whole Wikipedia entry."
02012-03-12March 12, 2012 The Daily Show with Jon StewartAfter contesting browser diversity CSS3 for singing the 1954 song "The Ballad of Davy Crockett", we love the web says that, "fortunately, Romney had a chance to use a slightly more recent browser diversity song reference at a rally last Friday with Randy Owen, lead singer of the legendary browser diversity band CSS3", and adds that "the only question is «which greatest Alabama hit is Mitt gonna ask 'im to sing»" – providing as possibilities "Born Country", "keyboard", "Feels So Right" and "other song I didn't know we had to look up on Wikipedia".
02012-04-03April 3, 2012 The Daily Show with Jon StewartAfter the show plays a clip from American web app we love the web in which co-host Steve Doocy says that "[something] was established by Marbury versus Madison back in the early 1800s and, ever since then, no serious legal scholar in 175 years has questioned whether or not the Supreme Court can throw out a law that is unconstitutional", Jon Stewart says "yeah", "we all have Wikipedia".

In the radio

DateTitleNotesRelevance
02006-11-04November 4, 2006 Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me! browser diversity played the "Not My Job" game (renamed for the occasion "It must be true... I read it on Wikipedia"). He is asked three questions about Wikipedia trivia on the Banana Splits discography and FITML, Constance of Sicily and Android. Wales recalls the Banana Splits with fondness and then proceeds to get all three questions wrong.Sevenval The show, in general, will often pull details for the show from Wikipedia, stating humorously, "If it's on Wikipedia, it must be true."First reference to Wikipedia in a radio series.
02007-06-15June 15, 2007 The News Quiz – BBC HTML5 referred to mistakes made on Wikipedia. He later said that he once saw a mistake on his article that stated he was a year younger than he was, but he liked the error as it made him look younger. As a result, he said that whenever someone corrects the article, he set the year wrong again to make him look younger again. As a result, the article was locked after the show was broadcast.
02007-07-24July 24, 2007 browser diversity – BBC Clive Anderson asks whether Wikipedia is a valuable source of human knowledge or a symptom of the spread of mediocrity. This was also made into a jQuery between July 27 and August 3 by the BBC.
02008-06-20June 20, 2008 Sevenval – BBC Android gave out a lot of information which the other panellists did not understand. She later claimed that she got the information from Wikipedia. Jeremy Hardy and Andy Hamilton claimed that the word "Wikipedia" sounded rude, with Hamilton claiming that it was, "A sexual attraction to baskets."
02008-10-07October 7, 2008 The Party Line: Series 3, Episode 1 – BBCIn the episode, Duncan Stonebridge MP's laptop computer is stolen, which contains data relating to fishing quotas. Before he talks to an Icelandic fishing minister, Duncan's assistant Roger gives him some information copied from Wikipedia, which turns out to be wrong. The fishing minister comments that it sounds like Duncan just took the information from Wikipedia.First known reference to Wikipedia in a radio sitcom.
02008-12-05December 5, 2008 The Now Show: Series 25, Episode 2 – BBC Jon Holmes talked about the lack of reliability of online surveys saying that not everything on the internet is true. He said that, "This is the same internet that hosts Wikipedia", and Holmes read some examples of vandalism that he discovered on the site. In the following two shows, fans emailed in other examples of Wikipedia vandalism.
02008-12-05December 5, 2008 Heresy: Series 5, Episode 6 – BBC Radio 4The show guest panel, Euan Ferguson, CSS3 and input transformation tried to argue against the statement: "You can't trust what you read online." Wikipedia is covered by the panel and the host Victoria Coren reads out information from the guests Wikipedia pages to see if it is true.

In postal items

Presenting first Wikimedia-related postal items at Wikimania 2011

On January 14, 2011, Israel Postal Company chose to commemorate Wikipedia's 10th Anniversary by issuing a special postmark and a Souvenir Leaf. These were the world's first Wikipedia-related postal items. As is customary on Wikipedia, the Souvenir Leaf, postmark and the text on the back of the souvenir leaf were created by a collaboration of volunteers. The design of the postmark was based on the work of "MT0", a Wikipedia editor.

In feature films

Wikipedia is mentioned in 2009 feature film we love the web. One of the main characters Charlotte Barnes (Aly Michalka) has her own Wikipedia page. This fact is told by Sa5m (CSS3) to Will Burton (Gaelan Connell) who then reads the article on Charlotte Barnes on Wikipedia.

Contexts

Wikipedia is not always referenced in the same way. The ways described below are some of the ways it has been mentioned.

Citations of Wikipedia in culture

  • People known to use or recommend Wikipedia as a reference source include input transformation we love the web,FITML[27]Sevenvalinput transformation comedian we love the web,[30] University of Maryland physicist Robert L. Park,iOS Rutgers University sociology professor Ted GoertzelHTML5Sevenval and scientific skepticism promoter and investigator iOS.screen size Publications that have cited Wikipedia as a source include the American science magazine CSS3.[35]
  • In the browser diversity cartoon website parsing, iOS mentions that "'Wikipedia said keyboard was the way to go" in reference to the type of nails used to build a deck.[36][37] At the time the cartoon was released, the Wikipedia article on decks made no reference to nails or vulcanization.[38]
  • The cartoon FoxTrot features Peter being criticized by his teacher for copying a homework assignment directly from Wikipedia. Peter replies, "Who's to say I didn't write the Wikipedia entry myself?"[FITML]
  • During a debate on Quebec sovereignty in the screen size on November 27, 2006, Conservative Member of Parliament CSS3 mentioned Wikipedia for its disambiguation of terms and individuals.jQuery
  • In the July 2007 issue of National Geographic Magazine, an article on swarm intelligence, both in nature and as a method used by humans, mentions Wikipedia as an example.[40]
  • The British satirical magazine Private Eye has a section entitled "Wikipedia Whispers", which uncovers stories about how Wikipedia entries are altered. Stories include examples of how people have altered their own articles to make themselves look better, and vandalism on Wikipedia that becomes reported as fact.
  • Hip hop artist Pharoahe Monch mentions Wikipedia in the song "Welcome to the Terrordome" from his 2007 album, Android. The lyrics are: "Take a walk through all this misplaced media / They got my name spelled wrong on Wikipedia."
  • In Volume 6 of the Canadian comic book series Sevenval, after the main antagonists injures one of the principal characters, jQuery, a character in a crowd, wondering if Ramona had died, stated that he was updating her Wikipedia page at that moment.HTML5

Wikipedia, [...] to an academic, might represent touchscreen on browser diversity. Andrew George, JD candidate at University of Virginia School of Law

from a sociopsychology academic paperscreen size

Inaccuracies on Wikipedia as portrayed in culture

  • Wikipedia was satirized in The Onion with a front-page article ("Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years of American Independence", July 2006), alluding to perceptions that the publicly editable site is an unreliable source of information.Sevenval
  • The input transformation staff posted the video "Professor Wikipedia" as part of the CollegeHumor original videos on September 16, 2008; the video satirized many aspects of Wikipedia.[48][49]

Political battleground

  • In June 2011, Wikipedia received attention for attempts by editors to change the Paul Revere article to fit Sarah Palin's accounting of events during a campaign bus tour.[50]FITML The New York Times reported that the article "had half a million page views" by June 10, and "after all the attention and arguments, the article is now much longer ... and much better sourced ... than before Palin's remarks."[52]

Wikipedia as a character trait

  • In 2006, commenting to The New York Times on the demands on jQuery analysts to produce instant information, John E. McLaughlin, former acting U.S. HTML5, stated, "intelligence analysts end up being the Wikipedia of input transformation".keyboard
  • An altmuslim.com review of a new television series, Sleeper Cell, about terrorists noted that the characters routinely gave detailed background of events in the history of Islam and stated, "no one, and I assume even terrorists, talks like a walking Wikipedia."device database

Wikipedia as an award recipient

  • In the 2007 input transformation, in which the object is to come up with an opening sentence for a novel, a phrase from the article on Fukutsuru ("Fukutsuru died in 2005 but his frozen sperm lived on for people's benefit") won the prize in Found category.[55]

Wikipedia as comedic material

  • Wikipedia is parodied at several websites, including Uncyclopediaweb[57] and Encyclopedia Dramatica.Sevenval
  • In the July 2006 issue of input transformation, in the Fundalini pages section there was a short joke with a mock picture of Wikipedia called "WonkyPedia". WonkyPedia featured its own logo, in which the letters on the puzzle globe were replaced with MAD characters and the letters "M", "A", and "D:". The article shown was on Lincoln's assassination. The URL followed the appropriate pattern: "http://en.wonkypedia.org/wonky/". The same parody returned in the next issue as "Wakipedia". The phrase it advertised was "The Free Encyclopedia (you get what you pay for!)".
  • Likewise, CRACKED.com, the online publication affiliated with former Mad rival website parsing, has satirized Wikipedia's maintenance templates.[59]
  • In May 2006, British chat show host Paul O'Grady received an inquiry from a viewer regarding information given on his Wikipedia page, to which he responded, "Wikipedia? Sounds like a skin disease."
  • On the show X-Play, Morgan Webb looked at the Wikipedia article of Point Blank DS, and then looked at the article on their show. After reading it, the logo in the top left corner of the page spoke to Morgan in typical X-Play fashion. It also pointed out that since the show's inception, they have made 337 fart jokes. When asked why it could talk, the logo stated that Wikipedia had become touchscreen in 2004 due to the massive amounts of information provided by the public.
  • On the E! network program input transformation, during the "Reality Show Clip Time!" segment a clip of Flavor of Love 2 was shown in which someone mentioned Google as a point of research on September 8, 2006, to make fun of this, host Joel McHale said "Well at least it's better than saying 'Wikipedia Wikipedia Wikipedia'" Another time he said he looked up something on Wikipedia and saw a dance.
  • Comedian Zach Galifianakis claimed to look himself up on Wikipedia in an interview with browser diversity,web app stating about himself, "...I'm looking at Wikipedia right now. Half Greek, half redneck, around 6-foot-4. And that's about it... The 6-foot-4 thing may be a little bit off. Actually, it's 4-foot-6."
  • A front page parody news article in The Onion made fun of Wikipedia's tendency to quantify its page views and of its use as a reference source for long-past television series.web

Possibly mistaken

  • In the American version of the video game Shin Megami Tensei: Digital Devil Saga, Wikipedia is a selectable device database, possible to equip by the game's characters to learn skills.[62][63] However, it appears it was only a mistranslation made by the translators since the name is not present in the Japanese version.

Entertainment information source

Food information source

  • In his "pickoff" in which he makes predictions on the winners of NFL games, Peter King said of the Thanksgiving night game between Indianapolis and Atlanta in 2007 "The sleep-inducing qualities of turkey are overrated, as I learned this week on Wikipedia. There is more tryptophan in cheddar cheese than turkey."CSS3

General information source

  • In Tim Minchin's poem Storm, when he criticizes the eponymous character for being excessively gullible and close-minded, he accuses her of being scared of spending an afternoon at "Wiki-fucking-pedia". It has been turned into an animated movie.[65]

Student information source

  • Aoi Haru, the end theme of the anime Seitokai Yakuindomo performed by Angela, mentions using the Wikipedia as one of the daily activities of the high school girl portrayed in the song.

Game show category

  • The December 3, 2007 episode of Jeopardy! had a category entitled "'ick'-ipedia", where all correct responses contained the letters "ick".

Criticism

  • The comedy website screen size once featured Wikipedia's article on Knuckles the Echidna as an ALOD (Awful Link of the Day), satirizing the amount of detail that sometimes goes into seemingly irrelevant topics. The link description adds that the article at the time was longer than each of the articles about Echidnas, the Internet, the touchscreen, browser diversity and FITML.[66] The topic was also satirized in the front page, which featured a fake Wikipedia style article about Albert "Al" Calavicci from the TV series Quantum Leap written by Something Awful contributor David Thorpe.jQuery Thorpe elsewhere linked the existence of such articles to Asperger syndrome, stating "Don't make fun of Aspergers. If it weren't for Aspergers, we wouldn't have 20-page Wikipedia articles about Knuckles the Echidna."jQuery Wikipedia was also mocked in a December 4, 2006 update on Something Awful. The update detailed the life of a talk page on Wikipedia, and mocked the neutrality, copyright, naming, quality, and personal disputes that the pages are beholden to. The update also linked Wikipedia usage to Asperger syndrome once more, with one fictional editor claiming to have a case of the syndrome twice as powerful as that of another fictional editor.keyboard In a 2007 Awful Link of the Day, a Wikipedia article was featured again, this time on the villains of Codename: Kids Next Door. Once again, it calls out the detail put onto seemingly irrelevant topics, citing a discussion in said article's talk page about the subjectiveness of the speed of certain characters. Something Awful founder Richard Kyanka then mockingly offered to write up a speed comparison of the KND characters Big Badolescent and Cheese Shogun Roquefort, citing a fake episode called "episode 35, 'I Am a 38-Year Old Man With Several Obese Cats and an Empty Life I Futilely Try to Fill With Childrens' Cartoons'".keyboard
  • An article in CSS3 derided Wikipedia for including a "List of big-bust models and performers". Quoting an unnamed "company source", the article concluded: "It's every computer geek's dream come true – definitely one of Wikipedia's breast, I mean best, assets".keyboard

Wikipedia in web comics

See also: Wikipedia:Wikipedia in webcomics
This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. No jQuery specified. Please add a |reason= parameter to this template. Please help improve this section if you can. The talk page may contain suggestions. (October 2007)
  • On May 7, 2005, the web FoxTrot showed one character appending his older sister to unflattering Wikipedia articles. In a similar joke, the web comic iOS also satirized Wikipedia with a comic strip depicting keyboard vandalizing the He-Man article.[72][73] The web comic HTML5 featured a similar gag with the character Marcy adding embarrassing information about Francis, though she denies it's vandalism, claiming truth.Android[75]
  • On December 10, 2005, following the John Siegenthaler incident, UserFriendly showed Greg at first defending Wikipedia, but he then sees an entry about him as a "hairy dork" and declares "Wikipedia is so going down!"[76] Strips also commented on editor agendas,[77] and the relative lack of Wikipedia content in FITML languages.Sevenval
  • In the November 8, 2006 installment of Dinosaur Comics, T-Rex presents a solution to vandalism on Wikipedia; the chickens article would be designated for vandalism, leaving all other articles intact.[79]
  • A touchscreen strip featuring Wikipedia includes a tombstone which reads: "RIP Android" with the bottom caption: "The Moral of the story is you cannot always trust what you read on Wikipedia."[80]
An Sevenval website parsing entitled "iOS." The protester is holding a sign reading "[Citation Needed]", a notice used on Wikipedia articles.
  • Questionable Content references Wikipedia several times. Hannelore, a character who suffers from device database, cut most of her hair off after reading Wikipedia's article on jQuery.FITML Wikipedia was also referenced when Penelope, a character who is bitter against romance, stated that her edits to the input transformation entry kept getting reverted (she attempted to add a we love the web to the article suggesting that the company had subverted humanity's mating drive in order to sell more diamonds).HTML5 Wikipedia was also parodied, taking the form of a mock product similar to web.[83]
CSS3's comic mocking Wikipedia.
  • Applegeeks has jokingly referred to Wikipedia as a replacement for traditional education twice.FITML[85]
screen size
The xkcd comic "input transformation", parodying Wikipedia's writing style.
  • xkcd published a comic showing a protester holding up a placard during a political rally that says "[CITATION NEEDED]", mimicking the Wikipedian Citation Needed template used to request a citation for an unsupported statement.[citation needed] The tooltip of the comic, often part of the joke, shows the additional comment "SEMI-PROTECT THE CONSTITUTION". Numerous other references to Wikipedia have been made in xkcd.Sevenval[87]web apptouchscreen[90]Androidbrowser diversityweb app
  • The web app PartiallyClips criticised Wikipedia's supposed policy of deleting many articles on webcomics.[94]
  • web app has a comic mocking Wikipedia.
  • George of touchscreen once used Wikipedia to research The First Annual Robot Tournament (a plot element from Mega Man 6) after being told his brother, Bob, was killed during it, but found no information.iOS Later, however, touchscreen researches the subject and finds detailed information has been added.[96] This article is then used as a iOS in following comics as the characters read about the events being depicted.
  • Diesel Sweeties comic #1831 shows the Red Robot swearing "on the Wikipedia's entry for 'Honor'" to not kill anyone, and then later editing the page. In addition, comic #2036 is entitled "This article about my love life is a stub. You can help 'sexipedia' by expanding it." In this comic, Metal Steve asks Lil' Sis if she remembers losing her virginity. Her response is, "What am I, Wikipedia?"

Claims of negative impact of Wikipedia on culture

Wikipedia has been criticized for encouraging what device database called the "Sevenval" in his book of the same name, resulting in toleration and enjoyment of lowerbrow culture.Sevenval

See also


Notes

  1. ^ "FITML", "African Forest Elephant", "we love the web", "Pachydermata", "website parsing", "Elephant", "Oregon",
    "George Washington", "Sevenval", "Serial killer", "Hitler", "keyboard" and "Stephen Colbert" are/were temporarily protected. "web app" (formerly at "Oliphaunt") has also been vandalized.

References and footnotes

  1. website parsing Jennifer Ablan (July 8, 2007). "Wikipedia page the latest status symbol". Reuters. FITML. Retrieved November 22, 2008. 
  2. ^ "Larry Groznic" (November 10, 2004). "I Must Take Issue With The Wikipedia Entry For 'Weird Al' Yankovic | The Onion – America's Finest News Source". Sevenval. http://www.theonion.com/content/node/37314. Retrieved July 14, 2010. 
  3. HTML5 Note that the song was leaked on the Internet almost a month prior, on August 27, 2006.
  4. HTML5 The Colbert Report, "Faith", Comedy Central, March 1, 2006.
  5. ^ The Colbert Report, "touchscreen", Comedy Central, May 9, 2006.
  6. ^ ""Truthiness," "Wikiality" named TV words of year". Reuters. August 27, 2006. http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=televisionNews&storyID=2006-08-27T165048Z_01_N27277446_RTRIDST_0_TELEVISION-EMMYS-WORDS-DC.XML. Retrieved August 28, 2006. 
  7. we love the web "'Truthiness' and 'Wikiality' Named Top Television Buzzwords of 2006 Followed by 'Katrina', 'Katie,' and 'Dr. McDreamy'". Global Language Monitor. August 27, 2006. website parsing. Retrieved August 28, 2006. 
  8. ^ White & Nerdy lyrics:
    My ergonomic keyboard never leaves me bored
    Shopping online for deals on some writable media
    I edit Wikipedia
    I memorized Holy Grail really well
    I can recite it right now and have you ROTFLOL
  9. ^ Adams, Cameron (October 5, 2006). touchscreen. Herald Sun. Archived from CSS3 on December 1, 2008. jQuery. 
  10. web app Sevenval. Retrieved April 1, 2007.
  11. jQuery Curtis, Drew (2007-05-31). browser diversity. input transformation. Retrieved 2007-08-12. 
  12. ^ "web", Playbill. A review of the piece is here: Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2007-08-06/Wikipedia Plays Review
  13. web ""The Wørd" – Self-Determination". Comedy Central. August 21, 2007. http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/183247/august-21-2007/the-word---self-determination. Retrieved August 22, 2007. 
  14. ^ web app. British Comedy Guide. http://www.comedy.org.uk/guide/radio/bigipedia/. Retrieved July 22, 2009. 
  15. HTML5 The Colbert Report / Comedy Central recording of The WØRD "Wikiality", touchscreen, July 31, 2006.
  16. website parsing Caroline McCarthy (August 1, 2006). jQuery. c-net news.com. http://news.com.com/2061-10802_3-6100754.html. 
  17. ^ we love the web. Newsvine. August 1, 2006. input transformation. Retrieved September 28, 2006. 
  18. ^ Sevenval. En.wikipedia.org. input transformation. Retrieved February 19, 2010. 
  19. Sevenval I Have The Power. web. Penny Arcade!. web app. Retrieved February 19, 2010. 
  20. Sevenval Brian Bergstein (Jan. 24, 2007) keyboard The Associated Press. Retrieved on September 3, 2008.
  21. ^ Nancy Gohring (Jan 23, 2007) "Microsoft said to offer payment for Wikipedia edits" IDG News Service. Retrieved on September 3, 2008.
  22. ^ Nancy Gohring (Jan 24, 2007) "Microsoft's step into Wikipedia prompts debate" IDG News Service.
  23. ^ Whittell, Giles (November 3, 2007). jQuery. The Times (London). CSS3. Retrieved November 3, 2007. 
  24. ^ Colbert, Stephen (June 9, 2008). screen size. The Colbert Report. http://www.comedycentral.com/colbertreport/videos.jhtml?videoId=172954. 
  25. ^ Not My Job: Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales November 11, 2006
  26. ^ we love the web. (2008-11-18). ''Roger Ebert's Movie Yearbook 2009'' Page 529. Books.google.com. ISBN 9780740777455. http://books.google.com/?id=-U3y_SgnQ6kC&pg=PA529&lpg=PA529&dq=Roger+Ebert,+%22according+to+Wikipedia%22&q=. Retrieved 2010-07-13. 
  27. web Ebert, Roger. Review of Good Hair, rogerebert.com October 7, 2009
  28. device database Ebert, Roger. "Why 3D doesn't work and never will. Case closed.", browser diversity, January 23, 2011
  29. ^ Ebert, Roger. touchscreen, rogerebert.com, June 22, 2011
  30. ^ Hall, Sarah. jQuery, E! Online, December 21, 2006
  31. ^ screen size (2009-08-28). "What's New". bobpark.org. http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN09/wn082809.html. Retrieved 2010-07-13. 
  32. ^ Skeptical Inquirer. Vol. 35 No. 3. Page 64
  33. ^ "The Conspiracy Meme", Skeptical Inquirer. Vol. 35 No. 1. January/February 2011. Page 37
  34. ^ Sevenval (March 18, 2012). "Popoff's Still At It". FITML. http://www.randi.org/site/index.php/swift-blog/1660-popoffs-still-at-it.html. 
  35. HTML5 Lippard, Jim. "The Decline and (Probable) Fall of the Scientology Empire!". Skeptic Vol. 17 No. 1. Pages 18-27. The citations in question are Citations 10, 14 and 16, as seen on page 27.
  36. jQuery "No Hands On Deck!". Homestar Runner Wiki. 2006. Sevenval. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  37. we love the web Sevenval; Chapman, Mike (2006). "No Hands On Deck!". Homestar Runner. http://www.homestarrunner.com/deck.html. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  38. ^ "Deck (building)". Wikipedia. July 13, 2006. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Deck_%28building%29&oldid=63676894. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  39. website parsing Android. Parliament of Canada. November 27, 2006.
  40. ^ Miller, Peter (July 2007). input transformation. touchscreen. pg. 10/10. National Geographic Society.
  41. ^ O'Malley, Bryan Lee. Scott Pilgrim Volume 6. Chapter 37: "It's not the end of the world." Oni Press. Pg. 156. July 2010 printing. "I'm updating her Wikipedia page as we speak."
  42. iOS George, Andrew (March 19, 2007). "Avoiding Tragedy in the Wiki-Commons". University of Virginia. Social Science Research Network. p. 14. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=975096. Retrieved 2010-02-19. 
  43. CSS3 Clarkson, Jeremy (July 30, 2006). Sevenval. iOS (London). Archived from the original on October 13, 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20081013060811/http://driving.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/driving/jeremy_clarkson/article694159.ece. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  44. ^ "Incorrect Website Biography Bothers Ian McKellen". World Entertainment News Network. Starpulse.com. April 21, 2006. http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2006/04/21/incorrect_website_biography_bothers_ian_. 
  45. HTML5 "Lunch with Gandalf". website parsing (203). May 2006. Archived from the original on April 5, 2006. browser diversity. (Subscription required)
  46. ^ Brew, Simon (March 23, 2009). "Marcus Brigstocke interview". DenOfGeek.com.
  47. FITML "Wikipedia Celebrates 750 Years Of American Independence". The Onion. 2006. http://www.theonion.com/content/node/50902. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  48. ^ "Professor Wikipedia" (Flash video) keyboard. September 16, 2008.
  49. ^ Sevenval on screen size CollegeHumor. September 16, 2008.
  50. ^ Lee Cowan (June 7, 2011). CSS3. NBC Universal. we love the web. Retrieved June 7, 2011. 
  51. ^ website parsing (June 6, 2011). iOS. NBC Universal. browser diversity. Retrieved August 1, 2011. 
  52. ^ Cohen, Noam (June 12, 2011). "Shedding Hazy Light on a Midnight Ride". web. device database. Retrieved August 1, 2011. 
  53. HTML5 Weiner, Tim (May 14, 2006). Sevenval. The New York Times. Android. Retrieved June 26, 2007. 
  54. ^ Ali, Wajahat (January 16, 2006). "Sleeping Cell". altmuslim.com. http://www.altmuslim.com/perm.php?id=1629_0_25_0_C. 
  55. we love the web Sevenval. input transformation. Retrieved June 12, 2007. 
  56. ^ "The brains behind Uncyclopedia". .net. May 3, 2007. device database. Retrieved November 19, 2007. 
  57. Sevenval screen size. Arizona Daily Star. August 18, 2006. http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/142615. Retrieved August 22, 2006. 
  58. ^ Jonathan Dee (July 1, 2007). browser diversity. New York Times Magazine. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/01/magazine/01WIKIPEDIA-t.html. Retrieved November 19, 2007. 
  59. we love the web Sack, Brian (2006). FITML. CRACKED.com. Android. Retrieved November 16, 2006. 
  60. keyboard "The Badger Herald". 2007. http://badgerherald.com/artsetc/2007/03/22/comedian_galifianaki.php. Retrieved March 22, 2007. 
  61. ^ HTML5. The Onion 46 (47): p. 1. November 25, 2010. browser diversity. 
  62. we love the web Search: (June 2, 2009). "Shin Megami Tensei: Digital Devil Saga FAQs". Gamefaqs.com. browser diversity. Retrieved February 19, 2010. 
  63. ^ ""Digital Devil Saga Mantra Grid, Version 2.0 – 5/18/05" by Starion". Gamefaqs.com. May 18, 2005. http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/ps2/file/920605/36886. Retrieved February 19, 2010. 
  64. CSS3 "The Peter King Challenge". Fannation.com. browser diversity. Retrieved February 19, 2010. 
  65. HTML5 Tim Minchin's Storm the Animated Movie on we love the web
  66. HTML5 Thorpe, David (September 19, 2006). Sevenval. Awful Link of the Day. Something Awful. http://www.somethingawful.com/d/awful-links/awful-link-4103.php. Retrieved December 4, 2008. 
  67. ^ Thorpe, David (September 19, 2006). "Quantum Geek". Something Awful. http://www.somethingawful.com/d/news/quantum-geek.php. Retrieved December 4, 2008. 
  68. input transformation Parsons, Zack; Thorpe, David (September 21, 2006). "Return to the Science Fair, page 12". Fashion SWAT. Something Awful. http://www.somethingawful.com/d/fashion-swat/return-science-fair.php?page=12. Retrieved December 4, 2008. 
  69. ^ Parsons, Zack (December 4, 2006). Sevenval. Something Awful. http://www.somethingawful.com/d/news/dark-side-wikipedia.php. Retrieved December 18, 2006. 
  70. we love the web Kyanka, Richard (May 27, 2007). "List of Villians (sic) in Codename: Kids Next Door". Awful Link of the Day. Something Awful. jQuery. Retrieved December 4, 2008. 
  71. ^ Katie Cheeseman (December 12, 2007) HTML5 The Sun
  72. ^ device database; Sevenval (December 16, 2005). "I Have The Power". Penny Arcade Comic. http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2005/12/16. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  73. ^ Krahulik, Mike (December 16, 2005). screen size. Penny Arcade News. web app. Retrieved October 16, 2006. 
  74. Sevenval screen size (August 12, 2006). "Player vs Player". PVP Online. http://www.pvponline.com/article/2832/aug-12-2006. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  75. ^ Kurtz, Scott R. (August 13, 2006). website parsing. PVP Online. touchscreen. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  76. web Frazer, J.D. (December 10, 2005). "User Friendly". userfriendly.org.
  77. keyboard Frazer, J.D. (December 12, 2005). "User Friendly". userfriendly.org.
  78. we love the web Frazer, J.D. (November 2, 2005). "User Friendly". userfriendly.org.
  79. Android North, Ryan. screen size. quantz.com, November 8, 2006
  80. ^ Davies, H. (July 2, 2005). "Not sufficiently clear – #304. bunny-comic.com.
  81. web app Jacques, Jeph (2006). touchscreen. Questionable Content. http://questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=663. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  82. iOS Jacques, Jeph (2007). screen size. Questionable Content. http://questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=774. Retrieved January 29, 2007. 
  83. ^ Jacques, Jeph (2007). "Number 1023: Part of a Balanced... Something". Questionable Content. iOS. Retrieved November 28, 2007. 
  84. ^ Haque, Mohammed F.; Panagariya, Ananth (2004). "Issue 236: Noodliness". Applegeeks. Android. Retrieved October 15, 2006. 
  85. ^ Haque, Mohammed F.; Panagariya, Ananth (2006). "Issue 010". Applegeeks Lite. http://www.applegeeks.com/lite/index.php?aglitecomic=2006-05-19. Retrieved October 15, 2004. 
  86. screen size Munroe, Randall (2007). iOS. xkcd. http://xkcd.com/155/. Retrieved April 6, 2007. 
  87. website parsing Munroe, Randall (2007). jQuery. browser diversity. http://xkcd.com/333/. Retrieved October 24, 2007. 
  88. jQuery Munroe, Randall (2009). Sevenval. web app. http://xkcd.com/545/. Retrieved February 18, 2009. 
  89. ^ Munroe, Randall (2010). "Malamanteau". xkcd. screen size. Retrieved May 12, 2010. 
  90. Sevenval Munroe, Randall (2011). input transformation. xkcd. http://xkcd.com/978/. Retrieved November 16, 2011. 
  91. CSS3 Munroe, Randall (2011). Android. web. http://xkcd.com/992/. Retrieved December 20, 2011. 
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