Per the 7th AFD, "all further nominations should be closed as violations of WP:DELAFD unless there is new or changed policy backing the AFD". And per the DRV "[The preceding sentence] should be read as an admonition against superfluous nominations. It is not a moratorium."
IAR cannot be used by a minority party to simply assert that a rule that they don't like doesn't apply in a given situation. By definition, an appropriate IAR action will have the approval of an overwhelming number of editors. Such is not the case here.
Thus, absent a clear majority in favor of an IAR position, and given the clear policy arguments in support of a normal WP:V approach, the clear policy based consensus is to keep this list only to those deaths for whom there are reliable sources (as noted by one person, these need to be high quality sources, not tabloid journals who regularly fling around these words for fun) that the death is in someway exceptional. All other entries (those for whom someone might say "Come on, this is obviously strange") should be removed.
List of unusual deaths is a former featured list candidate. Please view the link under Article milestones below to see why the nomination failed. Once the objections have been addressed you may resubmit the article for featured list status.
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Megan Gibson (2011-01-14). "Wikipedia's 10th Anniversary: 10 Unforgettable Entries". TIME. Archived from the original on 2011-01-19. Retrieved 2010-01-15. This page, which doesn't claim to be complete, lists examples of unique or rare circumstances in which people have died. Gruesome? Yes. Distasteful? Perhaps. Fascinating? Definitely.
Caitlin Dewey (2015-11-05). "The most fascinating Wikipedia articles you haven't read". Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-11-06. When the Wikimedia Foundation recently polled its staffers about their favorite pages, these lists of urban legends, weird deaths and under-touted revolutions were among the winners. No explanation necessary, tbh: They're all self-evidently fascinating.
There is a holding tank for content, removed from the article due to poor sourcing, which may have been included in the article for a considerable time: Talk:List of unusual deaths/Sourcing issues. Following talk page discussion, and in line with WP:STALEDRAFT, it has been agreed that any content in this holding area not sourced within 6 months from addition should be removed.
Currently the description says the window broke, but that's wrong. The window was open and the referenced article mentions that and the video clearly shows the open window. 81.217.6.16 (talk) 16:52, 28 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Jim was a 19th century baseball player, he died when he swung a home run so hard it ruptured his bladder. Unfortunately, I can't find any reliable sources that directly call his death unusual. Bdblakley29 (talk) 21:40, 16 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Rori1911 uploaded authentic images of Robert Pakington, the objects found inside John Cummings' body, Henry Taylor's death (from The Illustrated Police News), Jane Stanford (which I have replaced with a portrait already on Commons), Julian Carlton, Mary Emma Busch James, Clarence Stagemyer, Gareth Jones, Monica Myers, David Grundman (which looks extremely fake but appeared in The New York Times in 1982), Dick Wertheim's death (I really hoped this one was a fake, but it isn't), Gloria Ramirez, Bliss Scott, Brittanie Cecil (same comment as for Wertheim's death; portrait in article is fair use so can't be reused here), Virginia Graeme Baker, Hitoshi Nikaidoh, Francis Daniel Brohm and Chandler Hugh Jackson, as well as Hisashi Ouchi, Michael Colombini, Abigail Taylor, Isaiah Otieno, Diane Durre's death, Vladimir Likhonos and Gareth Williams. The last seven are already tagged for speedy deletion on Commons as copyright violations (but could conceivably be transferred to Wikipedia at reduced resolution as fair use images), so some of the other images may be improperly licensed as well. Gildir (talk) 06:37, 18 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]