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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Daniel Hernandez (intern)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Pdonna (talk | contribs) at 03:06, 21 January 2011. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Daniel Hernandez (intern) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log)
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Notable for actions during one event, the 2011 Tucson shooting. While there has been several news articles about him after the shooting, there is nothing to indicate that in the future he will satisfy WP:BLP1E. Atmoz (talk) 22:51, 15 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Keep. Pdonna's links, as well as other coverage, suggest that this person will not be keeping a low profile. Roscelese (talkcontribs) 02:27, 19 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
  • Those links are still mostly focused on the shooting (BLP1E). If additional sources could be added to establish his notability in a separate topic (for example: his LGBT activism), that would strengthen the keep argument. KimChee (talk) 10:03, 19 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Sipple was notable not so much for his heroics, but for the poor way he was treated afterwards. I guess in the grander scheme of things, the news also focuses now on crazed gunmen rather than the heroes that stop them. In a year, we'll know whether Hernandez will remain a public figure, but at this point this just smacks of WP:RECENT. SDY (talk) 02:10, 20 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The comparisons to Sipple is that of a gay American hero. Sipple was not an activist where Hernandez is and he is certain to get even more attention. Also this case brings up many interesting contrasts; the gay angle when marriage is such a hotbutton issue, being Mexican-American in a state known for anti-immigration laws and that he's so young and yet openly gay. BLP1E warns to not focus bringing embarrassment to someone known for only one event, not for being a national hero. This is a human interest story that has already become front page news in the Spanish-language media as well as the Gay media and the above links talk about the person beyond the event. "WP:BLP1E should be applied only to biographies of low-profile individuals." (see Wikipedia:Who_is_a_low_profile_individual#Media_attention) Pdonna (talk) 02:32, 20 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Human interest story" is a huge red flag. With the 24 hr news operation, we could have articles on missing cats with multiple reliable sources. Every article about the shooting mentions Loughner. Maybe one in twenty mentions Hernandez. He was not an integral part of the event, and while we respect and honor his actions, we can do that in the context of the article on the shooting. SDY (talk) 04:44, 20 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Human interest stories are what attract a readership to a media outlet. I wouldn't even have heard about this guy if the angles on him were presented as dry facts. They weren't, the LGBT press talks about his activism and speculates about his political career. The Spanish-language media takes a different spin about the Mexican-American hero. Etc. It is the job of the media workers to take a story and highlight the human interest aspects to attract humans to their brand. Possibly Hernandez is only mentioned in a fraction of the coverage about the entire event but that's because he was not the focus of the entire event. A lot of mainstream Time, CNN, PBS, NPR, Fox, LA Times, etc. Here's a few more; "ARIZONA SHOOTING: Daniel Hernandez goes from Giffords' intern to world hero"[11], "Giffords intern handling sudden fame after speech", By TERRY TANG,Associated Press,[12], here's a passage,
"Since Wednesday night, Hernandez has given more than 200 interviews. Trying to walk into the medical center where Giffords is hospitalized or anywhere else, he is surrounded by throngs of well-wishers. Before the memorial, the biggest group Hernandez had ever addressed was about 30 people. "And even that I think is a bit of a stretch," Hernandez told The Associated Press. Hernandez said the whole event still seems unreal. He can't even remember exactly what he said Wedneday night. "I ended up throwing away the speech I was going to be giving moments before I went up on stage. I think it's really disingenuous to be doing anything other than speaking from the heart." Hernandez had been an intern with Giffords' office for all of five days when the shooting happened at a district meet-and-greet outside a supermarket. He also volunteered as a teenager for her 2008 congressional campaign.
Born in Tucson to parents of Mexican heritage, Hernandez grew up the oldest of three children. His parents taught him and his two sisters from a young age to give back. "My mom is like that. She has a big heart," younger sister Alma Hernandez said. "My dad always thinks about the community. He always wants to do better. He always told us we have to always go back to our community where we came from to help out." Their father is retired and their mother has a side business baking cakes. Hernandez's talent for public speaking was developed in high school, where he participated in academic decathlons, Junior Honor Society and student council. Besides interning for Giffords, Hernandez was appointed as a commissioner at large to the City of Tucson Commission on Gay, Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Issues. He plans to help the organization with education outreach on issues such as bullying.
C. Michael Woodward, co-chair of the commission, said Hernandez had a resume bigger than some candidates twice his age. "It was pretty clear he was a mover and a shaker long before any of this happened," Woodward said. "The real heroes are the ones who dedicate themselves to public service but that's what he's planning to do anyway. He just got his hero badge early.""
Here's a whole column noting his being Mexican-American, "What If Daniel Hernandez Was Undocumented?"[13]
And a couple talking about the gay aspects, "Grace Under Fire"[14] notes the comparison to Mark Bingham, "Does Sen. John McCain Owe Gay Servicemen an Apology?"[15] delves into the loaded language and differing standards the US has for those who are openly gay. So there are plenty of sources that talk about Hernandez in depth and as a unique aspect to a huge tragic event where this material would likely not be as useful. And after 200 interviews BLP1E cannot apply, after dozens and dozens of media interviews, many covering background information on him having nothing to do with the event itself it would seem he has surpassed any concerns of notability and verifiability. Pdonna (talk) 03:06, 21 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]