User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/10 per page (alphabetical)/38


Edit request: replace 2013 infobox photograph with 2024 self-portrait

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Hello. I am Patrick Lamb, the subject of this article, editing under my declared COI account. The current infobox photograph is from 2013 and no longer reflects my current appearance. I have uploaded a new portrait to Wikimedia Commons that I shot myself with a self-timer in 2024, released as own work under CC BY-SA 4.0.

I tried to make this change directly earlier today and UtherSRG correctly reverted it as a COI edit. I am now bringing it here as a proper edit request.

Requested change in the {{Infobox musical artist}}:

From:

| image = Saxophonist Patrick Lamb in Portland, 2013.jpg
| caption = Lamb in 2013

To:

| image = Patrick Lamb saxophonist 2024 portrait 01.jpg
| caption = Lamb in 2024

The new file is at File:Patrick Lamb saxophonist 2024 portrait 01.jpg. Three additional self-portraits from the same set are also on Commons as portraits 02, 03, and 04 if a reviewing editor would prefer a different image. The existing 2013 file remains on Commons and is not being requested for deletion.

Thank you for considering this. Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 01:49, 13 May 2026 (UTC)



Edit request: sources for two citation-needed tags in Billboard section

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The two citation-needed tags in the "Billboard charting and SiriusXM Watercolors" section can be addressed from the following published sources.

For the claim that "Tailgate!" was added to SiriusXM Watercolors and was "Most Added" at smooth-jazz radio, the supporting source is the subject's official biography page at patricklamb.com/bio, which describes the track as added to SiriusXM Watercolors and "most-added to Billboard Radio." A contemporary post from the SiriusXM Watercolors and Patrick Lamb social-media channels also confirms the addition (https://www.facebook.com/patricklambmusic/videos/567402826299111/).

For the 2026 single "Horizon Line", the song is currently tracked on the RadioWave Monitor Groove Jazz 100 chart, where it is listed at No. 17 for the week of 26 May 2026 (https://www.radiowavemonitor.com/pub_charts/r100_7.aspx). The current article wording (No. 20 on RadioWave / No. 26 on SmoothJazz.com) is no longer accurate; the present radio position documented in published sources is the No. 17 figure on the Groove Jazz 100.

Suggested replacement wording for the two sentences currently tagged:

"Patrick Lamb's single 'Tailgate!' was added to SiriusXM Watercolors and was reported as 'Most Added' at smooth-jazz radio.[1] His 2026 single 'Horizon Line' reached No. 17 on the RadioWave Groove Jazz 100 chart in the week of 26 May 2026.[2]"

Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:34, 27 May 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: year of birth — published source identified

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The article currently triggers the hidden category "Year of birth missing (living people)". The subject's date of birth is published on his Apple Music artist page (https://music.apple.com/us/artist/patrick-lamb/30772273) as "May 4, 1970".

Proposed addition to {{Infobox musical artist}}:

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1970|5|4}}

(No change to birth_place.)

If a reviewer prefers to add only the year rather than the full date, the alternative is:

| birth_date = 1970

Either change will clear the "Year of birth missing (living people)" hidden category.

Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:34, 27 May 2026 (UTC)



Edit request: biographical additions to Early life and Touring sideman work

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Three small biographical additions, all sourced primarily to self-published material per WP:ABOUTSELF (non-controversial facts about the subject, not unduly self-serving):

1. First saxophone teacher (Early life and education). The subject's existing Apple Music for Artists Q&A bio names his first saxophone teacher. Proposed addition to the Early life section, after the sentence about Stan Getz and Wayne Shorter influences:

"Lamb was first introduced to the saxophone by Robert Ernst, the band teacher at Cedar Park Middle School in Portland.[3]"

2. Specific tenures with Vannelli and Caldwell (Touring sideman work). The current paragraph lists Gino Vannelli and Bobby Caldwell as flat generic credits. The subject's own Facebook artist page (@patricklambmusic) specifies two tenures that more accurately reflect the relationships: eighteen years with Vannelli and eight years in Caldwell's band. Proposed revision (insert one sentence after the Diane Schuur sentence, then tighten the flat list):

"Lamb spent eighteen years touring with Gino Vannelli and eight years as part of Bobby Caldwell's band.[4] He has also toured or recorded with Smokey Robinson, Esperanza Spalding, the Jeff Lorber Fusion, and Jason Scheff, the lead vocalist of Chicago from 1985 to 2016, and shared concert stages with Bobby Kimball of Toto, Tommy Thayer of Kiss, Robby Krieger of The Doors, Sebastian Bach, Danny Seraphine of Chicago, and Alice Cooper, among others."

This combines (a) the new Vannelli/Caldwell tenure language and (b) the Jason Scheff addition into one tightened sentence; existing citations to the GigRoster and All About Jazz sources still apply to the shared-stage list.

If a reviewer prefers a more conservative formulation, the minimal change is to insert "Jason Scheff (lead vocalist of Chicago, 1985–2016)" into the existing sideman list and leave the rest unchanged.

Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:55, 27 May 2026 (UTC)



Follow-up — better sources identified, plus the Chris Botti connection. Since posting the section above I have located two stronger published sources for the Robert Ernst paragraph: a Portland Tribune Q&A (2013) and an International Musician (AFM magazine) cover profile (Feb 2014). Both quote the subject directly on his start on the saxophone, and both include a notable detail that I should have included in the original request — the same teacher had previously taught Chris Botti.
Quote from Cullivan (Portland Tribune, 2013): "I didn't start playing until 1983 when I moved to Portland and enrolled late at Cedar Park Middle School and enrolled in beginning band with Mr. Robert Ernst. Mr. Ernst also taught (recent Grammy winner) Chris Botti before me."
Quote from International Musician (Feb 2014): "After Lamb's father completed his doctorate at the University of Texas, he took a job in Portland, Oregon, and that's where Patrick Lamb began his formal music education at Cedar Park Middle School. 'The beginning band teacher [Robert Ernst] was the same beginning teacher that [Local 802 (New York City) member] Chris Botti had,' says Lamb."
Revised proposal for the Early life section (replaces the Apple-Music-cited version above):
"Lamb began playing saxophone in 1983 after his family settled in the Portland area, enrolling in beginning band at Cedar Park Middle School in Beaverton, Oregon, under Robert Ernst, who had previously taught Chris Botti.[5][6]"
Three changes vs. the original request: (1) the Apple Music citation is replaced with two independent secondary sources (Portland Tribune and the AFM's International Musician), (2) the previously-omitted Chris Botti detail is now included with sourcing, and (3) the school's municipality is given as Beaverton (Cedar Park is in the Beaverton School District) rather than the colloquial "Portland" used in the sources.
Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 05:24, 27 May 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: add Bobby Caldwell quote to Critical reception

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The Critical reception section currently cites Todd Barkan and Dave Koz, both sourced to the subject's official press page (patricklamb.com, existing reference #14). A third blurb on the same press page is attributed to Bobby Caldwell. Proposed addition to the Critical reception section:

"Bobby Caldwell, with whose band Lamb toured for eight years, called him 'one of the best instrumentalists I've ever worked with.'[7]"

This uses the same patricklamb.com/press source as the existing Barkan and Koz quotes. If a reviewer prefers a stronger origin, the quote also appears in EPK materials issued under Patrick Lamb Productions; happy to provide the alternate citation on request.

Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:55, 27 May 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: add detail to White House section

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The White House (1996 and 1997) section is well-sourced. One small factual detail the subject recalls from those performances — that he was introduced to President Clinton during the holiday Congressional VIP Tours — is not yet in the article. As with the existing Lauderdale companion detail (currently noted in footnote a as "Lamb's recollection ... not independently corroborated in published sources"), this would be a recollection-only detail.

Proposed sentence, with the same note-style caveat as the Lauderdale footnote, appended to the White House paragraph:

"During the 1996 and 1997 performances, Lamb was introduced to President Clinton.[a]"

If a reviewer would prefer not to add recollection-only material, please disregard this section.

Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:55, 27 May 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: residence, external link, and Portland venue history

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Three small surface additions:

1. Palm Beach, Florida residence — lead or origin. The article is already in Category:Musicians from Palm Beach County, Florida but the prose still reads "Origin: Portland, Oregon" with no mention of the subject's current Florida residence. Proposed minimal addition to the lead, after the OMHF / Muddy Award sentence:

"Lamb is based in Palm Beach, Florida.[8]"

(The Apple Music artist page lists his current location. If a reviewer prefers the WP:ABOUTSELF standard be met by a different source, patricklamb.com also lists Palm Beach as his current base.)

2. Spotify external link. The External links section currently includes Billboard, All About Jazz, Apple Music, Bandsintown, and Wikimedia Commons, but no Spotify link, which is the largest streaming source for the subject's catalog. Proposed addition:

* {{official|1=https://open.spotify.com/artist/3qR6sqXnnwZm3tLed2CO35 |2=Patrick Lamb at Spotify}}

(Or as a plain link if the {{official}} template is not preferred for streaming services.)

3. Jimmy Mak's anchor relationship — Solo career. The subject was historically a regular saxophonist at Jimmy Mak's, the long-running Portland jazz club, and a personal friend of the owner Jimmy Makarounis until Makarounis's death in 2016. Proposed addition to the Solo recording and performance career section, if a reviewer can identify a sourceable mention (suggestions: Oregonian obituary for Jim Makarounis, Willamette Week coverage of Jimmy Mak's closing). I do not yet have a published secondary source to cite; flagging here for any reviewer who may have better access to Portland-area press archives. If no source can be found, please disregard this third item.

Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:55, 27 May 2026 (UTC)


Follow-up: a published source has now been found for the Jimmy Mak's item (item 3 above). When I posted this section I did not have a secondary source for the Jimmy Mak's connection. I now do. The Portland Radio Project article "Jimmy Mak and the Language of Music" (January 4, 2017) is an interview-based piece in which the club's owner, Jimmy Makarounis, recalls that the first act to play Jimmy Mak's when it opened was Patrick Lamb. A possible sentence for the Solo recording and performance career section is: "Lamb was the first act to perform at the Portland jazz club Jimmy Mak's after it opened in 1996," with a citation to "Jimmy Mak and the Language of Music". Portland Radio Project. January 4, 2017.. It could also be linked to the existing Jimmy Mak's article. I still do not have an independent secondary source for the separate point that the ticketing company handled the club's ticketing, so please leave that part out for now. Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:33, 16 June 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: remove two leftover drafting notes from the article body

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Two small cleanup items. Both are leftover drafting notes that should not be in the finished article.

The first is in the Discography section. It currently ends with the sentence "A complete discography may be reconstructed from Lamb's MusicBrainz and Apple Music profiles once entered by the editor." That sentence is a note to editors, not article content, so please remove it. The list of selected singles above it is fine to keep.

The second is footnote a in the Notes section. It currently says the Lauderdale detail "is not independently corroborated in published sources reviewed during research for this draft (April 2026); editors are encouraged to seek additional sourcing." The wording about research for the draft is left over from when this was a draft. Please change that footnote to read: "The 1996 accompanist Ed Bisquera is corroborated by The Rocket. Lamb's recollection of Thomas Lauderdale as his 1997 accompanist is not independently corroborated in published sources."

Thanks for considering these. Updatepatrickfacts (talk) 04:20, 16 June 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: update faculty title to Emeritus

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I am the subject of this article. Per WP:COI, I am requesting the following edits be reviewed and made by an independent editor rather than editing the article directly.

1. Update faculty title to emeritus status

Current text: "He joined the faculty at Georgia State University College of Law in 2006, where he is currently a Regents Professor and the Bobby Lee Cook Professor of Law."

Proposed text: "He joined the faculty at Georgia State University College of Law in 2006, where he is currently a Regents Professor Emeritus and the Bobby Lee Cook Professor of Law Emeritus."

Sources: Georgia State University College of Law faculty profile (lists title as "Professor Emeritus, Regents' Professor and Bobby Lee Cook Professor of Law"); Greenwall Foundation Faculty Scholars Program Committee page (lists title as "Regents Professor Emeritus" and "Bobby Lee Cook Professor of Law Emeritus").

2. Remove outdated word "recently"

Current text: "He testified as an expert witness in Lowe v. Atlas, a landmark federal genetic discrimination case, and his work was recently cited in a U.S. Supreme Court opinion, (Kristina Box, Commissioner, Indiana Department of Health, et al. v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., et al (587 U. S. ____ (2019))"

Proposed text: "He testified as an expert witness in Lowe v. Atlas, a landmark federal genetic discrimination case, and his work was cited in a U.S. Supreme Court opinion, (Kristina Box, Commissioner, Indiana Department of Health, et al. v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., et al (587 U. S. ____ (2019))"

Reason: The citation is from 2019 and is no longer "recent"; the word is now inaccurate/stale.

3. Remove outdated phrase "In recent years"

Current text: "In recent years he has lectured in England, Austria, Italy, Russia, Pakistan and Canada, and at dozens of colleges and universities in the U.S."

Proposed text: "He has lectured in England, Austria, Italy, Russia, Pakistan and Canada, and at dozens of colleges and universities in the U.S."

Reason: The lecturing described is no longer recent; the time-relative phrase is now inaccurate/stale.

4. Add new sentence on Greenwall Foundation appointment

After the sentence ending "...a group of more than 200 individuals of outstanding accomplishment whose work has informed scholarship and public understanding of complex ethical issues in health, health care, science, and technology.", add: "In 2026 he was named to the Faculty Scholars Program Committee of the Greenwall Foundation."

Source: Greenwall Foundation Faculty Scholars Program Committee page.

5. Add new sentence on 2024 NEJM publication

In the Career section, after the second paragraph, which currently ends: "Lombardo also published an edited volume: A Century of Eugenics in America: From the Indiana Experiment to the Human Genome Era (2010).", add: "In 2024 Lombardo published an assessment of the New England Journal of Medicine's own historical coverage of eugenics, "Recognizing Historical Injustices in Medicine and the Journal: 'Ridding the Race of His Defective Blood' — Eugenics in the Journal, 1906–1948.""

Source: Lombardo PA. Recognizing Historical Injustices in Medicine and the Journal: "Ridding the Race of His Defective Blood" — Eugenics in the Journal, 1906-1948. N Engl J Med. 2024;390:869-873. Link.

Thank you for reviewing. ~2026-38343-21 (talk) 17:58, 5 July 2026 (UTC)


COI Edit Request

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I’m making this paid edit request on behalf of Pearl.com. I am proposing the following edits for neutrality, clarity, and closer alignment with existing sources.

COI Edit Request (Revised)

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I am making this paid edit request on behalf of Pearl.com. This request is a revision of a previously declined request. I have reduced the number of citations throughout the proposed text and retained only the sources supporting each statement.


The first home finance software application

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Disclosure: I am the son of Gerald Rubin (founder of MECA Software) and a former developer at the company.

Specific Change 1 (Correcting the Origin Date/Company): Please change: "PFM started in 1983 with the founding of Intuit. Scott Cook and Tom Proulx, the company's founders, witnessed the rise of the personal computer and saw an opportunity to develop personal financial software."

To: "Modern PFM software emerged in the early 1980s. In early 1984, Micro Education Corporation of America (MECA) (a subsidiary of Marketing Corporation of America), led by Gerald Rubin, released its flagship product, Andrew Tobias' Managing Your Money (MYM). Andrew Tobias announced the software's release on the Today Show on March 19, 1984, and initial distribution began that month (documented in Compute! Magazine, Dec 1985, p. 134). Intuit's Quicken (originally Kwik-Chek) followed later that year, with a launch scheduled for October 1984 (Inside Intuit, Taylor & Schroeder, p. 28)."

Specific Change 2 (Adding Technical Innovation): Please add the following text after the mention of MYM: "The development of MYM was notable for its use of a proprietary language called SEESAW (System Elegantly Enmeshing Screens And Worksheets). Created by Steve Wagar and Jim Russell, SEESAW allowed a user interface layer to sit directly atop a spreadsheet engine, enabling complex relational logic across different modules of the application. This technical environment served as an early training ground for several industry leaders, including Rob Glaser, who was approximately the 250th employee at Microsoft before founding RealNetworks." Markdrubin99 (talk) 17:42, 19 April 2026 (UTC)


Help refining encyclopedic tone and updating 2020–2024 professional history

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Hi fellow Wikipedians,

I have disclosed my WP:COI in my talk page and kindly request your help to keep this page up-to-date and accurate.

1. Add: Freund serves as the CEO of Diamond Baseball Holdings (DBH), which owns and operates 48 affiliated Minor League Baseball (MiLB) teams throughout North America.[22][23]

  • Rationale: It establishes Freund’s current primary role, which is a requirement for a biographical lead per MOS:INTRO
  • Placement: Lead, after first sentence

2. Update: In 2020, Freund began work for the Major League Baseball Office of the Commissioner. Freund was retained as part of Trinity Consultants to help transition the MLB's licensed affiliate teams as the league was restructuring its minor leagues.

  • Proposed update: In October 2020, Major League Baseball appointed Freund to work with the Office of the Commissioner during the reorganization of the Professional Development League system. In this role, he helped guide the transition of Minor League Baseball (MiLB) to direct MLB operation and coordinated the restructuring of the system to 120 affiliated teams.[24]
  • Rationale: Refined for MoS compliance; replaced passive phrasing with neutral, active verbs and added specific metrics (120-team count) for improved verifiability and encyclopedic depth.
  • Placement: Career, fifth paragraph

3. Update: In 2017, Baseball Ballpark Digest named Trinity Sports Holdings the Organization of the Year, for its ownership of the Charleston RiverDogs, Memphis Redbirds, and Williamsport Crosscutters.[25]

  • Rationale: Fixed incorrect name and added a citation from an independent, added third-party source to verify the notability.

4. Add: In January 2018, Freund launched Memphis 901 FC, a professional soccer team in the USL Championship, alongside principal owners Craig Unger and former U.S. National Team goalkeeper Tim Howard. [26][27]

  • Rationale: This is a significant career milestone regarding the subject's professional involvement in American soccer.
  • Placement: Career, fourth paragraph, second sentence


Thank you in advance!!

  1. https://patricklamb.com/bio
  2. https://www.radiowavemonitor.com/pub_charts/r100_7.aspx
  3. https://music.apple.com/us/artist/patrick-lamb/30772273
  4. https://www.facebook.com/patricklambmusic
  5. Cullivan, Rob (February 28, 2013). "A Lamb roars with funk". Portland Tribune.
  6. "Patrick Lamb". International Musician. American Federation of Musicians. February 1, 2014.
  7. Cite error: The named reference plpress was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  8. https://music.apple.com/us/artist/patrick-lamb/30772273
  9. Deborah Gage (October 8, 2012). "Pearl.com Raises $26M, Hires CFO". The Wall Street Journal.
  10. Patrick Hoge (June 19, 2012). "JustAnswer -- now Pearl.com -- raises $25 million". BizJournals (San Francisco).
  11. 1 2 Knibbs, Kate. "This New AI Search Engine Has a Gimmick: Humans Answering Questions". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
  12. Paradis, Tim (May 18, 2025). "Will AI Take Our Jobs or Make Workers Productive Superstars?". Business Insider. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
  13. Patrick Hoge (August 17, 2012). "Kurtzigs' entrepreneurial flair runs in family: Mother, sons have started six ventures". BizJournals (San Francisco). Retrieved June 16, 2021.
  14. Charles Passy (November 5, 2012). "Verdict is Out on Virtual Lawyers". Wall Street Journal.
  15. 1 2 "Pearl.com Closes $25 Million in Series B Funding". CNBC. 2012-10-08. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
  16. Perez, Sarah (2012-06-19). "JustAnswer Becomes Pearl.com, Raises $25 Million Series A". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
  17. Taylor, Colleen (2012-10-08). "Pearl.com, The Professional Q&A Site Formerly Named JustAnswer, Lands $25.7 Million Series B Funding". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2026-03-30.
  18. Sachiko Yoshitsugu (March 14, 2014). "Emily Su-lan Reber Porter helped Pearl overhaul pro hiring". BizJournals (San Jose).
  19. Gramatikova, Tsani (2024-04-18). "Pearl.com Launches AI Answer Review to Combat Misinformation with Expert Insights". Smart Branding. Retrieved 2026-04-07.
  20. O'Malley, Gavin. "JustAnswer Rebrands As Pearl.com". www.mediapost.com. Retrieved 2026-04-07.
  21. "JustAnswer Becomes Pearl, Comes Out From Under the Radar". AllThingsD. Retrieved 2026-04-07.
  22. Bret, McCormick (April 6, 2026). "As team acquisition frenzy ebbs, Diamond Baseball Holdings' focus shifts to stadiums and real estate". Sports Business Journal. Retrieved March 5, 2026.
  23. Reichard, Kevin (December 8, 2021). "Endeavor unveils nine MiLB acquisitions under Diamond Baseball Holdings". Ballbark Digest. Retrieved March 5, 2026.
  24. Reichard, Kevin (October 8, 2020). "Freund joins MLB in MiLB reorganization push". Ballpark Digest. August Publications. Retrieved March 6, 2026.
  25. "Crosscutters Principal Ownership Named Organization of the Year". November 16, 2017. Retrieved March 6, 2026.
  26. "Introducing Memphis 901 FC". USL Championship. September 1, 2018. Retrieved March 6, 2026.
  27. "Match Preview: NYRB II, Memphis 901 FC Meet for First-Time Ever". New York Red Bulls. March 27, 2019. Retrieved March 6, 2026.

TheBlueOwl (talk) 00:25, 29 April 2026 (UTC)

@TheBlueOwl
  1. Yes This update establishes Freund’s current primary role and professional significance, which is a requirement for a biographical lead per MOS:INTRO
  2. Yes Adding specific metrics like the 120-team count provides depth and makes the subject’s impact easier to verify.
  3.  Not done The name seems correct to me.
  4. Yes This update mentions a significant career milestone in American soccer and provides necessary breadth to the subject’s professional profile.
IBWikiFellow (talk) 18:39, 8 May 2026 (UTC)


Update request: Board affiliations and sport teams ownership

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Hi fellow Wikipedians,

I have disclosed my WP:COI on my talk page and would appreciate assistance updating the subject's current board affiliations and involvement with the Memphis Redbirds and Dagenham & Redbridge F.C. to provide a complete and chronologically accurate record of his tenure.

1- Update: His early education was held at Rippowam Cisqua School in Bedford, New York, a private Co-educational Day school starting at pre-kindergarten through the ninth grade, where he graduated from in 1991.

  • Proposed update: He graduated in 1991 from Rippowam Cisqua School, a private co-educational day school in Bedford, New York. A former chair of its board of trustees, he now serves as a trustee emeritus. He is also a current trustee at the Berkshire School in Sheffield, Massachusetts.[1][2]
  • Location: Early life and education, 2nd sentence
  • Rationale: Updated per MoS for tone and conciseness. Added info on board chair/trustee roles; these hold encyclopedic weight as active institutional leadership (not passive membership), ensuring compliance with WP:DUE.

2- Add: In 2016, Freund became the principal owner of the Memphis Redbirds, a Triple-A Minor League Baseball team.[3]

  • Placement: Career, after 2nd paragraph
  • Rationale: Adding his principal ownership of a prominent franchise (e.g., a Triple-A baseball team) is a defining professional milestone that carries significant weight under WP:DUE as a primary basis for his notability.

3- Add: In September 2018, Freund's investment firm, Trinity Sports Holdings, acquired a majority ownership stake in the English football club Dagenham & Redbridge F.C.[4]

  • Placement: Lead section, last sentence
  • Note: This update has already been covered in the body of the article.
  • Rationale: Per WP:LEAD, this addition is justified because it summarizes a major career milestone, tracking the subject's expansion from North American baseball into international sports ownership.

Thank you for reviewing this request! TheBlueOwl (talk) 02:18, 16 June 2026 (UTC)

References

  1. "Redbirds Introduce New Principal Owner Peter B. Freund". K8 News. April 6, 2016. Retrieved February 7, 2026.
  2. "RCS Launches Professional Panel Series". Rippowam Cisqua School. January 19, 2021. Retrieved February 7, 2026.
  3. Stukenborg, Phil (April 6, 2016). "New Redbirds owner Freund committed to Memphis". Commercial Appeal. Retrieved February 7, 2026.
  4. "Trinity Sports Holdings Assumes Ownership of Dagenham & Redbridge Football Club". Soccer Stadium Digest. September 17, 2018. Retrieved February 7, 2026.


Updating Profile

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Please add additional information to the "Awards and honors" section

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I am the subject of this article. There are two updates to add to the "Awards and honors" section

Professor Girguis was inducted in the American Academy of Microbiology in 2023.

SOURCE: https://asm.org/press-releases/2023/february/65-fellows-elected-into-the-american-academy-of-mi

Professor Girguis was awarded the Marine Technology Society's "Captain Don Walsh Award for Ocean Exploration"

SOURCE: https://www.mtsociety.org/index.php?option=com_dailyplanetblog&view=entry&year=2023&month=08&day=07&id=292:2023-captain-don-walsh-award-for-ocean-exploration-2023-winner-announced

Thank you for your time and assistance in reviewing this change! peter girguis Pgirguis (talk) 16:51, 10 June 2026 (UTC)


Please add additional information to "Public engagement" section

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I am the subject of this article. There are two updates to add to the "Public engagement" section

In 2023, Girguis was featured in the PBS NOVA Series on "Ancient Earth" (episodes 11 and 12). In 2025, he was featured on the PBS "Particles of Thought" podcast with Hakeem Oluseyi, where they discussed life in Earth's most extreme environments and the possibility of life on Mars and elsewhere.


SOURCES for PBS NOVA "Ancient Earth" https://www.imdb.com/title/tt29295126/?ref_=ttfc_fcr_epp_sm_1 https://www.imdb.com/title/tt29295127/?ref_=ttfc_fcr_epp_sm_2

SOURCES for "Particles of Thought" episode: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/video/interview-extremophiles-the-deep-sea-and-alien-life-with-peter-girguis/ Pgirguis (talk) 17:04, 10 June 2026 (UTC)


Requested update based on recent independent sources

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I have a conflict of interest regarding this subject, so I will not edit the article directly any further. I would like to request a neutral update based on recent independent coverage.

A possible approach would be:

  • updating the short description from “Belgian television producer” to “Belgian entrepreneur and ice-cream producer”;
  • adding a brief, neutrally worded note that Philippe Bogaert is the founder of Ralph & Roxy's;
  • briefly mentioning the recent coverage of the Brussels Airlines partnership;
  • keeping older material concise, for example by only noting that he is the author of Exit Permit! (2011).

Possible wording:

Philippe Bogaert (born 1971) is a Belgian entrepreneur and ice-cream producer. He is the founder of Ralph & Roxy's, a Belgian artisanal ice-cream brand based in Walloon Brabant. In 2026, the company received wider media attention after Brussels Airlines introduced Ralph & Roxy's ice cream on its long-haul flights.


Update of page request

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  • This page has conflict of interest issues which can be resolved with rewording and additional citations
  • The list of games needs updating

As I have a conflict of interest, I have created a suggested draft of the page in my sandbox User:Geo2kar/sandbox

Thank you!


Geo2kar (talk) 11:46, 25 June 2026 (UTC)

References


Previous page Next page

  1. Per Lamb's recollection; not independently corroborated in published sources reviewed during research for this article.
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).