User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/10 per page (alphabetical)/25
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Update request (COI): comprehensive article revision
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Jasmin Khezri. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
COI edit requests for early life, career
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Jay M. Bernhardt. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: Seven total updates to early life and career sections The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Hi! I'm a COI editor, making some requests here on behalf of Emerson College, a client of mine. (Just noting this is separate from my work with my employer, Porter Novelli.)
- In "Early life and education", update
- Bernhardt was born in 1969 into a Jewish family.[1][2] He grew up in East Brunswick, New Jersey.[3] He attended Rutgers University, where he earned a B.A. in sociology and minored in computer science. He earned a Master of Public Health (MPH)[4] degree from Rutgers and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Bernhardt earned his Ph.D. in public health from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC)[5] with an interdisciplinary focus on health communication.[6]
- to
- Bernhardt grew up in East Brunswick, New Jersey.[3] He attended Rutgers University, where he earned a B.A. in sociology and minored in computer science. He earned a Master of Public Health (MPH)[7] degree from Rutgers and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in 1994.[8] Bernhardt earned his Ph.D. in public health from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC)[9] in 1999,[8] with an interdisciplinary focus on health communication.[10]
- I couldn't find a good source for birth year or age; I swapped in the years he earned his degrees instead. Similarly, the first source for Bernhardt's religion is WP:RSEDITORIAL, which I believe is inappropriate for this use, and the second source does not include the level of detail given here.
- I suggest breaking the "Career" section into subsections: "Early career" for the first paragraph, "Moody College of Communication" for the next two paragraphs, and "Emerson College" for the last two.
- In the second paragraph of "Career", update
- Bernhardt's tenure has led to the development of many new programs including a four-year honors program,[11] B.A. degree in communication and leadership[12] and a “study away” program in New York City known as UTNY.[13] He increased graduate student funding and the four-year graduation rate to 80 percent, among the highest on campus.[14] He's recruited more than 50 new faculty members and established new research centers, institutes and programs.[15][16] He's also prioritized issues of diversity, equity and inclusion and established the college’s first associate dean position with this portfolio.[17]
- to
- Bernhardt's tenure led to the development of new programs including a four-year honors program,[18] a B.A. degree in communication and leadership,[19][20] and a "study away" program in New York City known as UTNY.[21][22] He increased graduate student funding and the four-year graduation rate to 80 percent, among the highest on campus.[23][22] He also recruited more than 50 faculty members and established new research centers and institutes.[24][25]
- Some tense fixes, a few WP:NPOV wording tweaks, MOS:CURLY fix, adding archive url for dead ref link, adding secondary sources, removing the last sentence cited to a primary source.
- In the third paragraph of "Career", update
- The Jay M. Bernhardt Award for Staff Excellence at the University of Texas is named in his honor.[26]
- to
- The Jay M. Bernhardt Award for Staff Excellence at the University of Texas is named in his honor. In 2023, the Moody College of Communication gave Bernhardt the Robert C. Jeffrey College Benefactor Award honoring people "who have given generously to the college with their time or resources", in recognition of his efforts to strengthen faculty and staff culture.[27]
- Swapping in an independent source and adding more info from the source.
- In the fourth paragraph of "Career", update
- In June 2021, Bernhardt became the thirteenth president of Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts, succeeding M. Lee Pelton.[28]
- to
- In June 2023, Bernhardt became the thirteenth president of Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts, succeeding M. Lee Pelton.[29]
- Per the cited source, 2021 is not the correct date.
- Also in the fourth paragraph of "Career", update
- to
- Adding a secondary source for the first part and cutting the second part. It may also make sense to cut this sentence entirely.
- In the final paragraph of "Career", update
- A month later, continued protests which also criticized Bernhardt's lack of response to these issues culminated on April 25, 2024, when Boston Police cleared an encampment in Boylston Place Alley, resulting in the arrest of 118 people, including many Emerson students, as part of the nationwide campus protests related to the Israel–Hamas War.[34][35][36]
- to
- A month later, continued protests culminated on April 25, 2024, when Boston Police cleared an encampment in Boylston Place Alley, resulting in the arrest of 118 people, including many Emerson students, as part of the nationwide campus protests related to the Israel–Hamas War.[37][38][39]
- Reading through all three cited sources, I'm not seeing any confirmation on the "lack of response" detail.
Sources |
|---|
|
Thanks for your time! Mary Gaulke (talk) 18:20, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
COI edit requests for infobox, career, recognition
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Jay M. Bernhardt. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: 3 updates to infobox, career, and recognition The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Hi! As noted above, I'm a COI editor for Emerson College. Proposing some additional edits to this article, this time to add more recent information to the infobox, career, and recognition sections.
- Switch the infobox from
{{infobox person}}to{{infobox academic}}.
- Add to the infobox:
- | occupation=President of Emerson College
- | boards=Emerson Board of Trustees
- | main_interests=
- Health communication
- Health applications for digital technology
- | workplaces=
- Add to the end of the "Career" section:
- In March 2025, Bernhardt announced "Extraordinary Emerson 2030", Emerson's five-year strategic plan. The plan identifies academics, collaboration, community engagement, and operational excellence as the college's four major priorities.[1] To support the collaboration priority, Bernhardt has added community spaces, including a game room, on Emerson's campus for students, faculty, and staff.[2]
- Under Bernhardt's leadership, Emerson elevated its Department of Visual Media Arts to a school within the college, the School of Film, Television, and Media Arts.[3][4] In 2026, he appointed the first dean for Emerson Los Angeles, the college's campus located on Sunset Boulevard.[5]
- Bernhardt also sits on the Emerson Board of Trustees.[6]
- Add to "Awards and recognition":
Sources |
|---|
|
I really appreciate any feedback. Again, thanks for your time! Mary Gaulke (talk) 04:18, 1 June 2026 (UTC)
COI edit request: founding of GPX Stream
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Jeff Segal. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I am employed by GPX Stream (disclosure on my user page), so I am requesting this rather than adding it myself.
Proposed addition — one sentence at the end of the "Driver coaching" section:
"Segal is also the founder of GPX Stream, a company producing live onboard camera systems for motorsport."[1]
Sourcing, stated plainly: the Sportscar365 piece identifies him as "GPX Stream founder Jeff Segal" but is bylined "News Release", so it is a published press release rather than staff reporting. A 2019 Forbes piece by contributor Mark Ewing also describes the GPX Stream system as Segal's (link), though I am aware of WP:FORBESCON. I believe the claim is uncontroversial and the two together are adequate for it, but I defer to the reviewer — if the sourcing is judged insufficient, declining is the right call.
No other GPX Stream content is proposed. Andyiancu (talk) 02:02, 9 July 2026 (UTC) Andyiancu (talk) 02:02, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
Update Book Section
edit![]() | The user below has a request that a significant addition or re-write be made to this article for which that user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
- What I think should be changed (include citations): Please add the following three works under the Books section.
- The Beautiful Plain: A Novel (University of Nebraska Press, 2026) ISBN 9781496248039[2]
- The Yogic Writer: Uniting Breath, Body, and Page (Bloomsbury Academic, 2024) ISBN 9781350371965[3][4]
- Sky Songs: Meditations on Loving a Broken World (University of Nebraska Press, 2020) ISBN 9781496222640[5]
- Why it should be changed: Updated information on book publications since 2017 up to 2026. The current page only lists book publications up to 2017.
- References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button): Citations included below and alongside the proposed changes above.
Anneschilll (talk) 01:33, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
References
- ↑ "GPX Stream Partners with USAC for Live On-Board Camera Tech". Sportscar365. 25 February 2025. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
- ↑ "Jennifer Sinor: 2026 Faculty University Service Award Nominee, College of Arts & Sciences, English". Utah State University Office of the Provost & Executive Vice President. Utah State University. Retrieved 7 July 2026.
- ↑ Sinor, Jennifer. "When Mountains Go Missing". Bloomsbury Literary Studies Blog. Bloomsbury Academic. Retrieved 7 July 2026.
- ↑ "Jennifer Sinor: 2026 Faculty University Service Award Nominee, College of Arts & Sciences, English". Utah State University Office of the Provost & Executive Vice President. Utah State University. Retrieved 7 July 2026.
- ↑ Miller, Benjamin. "Book Review - Sky Songs: Meditations on Loving a Broken World". Colorado State University: Center for Literary Publishing. Colorado State University. Retrieved 7 July 2026.
| This page must adhere to the biographies of living persons (BLP) policy, even if it is not a biography, because it contains material about living persons. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the page and its talk page, especially if potentially libellous. If such material is repeatedly inserted, or if you have other concerns, please report the issue to this noticeboard.If you are a subject of this page, or acting on behalf of one, and you need help, please see this help page. |
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![]() | The user below has a request that a significant addition or re-write be made to this article for which that user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
- What I think should be changed (include citations):
Birth date and place
Jens Biegert was born on 18 April 1971 in Heidenheim an der Brenz. Source: ICREA official profile (https://www.icrea.cat/Web/ScientificStaff/jens-biegert-410).
Title correction
His correct title is ICREA Research Professor, not simply "professor". Source: ICREA profile above.
Education — additions
- His PhD (TU Munich, 2001) was carried out under the joint supervision of Jean-Claude Diels and Alfred Laubereau, supported by a Dissertation Fellowship of the Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes. Thesis title: "Multi-photon coherent excitation of Sodium".(https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/doc/1197640/1197640.pdf)
- His doctoral thesis received the Allen Prize of the Optical Society (2004). Source: https://www.optica.org/get_involved/awards_and_honors/awards/past_awards/
- After his doctorate he led a research group at ETH Zürich for his Habilitation before joining ICFO in 2007. Source needed — https://www.icrea.cat/es/comunidad/icreas/17550/jens-biegert/
Awards — missing entries
- 2019: Bessel Research Prize, Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. Source: https://pc.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/guest-professor-jens-biegert-receives-the-friedrich-wilhelm-bessel-research-award/
- 2004: Allen Prize, Optica (see above).
- 2001: Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship, European Commission. Source still being located.
Research and career — proposed additions
In 2007, Biegert joined ICFO in Barcelona as an ICREA Research Professor, heading the Attoscience and Ultrafast Optics group.
His research focuses on the dynamics of electrons and atomic nuclei on attosecond timescales and nanometer length scales, using high-power laser systems spanning the mid-infrared to soft X-ray spectral range. Topics include strong-field physics, high-harmonic generation, ultrafast spectroscopy of quantum materials, and optical control of material properties. His group developed ultrafast mid-infrared laser systems and frequency combs enabling strong-field experiments at high repetition rates, and extended strong-field physics to longer wavelengths through ponderomotively-scaled attoscience. [ cite: Opt. Express 17, 3587 (2009); Nat. Photon. 9, 721 (2015)]
In 2015, the group generated isolated attosecond pulses in the soft X-ray water-window spectral region. [cite: Nat. Commun. 6, 6611 (2015)]
In 2016, Biegert's team, in collaboration with Kansas State University and other partners, reported a direct imaging of bond breaking in a molecule using laser-induced electron diffraction with attosecond and picometer resolution. [cite: Science 354, 308 (2016)]
In 2019, the group directly imaged the bending and stretching of a carbon disulfide (CS₂) molecule in real time, observing structural changes driven by the Renner–Teller effect. [cite: PNAS 116, 8173 (2019)]
The group subsequently introduced attosecond core-level spectroscopy as a method for following energy transfer among electrons, phonons, and the crystal lattice in real time, applying it to ultrafast phase transitions in semimetals and molecular systems. [cite: Nat. Commun. 7, 11493 (2016); Phys. Rev. X 11, 041060 (2021); Nat. Photon. 18, 731 (2024)] In 2022, the group reported optical detection of quantum phases in superconductors using high-harmonic spectroscopy. [cite: PNAS 119, e2207766119 (2022)]
In 2024, the group demonstrated optical control of valley topology in bulk materials, showing that valley polarization can be induced without requiring atomically thin samples. [ cite: Nature 628, 746 (2024)]
Since 2019, Biegert has been a scientific guest at the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society in Berlin. He served as Executive Director of Laserlab-Europe from 2021 to 2023 and has served on the Board of Directors of Optica and on advisory boards for international research infrastructures.
I am happy to provide draft wikitext for any or all of the above if that would be helpful to reviewing editors. Thank you for your time.
- Why it should be changed:
There are some changes that are needed as the current information is not correct or incomplete (affiliation, date of birth, and awards).
The section of Research has been edited to make it easier for readers, and I have added extra references of the papers.
MariaPereez (talk) 15:53, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
References
Edit Request: Add "The Trumpeter" Sculpture Information
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Jim Pattison Children's Hospital. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Party field and Wisconsin Republicans category
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Jim Schmitt. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: Review whether the infobox party field and Wisconsin Republicans category are supported with appropriate BLP sourcing The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I have a previously disclosed professional connection to Jim Schmitt, so I am raising this here for neutral editor review rather than making the change directly.
The article currently lists Schmitt's party as Republican in the infobox and includes , but the article body does not appear to contain an inline source directly supporting personal party affiliation. The article also states that Green Bay mayoral elections are conducted on a nonpartisan basis.
I think this creates a BLP sourcing and weight issue. Schmitt's mayoral office and elections were officially nonpartisan; Wisconsin city ballots do not carry party designations for city offices; and Wisconsin does not have voter party registration. At the same time, some sources have described Schmitt as Republican or moderate Republican. Those are different concepts: official ballot status, voter registration, personal ideology, and party affiliation should not be collapsed into one unexplained infobox label.
Relevant sources:
- Wisconsin Stat. § 5.60(3)(am): "No party designation shall appear on the official ballot for city offices." https://law.justia.com/codes/wisconsin/chapter-5/section-5-60/
- U.S. Election Assistance Commission: "Wisconsin does not have political party registration." https://www.eac.gov/taxonomy/term/18401
- WBEZ, 2008: Schmitt said, "I'm not registered with either party," in a story about Green Bay's independent and swing-voter politics. https://www.wbez.org/eight-forty-eight/2008/09/30/green-bay-voters-may-not-be-as-swinging-as-you-think
Given WP:BLP, WP:V, and WP:BLPCAT, should the infobox party field and be removed unless the article body includes a reliable source directly supporting personal party affiliation and explaining that this was not his official mayoral ballot or office designation?
A possible neutral resolution would be:
- leave the infobox party field blank or omit it;
- remove unless consensus finds the category is sufficiently supported;
- keep the article's sourced statement that Green Bay mayoral elections were nonpartisan.
I welcome neutral editor review. Rauglothgor (talk) 19:04, 1 June 2026 (UTC)
Update of references to my wiki page
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Joachim Stöhr. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
== Edit Request: Add Book Citations to Research Section == I am the subject of this article and have a conflict of interest. Please replace the current text in the "Research" section with the version below, which includes properly formatted ` {{cite book}}: Empty citation (help)` references. [== Research ==
Stöhr's early research focused on the development of novel investigative techniques based on soft x-ray synchrotron radiation for exploring the atomic and electronic structure of surfaces. He played a major role in developing the surface extended x-ray absorption fine structure (SEXAFS) technique as a tool for exploring surface structures, especially atoms bonded to surfaces. He also developed the near edge x-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) technique for the study of simple and complex molecules bonded to surfaces and for the study of thin polymer films. The technique is described in his 1992 book NEXAFS Spectroscopy.[1] NEXAFS is widely used today for the study of surface complexes and organic systems like polymers because of its elemental and chemical bond specificity and its ability to reveal the orientation of bonds through their polarization dependence. It also is the foundation of image contrast in soft x-ray microscopy which reveals the nanoscale structure of materials and biological cells.
Starting in the early 1990s he has concentrated on the use of polarized soft x-rays to study magnetic materials and phenomena, especially thin films and multi-layers underlying modern magnetic devices. He has pioneered x-ray magnetic microscopy which allows the direct observation of nanoscale ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic domains in materials with elemental and chemical state specificity. He has also pioneered time-resolved x-ray microscopy techniques with picosecond time resolution which reveals the function of spintronics devices. These studies and more generally the whole field of magnetism form the topic of his second 2006 book, Magnetism – From Fundamentals to Nanoscale Dynamics,[2] which he co-authored with Hans Christoph Siegmann.
His latest interest is the development, description and application of x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs). Their emergence in the new millennium has created a paradigm shift in the understanding of matter through unprecedented snapshots of the atomic and nanoscale structure of chemical, biological and technological building blocks that are invisible with light. XFELs can see these building blocks and their ultrafast dynamics which are the foundation of all chemical and biological processes and determine the function of electronic devices. Like the advent of conventional lasers in the 1960s, the development of intense, ultrashort and coherent XFEL pulses also required the introduction of an advanced theoretical framework in x-ray science based on quantum optics. This quantum description is a central part of his 2023 book The Nature of X-Rays and their Interactions with Matter.[3] The book has been extended in 2026 into two volumes, which respectively review the conventional semi-classical framework and the modern quantum optics description of x-rays and their interactions.[4][5]
Proposed update for international discography and collaborations
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Joe Barbieri. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Hello, I am Joe Barbieri, the subject of this article. I am writing to respectfully request an update to this page. The current article is a brief stub, and I would like to propose a more comprehensive, neutral, and fact-based version that reflects my international discography, tours, and collaborations (e.g., with Omara Portuondo, Jorge Drexler, Stacey Kent, etc.). Being aware of Wikipedia's Conflict of Interest (COI) guidelines, I am not editing the article directly. Instead, I am providing the proposed wikitext below for an independent editor to review. I have done my best to ensure the tone is strictly encyclopedic and neutral. Thank you for your time and assistance. === Proposed Wikitext ===
Joe Barbieri | |
|---|---|
Joe Barbieri in 2020 | |
| Background information | |
| Born | Giuseppe Barbieri 14 December 1973 Naples, Italy |
| Genres | Vocal jazz, world music, bossa nova, pop |
| Occupations | Singer, songwriter, composer, producer |
| Instruments | Vocals, guitar |
| Years active | 1992–present |
| Labels | Microcosmo Dischi, Harmonia Mundi, Yamaha |
| Website | joebarbieri |
Joe Barbieri (born Giuseppe Barbieri; December 14, 1973) is an Italian singer, songwriter, composer, and music producer.[6] His work bridges vocal jazz, bossa nova, and world music with the melodic tradition of Italian songwriting.[7] == Career == === Early career and international breakthrough === Barbieri began his professional journey in his native Naples, where he was discovered by Italian musician Pino Daniele.[7] In 2003, he established his own independent label, Microcosmo Dischi. In 2004, he released the album In parole povere, which featured jazz and bossa nova influences. The album gained international traction, securing distribution across the United States, Canada, and Asia by 2008. His 2009 release Maison Maravilha featured a collaboration with Cuban singer Omara Portuondo (from Buena Vista Social Club), earning him recognition from Radio France. === Jazz influences and global collaborations (2010–2019) === His 2012 album Respiro included a guest appearance by Academy Award-winning Uruguayan musician Jorge Drexler, and was supported by tours in Paris, Madrid, and Tokyo.[8] That same year, Yamaha released a "Best Of" compilation exclusively for the Japanese market. In 2013, Barbieri released Chet Lives!, a tribute to trumpeter Chet Baker. The album featured American jazz vocalist Stacey Kent, with whom Barbieri subsequently performed at the Olympia in Paris, alongside Brazilian artist Márcio Faraco. He later honored the legacy of Billie Holiday with the 2019 acoustic tribute album Dear Billie. His 2015 studio effort Cosmonauta da appartamento featured contributions from Spanish singer Luz Casal and Brazilian mandolinist Hamilton de Holanda. Beyond his solo work, Barbieri is a producer and arranger. In this capacity, he has helmed projects featuring international world music artists, including Brazilian musicians Ivan Lins, Maria Bethânia, and Arnaldo Antunes, as well as Spanish singer Silvia Pérez Cruz. === Recent projects (2020–present) === His 2021 album Tratto da una storia vera featured a collaboration with Brazilian cellist and arranger Jaques Morelenbaum. In 2024, he released Vulío, a jazz-infused homage to traditional Neapolitan song. Following the release of his 2025 studio album Big Bang, an album of original songs, Barbieri is slated to release his first symphonic instrumental album, in November 2026. == Selected discography == === Studio albums === * In parole povere (2004) * Maison Maravilha (2009) * Respiro (2012) * Chet Lives! (2013) * Cosmonauta da appartamento (2015) * Origami (2017) * Dear Billie (2019) * Tratto da una storia vera (2021) * Vulío (2024) * Big Bang (2025) === Live albums === * Maison Maravilha Viva (2010) * Tratto da una notte vera (2022) === Notable international collaborations === * "Malegría" (with Omara Portuondo) * "Diario di una caduta" (with Jorge Drexler) * "I Fall in Love Too Easily" (with Stacey Kent) * "But Not for Me" (with Márcio Faraco) * "Un arrivederci in cima al mondo" (with Luz Casal) * "Cosmonauta da appartamento" (with Hamilton de Holanda) * "Niente di grave" (with Jaques Morelenbaum) == References ==
- ↑ NEXAFS Spectroscopy. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-540-54422-7.
- ↑ Magnetism: From Fundamentals to Nanoscale Dynamics. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-540-30283-4.
- ↑ The Nature of X-Rays and their Interactions with Matter. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-031-20743-3.
- ↑ The Nature of X-Rays and Their Interactions with Matter—Volume I. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-032-07630-4.
- ↑ The Nature of X-Rays and Their Interactions with Matter—Volume II. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-032-07634-2.
- ↑ Eddy Anselmi (2009). Festival di Sanremo: almanacco illustrato della canzone italiana. Panini Comics. ISBN 978-8863462296.
- 1 2 Brighenti, Flavio (12 August 2013). "Joe Barbieri, la tenacia del romanticismo "Non vergogniamoci del bisogno d'amore"". La Repubblica. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
- ↑ Roselli, Raffaele (7 May 2012). "Il respiro swing di Joe Barbieri". Corriere della Sera. p. 11.
{{cite news}}:|access-date=requires|url=(help)
== External links == * Official website * Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/10 per page (alphabetical)/25 at AllMusic * Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/10 per page (alphabetical)/25 discography at Discogs Microcosmodischi (talk) 10:08, 22 May 2026 (UTC)
Edit request from article subject (COI)
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Joel Comm. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I'm Joel Comm and I am the subject of this article I'd like to flag a few things I think could use updating. Per WP:COI I'm not making the edits directly and am posting them here for editor review.
First I want to address something that came up on this talk page a while back. For the record I did not use ResultSource or any list-manipulation service for The AdSense Code. The bestseller status was earned completely organically through sales.
Now here are a few specific things to consider.
The article says I "played music and was a weatherman" when I started out in radio. It is true that I was a radio DJ in Champaign, IL from 1984-1986, and in Dallas from 1986-1987 , but the weatherman claim is wrong. While a DJ does occasionally share the time and temperature, I was never a weatherman. Could just that word be removed? It's unsourced anyway.
Since 2015, I have published two additional books that are missing from the bibliography. The current list ends with The Rockstars of JVZoo.com (2015). They are:
"The Fun Formula: How Curiosity, Risk-Taking, and Serendipity Can Revolutionize How You Work" (Thomas Nelson, June 2018). Amazon listing "Be the Legend: The Ultimate Guide for Getting Everything You Desire", co-authored with Gene Frederick (Morgan James Publishing, October 2025). This title reached the USA Today nonfiction bestseller list at #68 the week of October 29, 2025.
My infobox photo is over a decade old. I uploaded a current 2025 headshot to Commons under CC0 as my own work. The file is at File:Joel Comm - headshot 2025.jpg. Happy for it to be used if anyone wants to swap it in.
And the last piece is this. The article doesn't mention The Bad Crypto Podcast, which has been a focus of my efforts since 2017. I, and my co-host, Travis Wright, are now in our ninth year. The show is IMDb-listed, and Entrepreneurs on Fire interviewed me about it in 2021.
Will respond here if anyone has questions or needs additional sources. Thank you. ~2026-26601-94 (talk) 12:02, 2 May 2026 (UTC)

