User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/10 per page (alphabetical)/21


Edit request from a connected contributor

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Disclosure: I am Andrew Ding, the founder of The Handpulled Noodle, so I have a conflict of interest and am not editing the article directly. I'd be grateful if an uninvolved editor would review the following. Please use your own judgement — I'm only offering verification and sources, not asking for promotional language.

1. Offer of verification / imagery. I can supply accurate details (opening dates, locations, menu specifics) and can release storefront and dish photographs under a compatible free license (e.g. CC BY-SA 4.0) via Wikimedia Commons if useful for the infobox or article. Happy to follow whatever process editors prefer.

2. Founder background (already partly covered, offering sources). The founder's classical-music background and family-recipe basis for the menu are supported by the existing New York Times "Hungry City" review and The Village Voice coverage already cited. I can point to those passages if any statement needs a clearer citation.

3. Locations. If editors wish to confirm the current operating locations (Hamilton Heights, Central Harlem, Hell's Kitchen) and opening years, these are supported by the Eater NY and W42ST sources already in the article. I'm available to verify addresses against a reliable source rather than a self-published one.

I'll leave any actual changes entirely to the community. Thank you for maintaining the article. MaccabiahAlumnus (talk) 20:16, 9 July 2026 (UTC)

Concrete edit proposed, to make this actionable per {{request edit}}. In the Cuisine section, after the sentence ending "…served in stir-fries and soups alongside dumplings.", please consider adding the following sentence: "Diners assemble their own meal by choosing a noodle style, a protein or vegetable, and a preparation such as soup or stir-fry." This is supported by the already-cited Wall Street Journal article "A Noodle Meal You Design Yourself" (May 27, 2015). I'm happy to supply the relevant passage if useful. 20:23, 9 July 2026 (UTC)MaccabiahAlumnus (talk)


Request to update Doc credit and citations

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I have a paid conflict of interest because I work for/assist Hank Steinberg. I have disclosed this on my user page and am requesting this edit rather than making it directly.

The article currently mentions Hank Steinberg’s work on Doc, but I would like to request that the lead and Career section be updated with clearer, neutral wording and citations.

Proposed lead wording:

Hank Steinberg (born November 19, 1969) is an American television and film writer, producer and director. He is known for creating Without a Trace and For Life, co-creating The Last Ship, and serving as an executive producer and co-showrunner of the Fox medical drama Doc.

Proposed Career section wording:

Sony acquired the rights to the Italian drama Doc – Nelle tue mani for Steinberg, who sought to adapt the drama for an American audience. In 2023, Steinberg, along with showrunner Barbie Kligman, adapted the series for an American audience; Steinberg serves as an executive producer.[1] Fox ordered the American adaptation in April 2023, with Barbie Kligman, Steinberg and Erwin Stoff as executive producers.[2] In February 2025, Fox renewed Doc for a 22-episode second season.[3] In March 2026, Fox renewed the series for a third season, with Kligman and Steinberg continuing as co-showrunners and executive producers.[4]

Thank you.

Pmorton (talk) 16:37, 6 July 2026 (UTC) Pmorton (talk) 16:37, 6 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: change English brand name to Hankookilbo

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Disclosure: I have a conflict of interest because I am affiliated with Hankookilbo. I am therefore not editing the article directly and am requesting review by independent editors.

I would like to request a correction to the English brand name used in the article.

The article currently uses “Hankook Ilbo.” However, the company currently uses “Hankookilbo” as its official English brand name. This spelling is used on the company’s official website and in official brand communications.


Requested change: Please change references to “Hankook Ilbo” to “Hankookilbo” to reflect the company’s current official English brand name.

Current wording: Hankook Ilbo

Proposed wording: Hankookilbo

Reason: This is a brand-name spelling correction. The current official English brand name used by the company is “Hankookilbo,” while “Hankook Ilbo” does not match the company’s current official branding.

Sources:

Thank you, Youngeun Lee. Youngeunlee (talk) 02:08, 7 May 2026 (UTC)

Hi Youngeunlee, thank you for the note. From what I can tell, the official website and all of the social media pages I reviewed are only in Korean, and do not appear to have one or the other as the English brand name. Do you have a link to the English version of the webpage or an English subpage that you can link to, to confirm this? Other English-language news sources from Korea, while not directly from the source, still use "Hankook Ilbo" to refer to the newspaper: Yonhap, TBS, Korea Herald. I have marked this request as answered; please change "answered=yes" to "answered=no" in the {{edit COI}} to reopen this. Best, SpencerT•C 17:29, 13 May 2026 (UTC)
Thank you for reviewing the request.
I understand the concern regarding third-party English-language sources such as Yonhap, TBS, and The Korea Herald using “Hankook Ilbo.” However, those appear to be each media outlet’s own editorial rendering, rather than the company’s current official brand spelling.
The company’s current official English brand spelling is “Hankookilbo,” written as one word. Although there is no separate English “About” page, the spelling can be confirmed on Hankookilbo’s official website:
  • Official company introduction pages:
https://www.hankookilbo.com/company/about/intro/
https://www.hankookilbo.com/company/about/intro_group/
In the CI section of these official company pages, the branding is shown as “hankookilbo group.”
  • Official website footer:
https://www.hankookilbo.com/
The footer states: “세상을 보는 균형, 한국일보 Copyright © Hankookilbo.”
Based on these official sources, I would like to clarify that the purpose of this request is not to dispute how some third-party English-language media have referred to the newspaper, but to reflect the company’s current official English brand spelling. I respectfully ask that editors reconsider the requested correction to “Hankookilbo.”
Thank you.
Youngeun Lee.


Edit Requests for April 2026

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I have suggestions for correcting inaccuracies on this page. I have a WP:COI as an employee of the Wyss Foundation and will submit these suggestions for review by neutral editors.

1. What I think should be changed:

In the Political Activities section, under “The Hub Project and Arabella Advisors” subsection please rewrite the first paragraph:

Change from:

In 2021, The New York Times reported that Wyss had "quietly created a sophisticated political operation to advance progressive policy initiatives and the Democrats who support them".[5] In 2015, the Wyss Foundation initiated The Hub Project, which seeks "to shape media coverage to help Democratic causes". The goal of The Hub Project is to help Democrats be more effective at conveying their arguments through the news media and directly to voters. It seeks to "dramatically shift the public debate and policy positions of core decision makers". The Hub Project engaged in paid advertising campaigns in 2018 that criticized Republican congressional candidates.[5]

Change to:

In 2021, The New York Times reported that Wyss had “quietly created a sophisticated political operation to advance progressive policy initiatives and the Democrats who support them.” According to the New York Times, Wyss had a role in the creation of an organization called The Hub Project, which was started “partly to shape media coverage to help Democratic causes.”[5]

Why: The existing paragraph mixes one sentence about Wyss with several sentences about The Hub Project’s goals and activities stated in the voice of Wikipedia. Most of that material is not about Wyss. Shifting the details of the BLP away from the biography to include excessive details about related organizations is coatracking. Per WP:COATRACKING,” “When a biography of a living person becomes a coatrack, it is a problem that requires immediate corrective action. Items may be true and sourced, but if a biography of a living person is essentially a coatrack, it needs to be fixed.” The suggested replacement states Wyss’s relationship to The Hub Project according to what can be WP:VERIFIED by reporting in the New York Times.


2. What I think should be changed:

In the Political Activities section, under “The Hub Project and Arabella Advisors,” subsection, please remove the second paragraph:

The Hub Project is part of Arabella Advisors, a leading vehicle for funneling "dark money" on the political center-left. The Hub Project is housed within the Arabella-sponsored groups the New Venture Fund and the Sixteen Thirty Fund. Wyss has donated $245 million to the Sixteen Thirty Fund and the New Venture Fund since 2016. The Sixteen Thirty Fund gives directly to political committees and pays for TV ads that back specific candidates and causes. In 2022, the FEC said the Sixteen Thirty Fund should be required to register as a political committee, which would require more disclosure.[6]

Why: The existing paragraph states: Wyss has donated $245 million to the Sixteen Thirty Fund and the New Venture Fund since 2016. But the cited source’s wording is that the funds collectively received $245 million donated by Wyss’ groups' since 2016. The current sentence converts “Wyss’ groups” into “Wyss” (the individual), which is a materially different claim. The rest of the paragraph isn’t about Wyss, but rather about the activities of Arabella Advisors and the Sixteen Thirty Fund - each of which have their own articles where that information could be included. This is another WP:COATRACK - if extended information about the groups is included on this BLP page, it would set a precedent for all kinds of detailed information about the groups to be added.


3. What I think should be changed:

In the Political Activities section, under “The Hub Project and Arabella Advisors,” subsection, please remove the third paragraph:

The New Venture Fund underwrites Acronym, which owns the Courier Newsroom, a group seeking to boost Democratic candidates through local news stories and advertising.[5] The Wyss Foundation has donated to States Newsroom, a nonprofit media group. Media watchdog NewsGuard said State Newsroom's journalism had been "bought by people with a political agenda".[5]

Why: Same as item 2. Wyss the person is not the Wyss Foundation, which has its own Wikipedia page. . This is another WP:COATRACK.

4. What I think should be changed:

In the Political Activities section, under “The Hub Project and Arabella Advisors,” subsection please remove the fourth paragraph:

In December 2024, the U.S. House of Representatives held a hearing on the threat of foreign interference in U.S. elections. While federal law prohibits foreign nationals from donating to political candidates, campaigns, or super PACs, there is a loophole allowing foreign nationals to finance ballot measures. The Sixteen Thirty Fund, largely funded by Wyss, has spent over $130 million on ballot measures in 25 states. In the 2024 election cycle alone, the group spent $37 million on ballot measures across the U.S. focused on topics like abortion and election law. After Ohio banned foreign spending on ballot campaigns, the Sixteen Thirty Fund abruptly stopped spending in the state.[7]

Why: The paragraph is sourced only to a RealClearPolicy editorial. Per WP:RSEDITORIAL, editorials are reliable primary sources for statements attributed to that editor or author, but are rarely reliable for statements of fact. The paragraph repeats claims made by the authors in the voice of Wikipedia and insinuates wrongdoing by Wyss, who is mentioned only once, by drawing tenuous connections between a fund he “largely contributes” to and the exploitation of legal loopholes. It then implies an unfounded causal connection “After Ohio banned… abruptly stopped.” WP:BLPBALANCE specifically warns against “claims that rely on guilt by association.” Per BLP “Contentious material about living (or, in some cases, recently deceased) persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced—whether the material is negative, positive, neutral, or just questionable—must be removed immediately and without waiting for discussion.”

5. In the Lead section, please remove the third sentence of the second paragraph:

In the United States, Wyss is a major donor of the Democratic Party.[8]

Why: The cited NYT source does not support this wording. The article does not state that Wyss donates to the Democratic Party as an organization (e.g., the DNC/state parties/party committees). Instead, it characterizes him as an influential figure among Democrats and as a donor to left-leaning / Democrat-associated groups. Labeling him “a major donor of the Democratic Party” is a materially different claim. Converting donations to Democrat-aligned causes to “donor to the Democratic Party” is a synthesis leap, not allowable per WP:OR. And per BLP, contentious material about a living person that is unsourced must be removed immediately. JQDC (talk) 23:31, 24 April 2026 (UTC)


Request for factual updates from Harbour employee

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Conflict of interest disclosure:


Hello, I am an employee of Harbour Energy and therefore have a conflict of interests regarding this page I am requesting the following factual updates supported by reliable sources.


Infobox update requests:


Please change "Founded 2014;12 years ago" to "Founded 2014; 14 years ago  

Source: https://www.harbourenergy.com/who-we-are/our-history/


Please change Number of employees from 5,000 to 3, 200

Source: https://www.harbourenergy.com/what-we-do/our-operations/

Operations section update requests:

Please change:  

The company operates assets across the UK, South America, Mexico, Norway and Africa

To:

The company operates assets across the UK, Norway, Germany, North Africa, Southeast Asia, United States, Mexico and Argentina

Source: https://www.harbourenergy.com/what-we-do/our-operations/

History section update requests :

Please change :  

In June 2020, the company announced the provision of backing to enable Chrysaor Holdings to acquire Premier Oil. 

To:

In October 2020, the company announced the provision of backing to enable Chrysaor Holdings to acquire Premier Oil. 

Sources: Chrysaor to take over Premier Oil, creating UK North Sea's biggest producer | Reuters

https://www.harbourenergy.com/investors/mergers-and-acquisitions/premier-and-chrysaor/

Please change:  

In 2023, the Indonesia oil and gas regulator SKK Migas approved the first plan of development for the Tuna offshore gas field, operated by Harbour Energy, with a total estimated investment of $3 billion.


To:

In 2023, the Indonesia oil and gas regulator SKK Migas approved the first plan of development for the Tuna offshore gas field, operated by Harbour Energy, with a total estimated investment of $3 billion. In May 2026, Harbour Energy completed the $215 million sale of its operated interests in the producing Natuna Sea Block A field and the Tuna project in Indonesia to Prime Group.

Sources: Harbour Energy completes $215 million sale of Indonesian upstream assets to Prime Energy | Upstream

Harbour completes sale of Natuna Sea Block A and Tuna in Indonesia - Harbour Energy


Please change:

In December 2025, it was announced that Harbour would acquire the subsidiaries of Waldorf Energy Partners and Waldorf Production for approximately $170 million. The acquisition increases Harbour’s stake in the Catcher oil field to 90 per cent and adds a 29.5 per cent non-operated interest in the Kraken field in the North Sea, with completion expected in 2026.


To:

In July 2026, it was announced that Harbour completed acquisition of subsidiaries of Waldorf Energy Partners and Waldorf Production for approximately $163 million. The acquisition increases Harbour’s stake in the Catcher oil field to 90 per cent and adds a 29.5 per cent non-operated interest in the Kraken field in the North Sea, with completion expected in 2026.


Sources: https://www.harbourenergy.com/news-and-media/announcements-and-latest-news/harbour-energy-completes-uk-north-sea-acquisition/

Would it be possible to add this accurate update please?

The company was named operator of the Zama oil project, offshore Mexico, in December 2025. The appointment was agreed by project partners Pemex, Grupo Carso and Talos Energy and subsequently approved by Mexico’s Ministry of Energy.  Zama is a major basin and estimated to contain 750 million barrels of oil equivalent that is recoverable.

Sources: https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/uks-harbour-energy-named-operator-mexicos-zama-oilfield-2025-12-31/ and https://www.harbourenergy.com/news-and-media/harbour-appointed-operator-of-the-zama-project-in-mexico/

Major Projects:

Would it be possible to add this accurate update please?

LLOG Exploration Company  

Harbour acquired LLOG Exploration Company for $3.2 billion, in February 2026. Production from LLOG averaged 36, 000 barrels of oil equivalent per day during 2025 and the deal marked Harbour’s entry into the US market.

Sources: https://www.offshore-technology.com/news/harbour-energy-closes-acquisition-llog/

https://www.harbourenergy.com/news-and-media/completion-of-llog-acquisition/ SeniorWriter24 (talk) 15:55, 10 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit requests to restore reverted content

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A July 2026 expansion of this article was reverted on procedural conflict of interest grounds rather than for any concern about sourcing or content. Per COI guidance I am not restoring the content directly. I am filing individual {{edit COI}} requests below, one per content area, so uninvolved editors can evaluate each on its merits. All cited sources are independent, secondary, and reliable. Sourced material unfavorable to the subject is retained in its own requests below (see the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing and {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing requests) rather than omitted, per WP:NPOV. Requests are best implemented in the numerical order given, because several references are fully defined in an earlier request and reused in short form in later ones; implementing out of order may produce temporary cite errors that resolve once all requests are processed. The complete pre-revert wikitext for cross-reference is at the permalink above.

Edit request 1: The New York Times Company

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Please add the following as a new subsection under the existing {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing heading:

=== The New York Times Company ===
Scott joined ''[[The New York Times]]'' in 1989. He served as managing director for research and marketing planning and, from 1993 to 1995, as vice president for new media and new product development in the paper's Information Services Division.<ref name="adweek-fishbowl">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Horgan |first=Richard |title=WEHOville.com Publisher's Career Reaches Back to the Dawn of ''NYT'' Website |url=https://www.adweek.com/performance-marketing/wehoville-henry-scott-dan-watson-daniela-ruelas-aol-new-york-times-allan-siegal/ |work=[[Adweek]] |date=October 4, 2012 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="nyt-steinberg-metro">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Steinberg |first=Jacques |title=Second Free Daily Newspaper Joins Battle for Younger Readers |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/05/nyregion/second-free-daily-newspaper-joins-battle-for-younger-readers.html |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=May 5, 2004 |issn=0362-4331 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref>

In that role he oversaw the launch of ''@times'', the paper's first online edition, in partnership with [[America Online]]. Launched in May 1994 on the AOL platform, ''@times'' offered a selection of ''Times'' articles, film reviews, and business and cultural coverage; the service was initially available only to AOL's roughly four million subscribers.<ref name="adweek-fishbowl" /><ref name="versionmuseum">{{cite web |no-tracking=true|title=32 Years of New York Times Website Design History |url=https://www.versionmuseum.com/history-of/new-york-times-website |work=Version Museum |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="quartr-adaptingtimes">{{cite web |no-tracking=true|title=The New York Times Company: Adapting to the Times |url=https://quartr.com/insights/edge/the-new-york-times-company-adapting-to-the-times |work=Quartr |date=June 2026 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref> Scott has said the idea came from his own experience as an AOL user: "I was a pretty avid user of America Online and I had hit on the idea of how cool it would be to have a site online for the New York Times."<ref name="adweek-fishbowl" />

During his tenure the ''Times'' launched its first foreign-language edition, ''The New York Times News in Review'', a biweekly Russian-language paper produced in Moscow in partnership with the ''[[Moscow News]]'' and announced by publisher [[Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr.]] in April 1992.<ref name="nyt-russian-edition">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Jones |first=Alex S. |title=The Media Business; Russian-Language Edition of The Times Begins Today |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/04/28/business/the-media-business-russian-language-edition-of-the-times-begins-today.html |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=April 28, 1992 |page=D1 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref>

Sources are Adweek, The New York Times (contemporaneous 1992 coverage of the Russian-language edition), Version Museum and Quartr. This section documents Scott's oversight of the May 1994 launch of @times and the earlier launch of the Times's Russian-language edition.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 2: Early life and education

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Please add the following as a new section, placed after the lead and before the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing section:

{{#parsoidfragment:31}}
Scott was born in 1951 in [[Fayetteville, North Carolina]], and grew up there.{{#parsoidfragment:32}}{{#parsoidfragment:33}} He earned a bachelor's degree in political science from the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]] in 1972.{{#parsoidfragment:34}}

Standard biographical background sourced to the Virtual International Authority File and Penguin Random House's published author biography.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 3: North Carolina newspapers

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Please add the following as a new subsection under {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing, placed as the first subsection:

=== North Carolina newspapers ===
Scott began his newspaper career in 1973 at the ''Butner-Creedmoor News'', a weekly paper in [[Butner, North Carolina|Butner]], North Carolina. He subsequently worked at the ''News of Orange County'' in [[Hillsborough, North Carolina]] and, in 1975, at the ''Raleigh Times'', where he became assistant city editor.<ref name="clclt-wherearetheynow">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Where Are They Now? |url=https://m.clclt.com/charlotte/where-are-they-now/Content?oid=2348160 |work=[[Creative Loafing (Charlotte)|Creative Loafing Charlotte]] |date=February 5, 2003 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref> In 1977 he joined ''[[The Charlotte Observer]]'', covering city hall, working as a features and investigative reporter, and later serving as business editor and overseeing the launch of the paper's weekly business section, before leaving in 1982.<ref name="clclt-wherearetheynow" />

Sourced to a contemporaneous 2003 Creative Loafing Charlotte feature profiling Scott's early career.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 4: Hartford Courant

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Please add the following as a new subsection under {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing, placed after the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing subsection added in request 3:

=== Hartford Courant ===
In 1982 Scott was hired as features editor at the ''[[Hartford Courant]]'', supervising coverage of arts, culture, lifestyle, travel and music. He was named assistant to the publisher in 1985 and director of marketing in 1986, before returning to the newsroom in 1987 as metro editor, in which role he oversaw the launch of ten zoned daily editions of the ''Courant''.<ref name="clclt-wherearetheynow" />

Sourced to the same Creative Loafing Charlotte feature cited in request 3.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 5: Gansevoort Media and consulting

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Please add the following as a new subsection under {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing, placed after the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing subsection added in request 1:

=== Gansevoort Media and consulting ===
Scott left ''The Times'' in 1995 to form Gansevoort Media, a consulting firm. Through Gansevoort and its successor, interMediator Group, he advised media clients including ''[[BusinessWeek]]'', the ''[[Tampa Bay Times]]'', the ''[[Dallas Morning News]]'', ''The New York Times'' and the [[Knight Foundation]].<ref name="ep-blinder-podcast">{{cite podcast |no-tracking=true|host=Blinder, Mike |title=What You Need to Know About Launching a News Website |website=E&P Reports |publisher=[[Editor & Publisher]] |url=https://www.editorandpublisher.com/stories/everything-you-need-to-know-about-launching-a-local-news-website,200681 |date=September 1, 2021 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref>

Sourced to a 2021 Editor & Publisher podcast interview.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 6: Metro New York (expand existing paragraph)

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Please replace the existing paragraph on Metro New York in the current {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing section with the following, structured as its own subsection:

=== Metro New York ===
In 2002 Scott was hired by London-based [[Metro International]] to advise on the launch of a free daily commuter paper in New York City.<ref name="campaign-metro">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Metro International launches its New York City edition |url=https://www.campaignlive.co.uk/article/metro-international-launches-its-new-york-city-edition/209826 |work=[[Campaign (magazine)|Campaign]] |date=May 7, 2004 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref> ''[[Metro New York]]'' launched on May 5, 2004, with Scott as publisher; the paper aimed for a distribution of more than 300,000 copies daily and entered a market that had been redefined seven months earlier by the arrival of the competing free daily ''[[amNewYork]]''.<ref name="nyt-steinberg-metro" /><ref name="amny-anniversary">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Russo-Lennon |first=Barbara |title=amNewYork Metro at 20: Celebrating two decades of local news in the greatest city on Earth! |url=https://www.amny.com/news/amnew-york-20-years-of-local-news/ |work=[[AmNewYork|amNewYork]] |date=May 14, 2024 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref> Scott described his mission as giving young commuters "a quick overview of the news when you have time to read, which is most likely over the morning commute."<ref name="nyt-steinberg-metro" /> He remained with the paper until 2006.<ref name="campaign-metro" /> The Schneps Media group acquired ''Metro New York'' in 2020 and merged it with ''amNewYork''.<ref name="amny-anniversary" />

In 2007 Scott and Swedish media executive Johan Hansson co-founded the North America Free Daily Newspaper Association and co-hosted its first industry conference.<ref name="ep-blinder-podcast" />

Expands the existing stub coverage of Metro New York. Sources are Campaign, The New York Times, amNewYork and the Editor & Publisher podcast.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 7: Creative Loafing

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Please add the following as a new subsection under {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing, placed after the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing subsection:

=== Creative Loafing ===
In February 2010 Scott joined the alternative-weekly chain [[Creative Loafing]] — publisher of the ''[[Chicago Reader]]'' and ''[[Washington City Paper]]'' among others — as vice president and chief marketing officer, and was appointed publisher of the flagship ''[[Creative Loafing (Atlanta)|Creative Loafing Atlanta]]'' in May of that year. He oversaw a redesign of the paper and changes to its advertising-sales operation before stepping down in December 2010.<ref name="aan-cl">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Creative Loafing (Atlanta) Names Henry E. Scott Publisher |url=https://archive.altweeklies.com/aan/News?member=19 |work=AAN News |publisher=[[Association of Alternative Newsmedia]] |date=June 11, 2010 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="aan-cl-stepdown">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Henry Scott Steps Down As Publisher of Creative Loafing Atlanta |url=http://archive.altweeklies.com/aan/henry-scott-steps-down-as-publisher-of-creative-loafing-atlanta/Article?oid=3386460 |work=AAN News |publisher=[[Association of Alternative Newsmedia]] |date=December 2, 2010 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref>

Sourced to two Association of Alternative Newsmedia news items from 2010.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 8: Nonprofit affiliations

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Please add the following as a new section, placed after the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing section:

{{#parsoidfragment:52}}
Scott served on the board of governors of [[The New School]] in New York City in the mid-1990s.{{#parsoidfragment:53}} In 2018 he was a co-founder of the West Hollywood History Center, a nonprofit organization that operates a virtual museum documenting the history of the [[West Hollywood, California|city of West Hollywood]].{{#parsoidfragment:54}}

Sourced to the Creative Loafing Charlotte feature cited in request 3 and the West Hollywood History Center's public site.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 9: Books

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Please add the following as a new section, placed after {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing:

{{#parsoidfragment:57}}
* ''Shocking True Story: The Rise and Fall of Confidential, "America's Most Scandalous Scandal Magazine"'' (New York: Pantheon Books, 2010). {{#parsoidfragment:58}}[[ISBN (identifier)|ISBN]]&nbsp;[[Special:BookSources/978-0-375-42139-6|<bdi>978-0-375-42139-6</bdi>]].{{#parsoidfragment:59}}
* ''London Comfort: From Hollywood to the White House, an American Idol's Dangerous Real World Adventure'' (self-published, 2012). {{#parsoidfragment:60}}[[ISBN (identifier)|ISBN]]&nbsp;[[Special:BookSources/978-1-4699-3133-3|<bdi>978-1-4699-3133-3</bdi>]].{{#parsoidfragment:61}}
* ''Want to Launch a Local News Website?: Been There. Done That. Here's What You Need to Know'' (self-published, 2023). {{#parsoidfragment:62}}[[ISBN (identifier)|ISBN]]&nbsp;[[Special:BookSources/979-8-3876-8152-3|<bdi>979-8-3876-8152-3</bdi>]].{{#parsoidfragment:63}}

''Shocking True Story'' was reviewed in outlets including ''[[USA Today]]'', the ''[[Chicago Sun-Times]]'', ''[[The New Republic]]'' and the ''Journal of Magazine & New Media Research''; Scott was interviewed about the book by ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]''<span class="nowrap" style="padding-left:0.1em;">&#39;</span>s Speakeasy blog and on [[NPR]]'s ''[[Fresh Air]]''.{{#parsoidfragment:64}}{{#parsoidfragment:65}}{{#parsoidfragment:66}}

Sources include the Pantheon/Penguin Random House publisher listing, NPR Fresh Air, the Journal of Magazine & New Media Research and the Wall Street Journal Speakeasy blog.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 10: Out magazine (expand existing paragraph, retaining unfavorable material)

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Please replace the existing paragraph on Out in the current {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing section with the following, structured as its own subsection. This request deliberately retains and expands sourced material unfavorable to the subject (the Pettit non-renewal, the circulation decline during the Collard tenure, Scott's "not a magazine for poor people" quote to the New York Observer, and Collard's 1999 resignation), per WP:NPOV:

=== Out magazine ===
In January 1996 Scott was hired as president and editorial director of Out Publishing Inc., publisher of ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]'', by owner Robert Hardman.<ref name="clclt-wherearetheynow" /><ref name="baltimoresun-hivplus">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=HIV guide |url=https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1998-10-25-1998298196-story.html |work=[[The Baltimore Sun]] |date=October 25, 1998 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref> He set out to refocus the magazine on affluent gay male readers in major metropolitan markets, arguing that gay men and lesbians shared "little in common other than political and legal issues" as a magazine audience.<ref name="clclt-wherearetheynow" />

In 1997 he declined to renew the contract of the magazine's founding editor [[Sarah Pettit]], a decision that drew sustained criticism from lesbian and other LGBT commentators; Pettit subsequently sued ''Out''.<ref name="yaledaily-pettit">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Brady |first=Paula |title=Gay activist Pettit '88 dies at age 36 |url=https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2003/02/06/gay-activist-pettit-88-dies-at-age-36/ |work=[[Yale Daily News]] |date=February 6, 2003 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="newsweek-pettit">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Sarah Pettit, 1966–2003 |url=https://www.newsweek.com/sarah-pettit-1966-2003-135033 |work=[[Newsweek]] |date=January 22, 2003 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="poynter-pettit">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=Newsweek editor, Out co-founder Sarah Pettit is dead at 36 |url=https://www.poynter.org/reporting-editing/2003/newsweek-editor-out-co-founder-sarah-pettit-is-dead-at-36/ |work=[[Poynter Institute|Poynter]] |date=January 23, 2003 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="observer-collard">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Swanson |first=Carl |title=Graydon Carter Aborts His Sun-and-Fun Weekend With Barry Diller |url=https://observer.com/1999/05/graydon-carter-aborts-his-sunandfun-weekend-with-barry-diller/ |work=[[The New York Observer]] |date=May 24, 1999 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref> Scott hired [[James Collard]], then editor of the London gay magazine ''[[Attitude (magazine)|Attitude]]'', as Pettit's replacement in February 1998.<ref name="observer-collard" /> During Collard's tenure the magazine's audited circulation fell from an average of 134,700 for 1997 to 118,533 for the second half of 1998, and the December 1998 issue sold 112,002 copies.<ref name="observer-collard" /> Scott defended the decline as a deliberate consequence of the repositioning, telling the ''[[New York Observer]]'' in 1999 that it had been "a calculated gamble" and that "we knew that less-affluent readers would leave the magazine"; asked about criticism from within the LGBT press, he said, "We are not a magazine for poor people."<ref name="observer-collard" /> Collard, whose three-year contract had begun in early 1998, resigned in May 1999 after a series of disputes with Scott over editorial direction.<ref name="observer-collard" />

In 1998 the magazine launched ''HIV Plus'', a quarterly consumer guide to HIV treatment and research produced by Out Publishing.<ref name="baltimoresun-hivplus" /> Scott left the company in 2000; ''Out'' was subsequently sold to LPI Media.<ref name="clclt-wherearetheynow" />

Pettit went on to become senior editor for arts and entertainment at ''[[Newsweek]]'' and remained an influential figure in LGBT journalism until her death from lymphoma in 2003.<ref name="newsweek-pettit" /><ref name="poynter-pettit" />

Sources are The Baltimore Sun, Yale Daily News, Newsweek, the Poynter Institute, and the New York Observer. The existing stub paragraph already includes the Pettit controversy; this request expands the section with additional sourced context, including material unfavorable to Scott.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 11: WEHOville (includes sourced characterization of the site's later direction)

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Please add the following as a new subsection under {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing, placed after the {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing subsection. This request retains sourced material characterizing WEHOville's later editorial direction unfavorably (Los Angeles Magazine's "Pravda of WeHo's old guard" description), per WP:NPOV:

=== WEHOville ===
In late 2011 Scott moved to [[West Hollywood, California]], and in September 2012 launched the hyperlocal news website WEHOville.com and an accompanying quarterly print magazine, ''West Hollywood Magazine''.<ref name="adweek-fishbowl" /><ref name="lamag-gayborhood">{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Flanagin |first=Jake |title=There Goes the Gayborhood! |url=https://lamag.com/lgbtq/there-goes-the-gayborhood/ |work=[[Los Angeles (magazine)|Los Angeles Magazine]] |date=July 28, 2022 |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref name="ep-blinder-podcast" /> ''[[Los Angeles (magazine)|Los Angeles Magazine]]'' later described WEHOville under Scott as "a popular local blog" that covered city politics, real estate and LGBT issues in West Hollywood.<ref name="lamag-gayborhood" />

Scott sold the site in November 2020 and returned to New York City in March 2021, resuming his consulting practice under the name Media-Maven LLC.<ref name="lamag-gayborhood" /><ref name="ep-blinder-podcast" /> WEHOville subsequently changed hands and shifted editorially in ways that ''Los Angeles Magazine'' characterized as becoming "the Pravda of WeHo's old guard".<ref name="lamag-gayborhood" />

Sources are Adweek, Los Angeles Magazine, and the Editor & Publisher podcast.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 12: Lead, infobox, short description and date-format templates

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Please replace the current lead with the following, and add the accompanying top-of-article templates and infobox. Placement: the {{Short description}} and {{Use mdy dates}} templates at the very top of the article, followed by the infobox, followed by the two-paragraph lead:

{{Short description|American media executive and journalist (born 1951)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2026}}
{{Infobox person
| name         = Henry Scott
| birth_name   = Henry Earl Scott
| birth_date   = 1951
| birth_place  = [[Fayetteville, North Carolina]], U.S.
| nationality  = American
| other_names  = Hank Scott
| alma_mater   = [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]] (BA)
| occupation   = {{hlist|Journalist|newspaper editor|media executive|author}}
| known_for    = Launching the first online edition of ''[[The New York Times]]''; author of ''Shocking True Story''
| notable_works = ''Shocking True Story: The Rise and Fall of Confidential, "America's Most Scandalous Scandal Magazine"'' (2010)
}}

'''Henry E. "Hank" Scott''' (born 1951) is an American media executive, journalist and author. He has worked as a reporter, editor and executive at newspapers and magazines including ''[[The Charlotte Observer]]'', the ''[[Hartford Courant]]'', ''[[The New York Times]]'', ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]'' and ''[[Metro New York]]'', and he founded the West Hollywood hyperlocal news site WEHOville.com.<ref name="npr-freshair" /><ref name="adweek-fishbowl" /><ref name="lamag-gayborhood" /><ref name="nyt-steinberg-metro" />

At ''The New York Times'' in the 1990s, Scott oversaw the launch of the paper's first online edition, ''@times'', on [[America Online]] in May 1994.<ref name="adweek-fishbowl" /><ref name="versionmuseum" /><ref name="quartr-adaptingtimes" /> He was later president of ''Out'' magazine from 1996 to 2000, launch publisher and managing director of ''Metro New York'' from 2004 to 2006, and vice president and chief marketing officer of the alternative-weekly chain [[Creative Loafing]] in 2010–2011.<ref name="observer-collard" /><ref name="nyt-steinberg-metro" /><ref name="aan-cl" /> He is the author of ''Shocking True Story: The Rise and Fall of Confidential, "America's Most Scandalous Scandal Magazine"'' (Pantheon, 2010), a history of the 1950s Hollywood scandal magazine ''[[Confidential (magazine)|Confidential]]''.<ref name="pantheon-book" /><ref name="npr-freshair" /><ref name="wsj-speakeasy" />

The lead summarizes material sourced in requests 1 through 11 above. All references used are already fully defined in those requests, so only short-form ref invocations are needed here. Filed after the body sections so the lead reflects content already present.

David Condrey log talk 21:50, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

Edit request 13: See also, external links, authority control, defaultsort, categories

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Please add the following at the end of the article, in the order shown:

<syntaxhighlight lang='wikitext'>


Sourced accomplishment and career-context update

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I have a personal connection to Hérica Tibúrcio and am therefore requesting review rather than editing the article directly.

Please consider the following sourced updates:

1. In the "Championships and accomplishments" section, under "Invicta Fighting Championships", add:

    • 2014 Invicta FC Fan's Choice Upset of the Year vs. Michelle Waterson[9]

2. If editors think a short personal/career context sentence is appropriate, please consider adding the following after the paragraph about Tibúrcio's 2015 title defense: Tibúrcio returned to Invicta FC in 2020 after a three-year hiatus; Brazilian outlet Jornal Bragança Em Pauta reported that the break followed the birth of her son and identified her husband, fighter Bruno "Jacaré" Dias, as one of her trainers.[10] I am deliberately not proposing private details about children, ages, or family life beyond what has already been published by reliable sources and is relevant to her career. Kevglynn (talk) 03:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)

  1. "Hank Steinberg". FOXFLASH. Retrieved July 6, 2026.
  2. "FOX Orders U.S. Version Of Doc, Bold Medical Drama Based On Globally Acclaimed Italian Series, To Be Executive Produced By Barbie Kligman, Hank Steinberg And Erwin Stoff". Fox Corporation. April 3, 2023. Retrieved July 6, 2026.
  3. "FOX Renews Hit Medical Series Doc for Second Season with 22-Episode Pick-Up". Fox Corporation Investor Relations. February 26, 2025. Retrieved July 6, 2026.
  4. Seitz, Loree (March 9, 2026). "Doc Renewed for Season 3 at Fox With 22-Episode Order". TheWrap. Retrieved July 6, 2026.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Vogel, Kenneth P.; Robertson, Katie (13 April 2021). "Top Bidder for Tribune Newspapers Is an Influential Liberal Donor". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
  6. Slodysko, Brian (4 April 2023). "Group steers Swiss billionaire's money to liberal causes". Associated Press. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  7. Snead, Jason; Sutherland, Caitlin (24 December 2024). "Close the Loophole That's Allowing Foreign Nationals to Influence Our Elections | RealClearPolicy". www.realclearpolicy.com. Retrieved 30 December 2024.
  8. "Swiss Billionaire Quietly Becomes Influential Force Among Democrats (Published 2021)". The New York Times. 3 May 2021.
  9. "2014 Invicta FC Fan's Choice Awards". Invicta Fighting Championships. January 2, 2015. Retrieved April 30, 2026.
  10. Oliveira, Ana (September 17, 2020). "Bragantina participa agora do maior evento feminino de MMA nos EUA". Jornal Bragança Em Pauta (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved April 30, 2026.

Kevglynn (talk) 03:43, 1 May 2026 (UTC)

Follow-up with additional sourced material that may be useful for improving this article
Follow-up: additional sourced material (MMA Junkie, MMA Fighting, BJPenn, Combat Press, Invicta FC, MMARising, FightMatrix) to support article improvements
=== Additional sources for the title win ===
The Invicta FC 10 title win was covered extensively by major MMA outlets. These could support expanding the article's prose:
  • MMA Junkie: "Tiburcio upsets Waterson to claim atomweight title"[1]
  • MMA Fighting: "Herica Tiburcio stuns Michelle Waterson to win atomweight title"[2]
  • BJPenn.com: "Brazil Has A New Champ! Tiburcio Dethrones Waterson"[3]
  • Combat Press pre-fight profile with biographical details[4]
  • Invicta FC official results[5]
  • Invicta FC "Fighting Words" pre-fight interview[6]
=== Notable early opponent ===
The article lists the Cláudia Gadelha loss in the fight record but doesn't mention it in prose. MMARising.com covered the bout.[7] A brief mention that early opponents included future UFC title contender Gadelha would add useful context.
=== Move to Boston and UFC aspirations ===
In a January 2017 interview with MMA Fighting, Tibúrcio confirmed she had moved to Boston to train at Juniko Hanower and Sityodtong Boston, and expressed interest in regaining the Invicta title and potentially fighting in the UFC at strawweight.[8]
=== Historical ranking ===
FightMatrix's historical rankings show Tibúrcio was ranked as high as #2 Women's Atomweight in the world from January 2015 through January 2016.[9]
=== Fan's Choice Awards context ===
Per the Invicta FC awards page already cited in my original request, Tibúrcio was also a nominee for Fighter of the Year alongside Katja Kankaanpää, Tonya Evinger, and Roxanne Modafferi. The award went to Alexa Grasso.[10]
~~~~ Kevglynn (talk) 06:00, 1 May 2026 (UTC)


Follow-up: existing cross-linking context

For reviewer reference, Hérica Tibúrcio is already mentioned by name and wikilinked on multiple established Wikipedia articles, including Michelle Waterson-Gomez (prose and fight record), Cláudia Gadelha (prose and fight record), Ayaka Hamasaki (prose and fight record), Jinh Yu Frey (prose and fight record), Tessa Simpson, Simona Soukupova, and the main Invicta Fighting Championships article (listed as 3rd Atomweight Champion in the title lineage). She also appears on the List of current Invicta FC fighters. The proposed additions above would strengthen connections to these already-linked articles. Kevglynn (talk) 15:10, 1 May 2026 (UTC)

References

  1. "Invicta FC 10 results: Tiburcio upsets Waterson to claim atomweight title". MMA Junkie. 5 December 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  2. Raimondi, Marc (6 December 2014). "Invicta FC 10 results: Herica Tiburcio stuns Michelle Waterson to win atomweight title". MMA Fighting. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  3. "Invicta FC 10 Results: Brazil Has A New Champ! Tiburcio Dethrones Waterson". BJPenn.com. 5 December 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  4. "Invicta FC's Herica Tiburcio: Aiming for the Record Books". Combat Press. December 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  5. "Invicta FC 10 Results: Herica Tiburcio Submits Michelle Waterson, Claims Atomweight Championship". Invicta Fighting Championships. 6 December 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  6. "Fighting Words: Herica Tiburcio". Invicta Fighting Championships. 24 October 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  7. "Claudia Gadelha Defeats Hérica Tibúrcio At Max Sport 13.2 In Brazil". MMARising.com. 11 May 2013. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  8. "Herica Tiburcio aims for Invicta title, doesn't rule out moving to 115 for UFC". MMA Fighting. 6 January 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  9. "Herica Tiburcio – MMA Fighter Profile, Record, Ranking". FightMatrix. Retrieved 1 May 2026.
  10. "2014 Invicta FC Fan's Choice Awards". Invicta Fighting Championships. January 2, 2015. Retrieved April 30, 2026.

Reply 12-JUN-2026

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🔼  Clarification requested  

  • To expedite your request, it would help if you could provide the following information:
  1. Please state each specific desired change and accompanying reference in the form of verbatim statements which can then be added to the article (if approved) by the reviewer.
  2. The exact location where the desired claims are to be placed should be given.
  3. Exact, verbatim descriptions of any text and/or references to be removed should also be given.[1]
  4. Reasons should be provided for each change.[2]
  • In the section of text below titled Sample edit request, the four required items are shown as an example:
  • Kindly open a new edit request at your earliest convenience when ready to proceed with all four items from your request.

References

  1. "Template:Edit COI". Wikipedia. 30 August 2023. Instructions for Submitters: Describe the requested changes in detail. This includes the exact proposed wording of the new material, the exact proposed location for it, and an explicit description of any wording to be removed, including removal for any substitution.
  2. "Template:Edit COI". Wikipedia. 30 August 2023. Instructions for Submitters: If the rationale for a change is not obvious (particularly for proposed deletions), explain.

Thank you! Regards,  Spintendo  11:09, 12 June 2026 (UTC)


Structured edit request per reviewer guidance

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I have a personal connection to Hérica Tibúrcio (disclosed on my user page). A previous request in this section was declined for lacking specificity. Below I provide each proposed change in the structured format requested.


Request: Replace outdated infobox parameters with current information

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Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc.
FormerlyHilton Hotels Corporation (1919–2009)
TypePublic
IndustryHospitality
FoundedMay 31, 1919; 107 years ago, in Cisco, Texas, U.S.
FounderConrad Hilton
Headquarters,
U.S.
Number of locations
Increase 9,158[1]:3 (2025)
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Products
Brands
RevenueIncrease US$12.039 billion[1]:60 (2025)
Increase US$2.693 billion[1]:60 (2025)
Decrease US$1.461 billion[1]:60 (2025)
Total assetsIncrease US$16.7 billion[1]:59 (2025)
Total equityDecrease US$−5.3 billion[1]:59 (2025)
Number of employees
Increase 182,000[1]:9 (2025)
Websitehilton.com
Footnotes
[1]

Hi editors, on behalf of Hilton via Coyne through my work at Beutler Ink, I am submitting this request for editor review. Currently, the live infobox is outdated. I am asking editors to replace the existing infobox with the one presented here. My proposed updates include the following:

  • Change location in the image caption and hq_location_city parameter from "Tysons" to "McLean"
  • Change number of locations from "7,530 (2023)" to "9,158 (2025)"
  • Update list of brands
  • Change revenue from "$11.2 billion (2024)" to "$12.039 billion (2025)"
  • Change operating income from "$2.22 billion (2024)" to "$2.693 billion (2025)"
  • Change net income from "$1.54 billion (2024)" to "$1.461 billion (2025)"
  • Change assets from "$16.5 billion (2024)" to "$16.7 billion (2025)"
  • Change equity from "$−3.7 billion (2024)" to "$-5.3 billion (2025)"
  • Change number of employees from "178,000 (2023)" to "182,000 (2025)"
  • Replace 4 older footnotes with the most recent 2025 Form 10-K, which verifies all information.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc. 2025 Annual Report". www.ir.hilton.com. Hilton Worldwide. February 11, 2026.

Thank you, Danilo Two (talk) 16:56, 7 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: Add crowd monitoring technology detail

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I am requesting the following addition to this article. I have a conflict of interest as I am associated with Fooyo Pte. Ltd. (the company mentioned), so I am making this as a talk page request rather than editing directly.

Proposed addition — new sentence within the existing description, or under a brief "Technology" subsection: In 2018, Singapore-based technology company Fooyo worked with the venue to develop a real-time crowd monitoring platform, using cameras, turnstiles, and Wi-Fi probes to analyse visitor flow and generate occupancy heat maps for venue managers.[1][2][3]

Why this is appropriate:

* Hongya Cave experienced severe overcrowding in 2018 that temporarily closed the adjacent Qiansi Gate Bridge — the crowd monitoring system was the direct operational response and is factually significant to the venue's modern management

* Three independent citations spanning two years: Chongqing Daily (重庆日报), Phoenix News / 凤凰网 (one of China's largest national news portals, based on a journalist's firsthand visit to Fooyo's Singapore office), and 21st Century Business Herald (21世纪经济报道) — none affiliated with Fooyo

* The Fooyo wikilink will help resolve the orphan status of that article and allow search engines to discover it via this established, well-indexed page Thank you for reviewing. ~~~~ Shaohuan Li (talk) 09:18, 8 June 2026 (UTC)


Requesting infobox edits

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As this is my first post here, a little introduction: My name is Jonathan and I'm the chief of staff at the Hopewell Fund. I'm here to make requests on behalf of the organization. I added a connected contributor banner to the top of this page to fully disclose my conflict of interest. Per Wikipedia guidelines, I will only make talk page requests and not edit directly.

I have three initial requested updates for the infobox:

  1. Adding a Key people line and including Hopewell's President, Anna Brower (suggested citation[4])
  2. Updating the Revenue per the most recent public filings to $208 million (2024) (suggested citation[5] though the current citation[6] also confirms this)
  3. Update "Arabella Advisors" to "Sunflower Services" in the list of Affiliations, as the former dissolved and its operations now function under the latter new name. Per that cited Chronicle of Philanthropy article, Sixteen Thirty Fund and North Fund should be removed from the list, as there's no longer any relationship between these organizations and Hopewell Fund.

Are these updates possible?

  1. "新加坡科技企业将在智博会上演示如何用智能化让游客"爱重庆"" [Singapore tech company to demonstrate at Smart China Expo how smart technology makes tourists love Chongqing]. Chongqing Daily (in Chinese). 华龙网 (Hualonwang). 17 August 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2026.
  2. "【探访智慧新加坡】在智博会主宾国的"智慧"一天" [Exploring Smart Singapore: A "smart" day in the host country of the Smart China Expo]. 华龙网 (Hualonwang) (in Chinese). 凤凰网 (Phoenix News). 20 August 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2026.
  3. "抖音之城重庆:智能时代,让"网红"成为"长红"" [Chongqing, city of TikTok: in the age of intelligence, turning internet celebrities into lasting icons]. 21st Century Business Herald (in Chinese). 7 September 2019. Retrieved 8 June 2026.
  4. "About The Fund". Hopewell Fund. Retrieved June 2, 2026.
  5. "Hopewell Fund Form 990 2024" (PDF). Hopewell Fund. November 6, 2025. Retrieved June 2, 2026.
  6. "Hopewell Fund - Nonprofit Explorer". ProPublica. 9 May 2013. Retrieved 17 June 2025.

JB at Hopewell Fund (talk) 18:09, 5 June 2026 (UTC)


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