Jump to content

Talk:Andrew Bolt

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MrMonroe (talk | contribs) at 01:58, 14 February 2007 (→‎Sources for Bolt column on Lebanese ambulance incident). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WikiProject iconBiography Unassessed
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography, a collaborative effort to create, develop and organize Wikipedia's articles about people. All interested editors are invited to join the project and contribute to the discussion. For instructions on how to use this banner, please refer to the documentation.
???This article has not yet received a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
WikiProject iconAustralia Start‑class
WikiProject iconAndrew Bolt is within the scope of WikiProject Australia, which aims to improve Wikipedia's coverage of Australia and Australia-related topics. If you would like to participate, visit the project page.
StartThis article has been rated as Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
???This article has not yet received a rating on the project's importance scale.
Note icon
Need help improving this article? Ask a LibrarianWhat's this? at the National Library of Australia.
Note icon
The Wikimedia Australia chapter can be contacted via email to help@wikimedia.org.au for non-editorial assistance.
Wikipedian A subject of this article, Mrlefty, has edited Wikipedia as User:Mrlefty.
  • (This message should only be placed on talk pages.)
Archive
Archives
  1. May 2005 – February 2006


User:Mcnab added an in-line link to http://members.optushome.com.au/hark/s9lygo.boltkhalid.htm, which comes from "Scum at the top", "Australia's Journal of Political Character Assassination" (!) and was written in April 2004. I've deleted it, and suggested at User_talk:Mcnab that such a link should go in "External Links", if anywhere. Personally, I don't think Wikipedia should even link to web pages like this one (see Talk:Brian_Leiter for a similar case with the opposite politics). —Chris Chittleborough 13:09, 9 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Interactive...

I just changed the bit at the end that calls his forum 'interactive journalism' to interactive discussion. This seems a lot more appropriate. I also changed 'an' to 'a'. Somebody wrote 'an' when they shouldn't have... Uh... Yeah... DarkSideOfTheSpoon 00:17, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

(1) Oops, that "an" was probably me. (2) I called it "interactive journalism" because Bolt is using the forum for feedback and discussion concerning published columns, and suggestions for new columns. (I would have given examples if only the @(&*^#! forum software used permalinks.) I think it's significant the readers are discussing the columns with Bolt as well as with other; that's what makes it more than an "emails to the editor" page.) (3) Bolt is doing "internet-enabled journalism" in another way: he gets material from (or rather via) blogs. So, while I wasn't all that happy with my original wording, I still think we could do better. Ideas and edits welcome. —Chris Chittleborough 10:33, 27 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Hmmm... I don't know if chatting with his readers is a form of journalism. That is why I changed it. You can write "internet enabled journalism" to describe the act of him using the discussion board as a source of news, but I don't think at its base level it should be described as journalism though. Whatever but, you can make it whatever you feel is right. :) DarkSideOfTheSpoon 04:49, 1 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Bolt's on-line forum

The putting-things-into-context sentence at the end of that section now reads:

Despite its low budget format, the forum was a pioneering experiment in Internet-aided "interactive journalism".

Now let me explain why I wrote that.

When it started in May 2005, Bolt's forum was a pioneering experiment in a journalist-turned-columnist using the internet to interact with readers. At that stage, very few newspapers had done more than publish email addresses and accept Letters to the Editor via email. I know of at least one newspaper that was ahead of Bolt, the Knoxville News-Sentinel in Tennessee, but I'm not aware of any others.

Actually, I suspect that the low-budget approach was important to getting the forum started relatively early: while other newspapers thought about creating an ambitious IT project, Bolt and the Herald-Sun just pulled something off a shelf and got stuck in. The down-side is that the forum doesn't have permalinks, which makes sustained discussion much harder.

Re the discussion above about whether the forum is "journalism": it's really "writing a column", which (1) is a kind of journalism but (2) is not the first thing "journalism" brings to mind. I've tried to think of something better and failed ("interactive op-ed journalism"? "interactive column-writing"?). Comments, ideas and edits all welcome!

Cheers, CWC(talk) 07:30, 21 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not quite sure how you can call what Bolt does with his forum "journalism". Largely, it's just a glorified letters-page in which Bolt responds to his critics with a scathing "you're obviously a hate-filled lefty" retort, and to his supporters with an incredibly profound "Thanks, Mike." Hardly journalism. And hardly "pioneering". Plenty of other media organisations had online letters-pages and "fora" long before Bolt.

I just don't think the sentence adds anything to the entry. It's impossible to demonstrate whether it's "pioneering" or not, and more importantly, it doesn't add anything of substance to the wikipedia entry. The paragraph describes the forum in sufficient detail already. Surely that's enough. Mrlefty 02:18, 2 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

An unrelated Andrew Bolt?

In a profile for skeleton sport athlete Michelle Steele, she describes as a role model Andrew Bolt. A bit of preliminary googling seems to suggest that there's a Andrew Bolt involved in surf lifesaving who lives in Queensland (not very close to Melbourne), and I suspect that the two are different people. A pity, as it'd really put the death in right wing death beast. Andjam 10:10, 16 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I see you watching him watching Bolt

Currently, external links has

  • A site watching Andrew Bolt, by MrLefty
  • A site watching Iain Hall, who watches MrLefty

but not Iain Hall's site. If Iain Hall's site is not noteworthy, why would Iain Hall watch be? Alternatively, how about removing all the watch sites? Andjam 09:19, 26 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'd say to one level. You've got Bolt's blog; you've got a (long-standing) blog responding to it. Further watchwatchwatchwatchwatchwatchwatchwatchwatchwatchwatch blogs are hardly required. No "Iain Hall watch". No "Boltwatch watch". Just one from each side. (The one from the Bolt side is obviously simply Bolt's own blog.) MrLefty 07:45, 24 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Accent

How did he develop his upper class Australian accent?

Obviously from living here. How did you develop your atitude?
That doesn't explain the accent; the question was obviously about the Varieties of Australian English, not about why he has an Australian accent as opposed to a Chinese one etc.; and what attitude?

Boltwatchwatch

does it belong here? I think it does if Boltwatch is here. Xtra 07:14, 23 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Of course it doesn't. How many iterations of response and counter-response do you want?

One level, a site which responds to the subject of the wikipedia entry's columns, is reasonable. ANOTHER level, responding to the response, is just silly. By that logic, we'd have to allow a BoltWatchWatchWatch, and then a BoltWatchWatchWatchWatchWatch etc.

One level at most.

The BoltWatch site is a reference largely for people who tend not to agree with Bolt's columns. Those who do agree with those columns hardly need another "watch" site - they've got Bolt's own "blog", and can submit their positive comments there.MrLefty 07:42, 24 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This doesn't make any sense. The Boltwatch site (written by the above user) does not debunk or expose anything about Bolts articles. The Boltwatch-watch site is more about highlighting the ad-hominem attacks and shoddy practices of the Boltwatch site. Prester John 04:32, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

A "subject" of this article??

What's that warning doing up the top of the discussion page? "|A subject of this article, Mrlefty, has edited Wikipedia as User:Mrlefty."

I'm not a subject of this article! MrLefty 07:48, 24 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yes you are ... or at least one of your blogs is.   Woops, now you aren't in the article any more.   Oh, wait, BoltWatch is back in.   No, now it's gone again.
[/joking]
But seriously folks, we probably need to discuss whether to mention BoltWatch (and, if so, BoltWatchWatch) in some detail, not just in Edit Summaries. (I know. We've gone through this before, and it was quite tedious enough the first time. I apologise in advance.)
Here's a somewhat strawy argument for mentioning it, as a starting point. Please supply other arguments, restate this one properly, etc.
Good encyclopedia articles tell readers where to go for more details. BoltWatch is the place to go for more criticism of Bolt, so we should link to it.
Regards, CWC(talk) 12:01, 25 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

(Subheading added belatedly by CWC(talk) 12:30, 1 August 2006 (UTC))[reply]

And just the same, Boltwatchwatch is the place to go for critisism of Boltwatch and we are not going to create a Boltwacth article, so this is the place for it. It is either both or neither. That is my position. Xtra 00:16, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

As you point out, there is no BoltWatch entry on Wikipedia. If there were, then by all means include the BoltWatchWatch link as "a place to go for criticism of BoltWatch". In the meantime, Bolt's blog is linked, appropriately. One critical site (I'd suggest the most significant critical site relating to Bolt) is mentioned. That should be it. If User: Xtra's stance is accepted, then the article would be weighed down with countless versions of "watch" blogs. It would be ridiculous.
The situation with ONE response blog provides balance. (The Andrew Bolt side is clearly amply represented by Bolt's blog itself.) Watch blogs of subjects are appropriate on Wikipedia (if longstanding and consistent) but not watch blogs of watch blogs.Garth M 07:48, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hmmmm, verry strange. New user, straight into a POV war. Sounds orchestrated to me. It is either both or none. Xtra 10:07, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You've argued that before, and been overruled. One watch blog = reasonable. Another watch "watch" blog = not reasonable. And also ridiculous. Garth M 10:36, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I was not overruled. That is a figment of your imagination. There was never any consensus to remove that link, just Mr Lefty and you - a new user who has come straight into a POV war. Please reade wikipedia:policy. You are trying to POV push and it will not be tolerated. Xtra 11:49, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Please, everyone, slow down. I only put that "strawy" argument up as a discussion starter. Other arguments for and against would be very welcome.
Tell you what, let's try to reach consensus on whether to mention http://boltwatch.blogspot.com/, and then decide about http://boltwatch-watch.blogspot.com/. (I'm assuming that no-one advocates mentioning BoltWatch-Watch but not BoltWatch. If I'm wrong, please say so.)
Now, surely someone has better arguments in favour of mentioning BoltWatch than my spur-of-the-moment effort. Arguments against are just as welcome.
Cheers, CWC(talk) 11:11, 26 July 2006 (UTC) who also added indentation to some earlier comments[reply]
BoltWatch is, as CWC has pointed out, the primary source for responses to Bolt's articles. Of course it's relevant. Wikipedia's NPOV policy involves including links from both sides of a political divide. In this case, there's the Bolt side, and the non-Bolt side. Bolt's blog is included as representative of the Bolt side. BW is included as representative of the non-Bolt side. (Although, in fairness, it's more "critical" in the real sense of the word than "anti-".)
BWW is simply an extra, unnecssary layer. Its function is perfectly taken up by Bolt's blog itself. In fact, its author regularly posts his remarks about BW to Bolt's actual blog. Clearly, BWW does not provide information or criticism in Bolt's favour which cannot already be found in the two already-existing links. Thus, its inclusion is neither necessary nor deserved. (Note: this dispute has only arisen because "niceperson" (Iain Hall), the owner of that blog, recently created a wikipedia account to add it to the Andrew Bolt entry.)
Finally, if user Xtra's philosophy were adopted, Wikipedia would then have to include a BoltWatchWatchWatch blog, then a BoltWatchWatchWatchWatch blog, and so on. Obviously a line has to be drawn somewhere. I'd argue it should be drawn at ONE blog critical of the subject, provided there's a "pro" site to argue in the subject's favour.
Wikipedia should only be including links which are directly relevant to the subject of an article. Not merely relevant to another site about the subject of an article. BoltWatch is about Andrew Bolt. BoltWatchWatch is about BoltWatch. The former should be included on a wikipedia article about Andrew Bolt. The latter should only be included if there were a wikipedia article about BoltWatch. (Which there isn't, and which there shouldn't be.) Garth M 22:30, 26 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

BoltWatch: Yes; BoltWatchWatch: ?

No-one has objected to linking to http://boltwatch.blogspot.com/, so I'll claim we've reached consensus on one question.

Now for the harder question: should we link to http://boltwatch-watch.blogspot.com/ ? It seems to me that the key issue is relevance. For example, would a Wikipedia reader who had never heard of Andrew Bolt learn something useful about Mr Bolt from reading BWW? (Clearly the reader would learn that Bolt has an energetic defender, but that's neither suprising nor all that useful.)

I don't read BWW (or BW!) regularly, but a quick skim of the current front page of BWW indicates that BWW does discuss Bolt, but not as much as it discusses BW and allied blogs So I'm currently quite neutral on this question. OTOH, I just emailed the BWW blogger to tell him about this discussion.

There is a reason for not linking BWW which at lease Wikipedia editor will care deeply about: linking BWW will make it much harder "Mr Lefty" to stay anonymous. However, (1) Bolt has also revealed Mr Lefty's name and occupation on his blog (as have many other Australian bloggers) and (2) this issue is not relevant to Wikipedia.

Hey, I told you this was going to be tedious. Cheers(?), CWC(talk) 12:30, 1 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I don't think either should be linked to. Blogs are questionable at best (per WP:EL and WP:NOT) and under absolutely no circumstances should Mr Lefty be adding his own blog to the article. It's just absurd. Sarah Ewart (Talk) 12:37, 1 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I argue that BW qualifies under WP:EL#What_should_be_linked_to item 4.
I agree that for Mr Lefty to add a link to BW would be in dubious taste. However, as someone who often agrees with Bolt and rarely with Mr Lefty, I'll happily add it myself. Regards, CWC(talk) 13:59, 1 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
'Neutral content' — like the premises used in arguments against Bolt? I almost always disagree with Bolt, vehemently, but I do not see how this qualifies. Blogs should never be added unless they are written by experts with useful information. Wikipedia needs better links than blogs; we should not be reducing it to blog level. Anyway, including BW has the annoying consequence of BWW appearing, then a silly edit war ensuing. If MrLefty wrote a notable book, then maybe information on his book should be linked to. Rintrah 17:37, 21 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with the above. "Boltwatch" by "Mr Lefty" (Jeremy Sear) doesn't even address Bolts arguments but instead is a website that relies on ad-hominem attacks. Neither the site or its author are of any notability. "Boltwatch-watch" even less so. Prester John 11:39, 11 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Conflict of interest Lefty Style

Should Lefty really have a say in this?

His sole purpose is to keep people who look up Andrew Bolt to not then stumble on boltwatch-watch.

--Anthony B 09:29, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Who cares about either blog? The blogosphere is not a good resource for information and analysis anyway, except trivial information. With Andrew Bolt's columns, most readers can make up their minds about the man's credibility after reading one of them once. Rintrah 19:16, 24 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Not enough citations

There are too many things in the article lacking citations. In a controversial topic like Andrew Bolt, this is especially problematic. Some of the language about the holey ambulance, written by a new wikipedian, may need rewriting for more neutral language. Andjam 13:19, 2 September 2006 (UTC) (Typo fixed Andjam 14:57, 2 September 2006 (UTC))[reply]

Can you be more specific about what you think lacks citation? Can you identify aspects of the ambulance incident that breaches NPOV? And let's not be hasty about judging a "new wikipedian".MrMonroe 13:24, 2 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There aren't any citations in the ambulance section. Also, the text "unsubstantiated and questionable", "confirming" lean towards supporting a certain opinion. If someone hasn't heard of blogs before and want to know how reliable they are, they can go to the entry on blogs. Noting that The Australian "spared" stablemate Bolt is at this stage original research - the editorial didn't criticise Tim Blair either, and he worked for Packer. Another thing that needs citation: "and is a relentless critic of ABC broadcaster Phillip Adams" (Adams isn't just ABC - he also writes for News Ltd). Andjam 14:57, 2 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I've addressed those issues you raise. The exception is my line about Adams being a frequent target of Bolt, a claim that, yes, is an observation and for which there is probably little external written evidence, apart from numerous mentions at Blair's blog etc. Is it original research to make this claim? Is it any more original than naming TV programs on which Bolt appears, or naming his wife? Because you added the "not verified" tag only after my edit last night, are you happy to remove it now I've edited the specific points you identified as not verified? Thanks.MrMonroe 02:51, 3 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Sources for Bolt column on Lebanese ambulance incident

Bolt clearly used zombietime.com's essay as a source for his column. Earlier debate on this issue can be found at User talk:MrMonroe.MrMonroe 03:43, 14 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Bolt also used photographs released by Associated Press, a world famous, and world renowned, news organisation. This should be given priority. Prester John 11:43, 11 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Uh, what's your point here? I'll check the clipping of his actual column when I get a chance, but as I recall his column about the ambulance incident used a picture taken from the Zombietime website. That website, as discussed at User talk:MrMonroe, was the primary source of his comments that day. Whether those pictures were subsequently, or earlier, available through AP is immaterial: out of the dozens of images AP would have supplied to newspapers following the incident, Bolt selected one that appeared at Zombietime. Why? Because ZT had already formulated the theory and assembled the evidence that he then used in his column, and to which Downer had referred a day or two earlier.
Prester John's comments urging that the noting the use of AP images "be given priority" suggest a wish to give Bolt's comments that day some additional authenticity or validity. Possibly he feels that the obvious (indeed, acknowledged) source of Bolt's opinions that day – Zombietime – is less than reliable. MrMonroe 05:45, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
You seem to be assuming that Prester John is here to lie. Please do not do that.
Please note well: Wikipedia policy requires us to take the subjects of articles at their word unless there is substantial, reliable, well-sourced evidence to the contrary. MrMonroe, if you can't operate within this policy, you should immediately stop editing articles about people you desire to discredit, which obviously includes this one.
Please note that zombie's essay (http://www.zombietime.com/fraud/ambulance/) uses photos from MSM websites, Getty Images, etc. It does not use photos zombie took. The phrase "a photo from the zombietime website" indicates a fundamental misunderstanding of this issue. Whether Bolt got a photo via via zombietime is completely irrelevant; what matters is where it came from originally.
As I've explained at User talk:MrMonroe, Bolt did not use zombietime as a source in the journalistic (or Wikipedia) sense of the word. That is, he did not think "hey, I know that the ambulance story was a hoax because some unknown person on a website says so"; he read zombie's analysis, checked it against the accompanying photos from news services and decided that zombie was right. And of course, zombie (and Bolt, and Downer) were both right about the ambulances not being hit by missiles, as the Red Cross and Human Rights Watch have both since conceded.
Cheers, CWC(talk) 14:45, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Chris, your histrionic posting and edit summary that includes the line "The Red Cross lied; deal with it" strongly suggest that you "appear to be pushing an agenda or a biased point of view" as described at WP:BLP. Further, you are consistently adopting "a sympathetic point of view" on Mr Bolt, which this Wiki policy discourages.
Please stick to the facts. You are clearly in no position to explain the steps Bolt took before he wrote his Herald Sun column on the ambulance incident. You make a fool of yourself by trying to do so. Just take a chill pill. MrMonroe 00:03, 13 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
OK, I have the column of August 30, "Not the hole truth." Here's what Bolt said about where he gained the information for his column: "The bloggers -- notably an American one known as Zombietime, whose research I've drawn on -- dug out other damning photographs." And later: "See the complete evidence on www.zombietime.com/fraud/ambulance." I hope this clears this up.
I have also reinstated the Rudd comment about Downer and Bolt. The relevance of this is obvious in the context of the earlier allegation of Downer's assistance for Bolt. I can't think why this has been deleted. MrMonroe 23:58, 13 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Petro Pirates

In copyediting the bit about Captain Ken Blyth criticizing Bolt, I noticed a problem. The article said (emphasis added):

[Blyth] disputes that soldiers on board the tanker fired over Bolt’s head as he tried to flee in his boat (crewmen on the vessel told Blyth soldiers fired up in the air); and also that Bolt refused to sign a confession that he had made up his earlier story (Blyth claims Bolt did sign a statement admitting his story was "seriously inconsistent with facts" and wrote an apology).

I'd guess that the second bolded section should read "and also claims that". Not having access to the book, I've played it safe and removed the bit about the confession. Please do not restore it unless you have read the book.

In fact, I added a {{Verify credibility}} tag in the hope that someone will please read that book and check that our reporting is accurate.

Cheers, CWC(talk) 02:39, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The description of Captain Blyth's comments are accurate: it was Bolt who had claimed in his news report that he had refused to sign a confession. From page 92 to 94 Blyth deals with his encounters with Bolt. Page 94: "Contrary to his account, Bolt signed an apology" .... "A Reuters report, quoting Mr Li saying that Bolt had signed a statement admitting that his story was 'seriously inconsistent with facts', was true. Bolt's irresponsible and inaccurate reports were faxed all around South-East Asian embassies and consulates and did a lot of damage. I would say that the hostility they aroused set relations between me and the Chinese officials back a certain distance." .... "Luckily, Bolt was not believed."

Cheers MrMonroe 03:37, 12 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]