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In looking over the article, trying to decide whether to review it or not, it seemed like almost all the sources were primary sources, e.g. interviews, whereas the Wikipedia:Good article criteria require that sources for anything other than information that is not controversial mys come from reliable sources. This is particularly important in the "Critical reception" section. Can you point out which ones are secondary sources? (I had trouble loading a couple of those citations in my browser.) Thanks, MathewTownsend (talk) 02:33, 10 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not going to make a checklist. I'm just going to list out the problems I see:
Intro: "While the series' first season mainly referenced horror films, "Ride Me to Hell" pays homage to 1970s cop shows, and Clark saw Grimes unleashing his memories from the 1970s as an opportunity to parody cop shows such as CHiPs and Starsky and Hutch." Reword to "While the series' first season mainly referenced horror films, "Ride Me to Hell" pays homage to 1970s cop shows. Clark used Grimes unleashing his memories from the 1970s as an opportunity to parody cop shows such as CHiPs and Starsky and Hutch."
Intro: "According to Nielsen Media Research, "Ride Me to Hell" was watched by 814,000 viewers in its original airing and dropped in total viewership from previous episodes." Reword into "According to Nielsen Media Research, "Ride Me to Hell" was watched by 814,000 viewers in its original airing, a slight drop in total viewership when compared to previous episodes."
Plot: "While trying to take down Aldermach as he became the new leader of Hell, Grimes accidentally killed a disguised Jimmy." Reword into "While trying to take down Aldermach when he became the new leader of Hell, Grimes accidentally killed a disguised Jimmy."