User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/15 per page/29


Requesting review of article title — sourcing

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I have a declared conflict of interest (see my user page) as an employee of the organization Mr. Ahmed chairs.

Current independent sources consistently refer to him as "Ismaeel Ahmed" or "Barr. Ismaeel Ahmed," without "Buba":

  • Vanguard, 6 December 2025 — "FG attracts $2bn investments in CNG, targets $5bn in 2027 – PiCNG"
  • TheCable, 12 September 2025 — "PiCNG chairman: Nigeria must leverage 200trn gas reserves for clean energy transition"
  • Vanguard, 26 May 2026 — "FG, China to localise CNG, EV infrastructure manufacturing in Nigeria"

Requested change: please change the article title from "Ismaeel Buba Ahmed" to "Ismaeel Ahmed", and update the lead sentence and any other instances of "Buba" in the article text to read "Ismaeel Ahmed", consistent with current sourcing above.

Could an editor review this? Thank you.

EmmanuelNwabuodafi (talk) 14:15, 8 July 2026 (UTC)

 Not done: The {{request edit}} template is for requesting changes to semi-protected pages. For conflict of interest requests, please use {{Edit COI}} instead. meamemg (talk) 14:53, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
Thanks for pointing that out. I've updated it to use
instead. Ready for review whenever you get a chance.
~~~~ EmmanuelNwabuodafi (talk) 17:55, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Consolidating Repetitive Exhibition and Collection Lists

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Hugh O'Donnell here! I am trying to clarify the text representing me on wikipedia. I need to remove repetative information that I've seen in the the second and third paragraphs in the life and work section. I would like it to read thus:

Although exhibiting regularly in solo and group shows since 1975, O’Donnell gained international recognition after his inclusion in the 1980 exhibition British Art Now: An American Perspective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. He has since exhibited extensively throughout the United States, Japan, Europe, and the United Kingdom, including presentations at the Royal Academy of Arts, London; the XLII Venice Biennale, Italy; and the IV Medellin Biennale, Colombia. His work is held in numerous permanent museum collections internationally, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; the Tate Gallery, London; the Victoria and Albert Museum; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto; the Yokohama Museum of Art; the Albright-Knox Art Gallery; and the Denver Art Museum. Hughartist (talk) 15:03, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Adding information and improving readability in History section

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Hello editors! My name's Mike and I'm a paid employee at Certinia. Due to my conflict of interest, I won’t make any direct edits to this article unless I have explicit permission from a reviewing editor.

My first request is to create more clear subsections in the History section, and add more information about the evolution of Certinia as a company. My version draws a clear line between the years the company operated as "CODA", then as "FinancialForce", and finally as "Certinia". The current article doesn't really lay out this transition in a way that's easy to follow. I think my version will help readers understand the timeline and name changes much more clearly:

Let me know if you have any questions, and thanks in advance for taking a look here Mikeatcertinia (talk) 19:19, 1 June 2026 (UTC)

Reply 23-JUN-2026

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  Edit request declined  

  • Amongst the references proposed to be used is one from TechCrunch. (See WP:TECHCRUNCH.)

Regards,  Spintendo  01:33, 24 June 2026 (UTC)

Hello Spintendo! I appreciate you taking a look here. I've made a version without the TechCrunch sources here. Let me know what you think:
Thanks Mikeatcertinia (talk) 14:28, 30 June 2026 (UTC)


Request for article rewrite based on sandbox draft (COI)

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Hello,

I am requesting a review and possible replacement of the current article with a revised draft located at User:Dschrier13/sandbox.

I have a conflict of interest, as Eliezer Blum is a family member, so I have not edited the main article directly. Instead, I prepared a draft in my sandbox that is based entirely on published, independent sources, including academic presses and major literary anthologies.

The draft focuses on verifiable aspects of Blum’s literary career, including his poetry, prose, translation work, and critical writing, and avoids unsourced or interpretive claims. All major statements are supported with inline citations.

I would be grateful if an uninvolved editor could review the sandbox draft and, if appropriate, replace the current article or suggest any changes needed to bring it into line with Wikipedia standards.

Thank you for your time and consideration. Dschrier13 (talk) 16:19, 16 December 2025 (UTC)

Friendly follow-up in case this request was missed. The sandbox draft remains available for review if an uninvolved editor has time. Thank you. Dschrier13 (talk) 14:55, 15 February 2026 (UTC)
This request was marked as answered, but no review, response, or
changes to the article were made. Re-opening for consideration by
an uninvolved editor. The sandbox draft at User:Dschrier13/sandbox
remains available and is based entirely on published, independent
sources with inline citations. Dschrier13 (talk) 20:00, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
This was marked closed by me because your talk page sequence was backwards. The flow of talk page posts always moves from top to bottom; you were placing them bottom to top. That made it appear at first glance that your initial draft was superceded by two separately proposed and resolved requests. I've since resequenced it for you. Regards,  Spintendo  21:20, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
thank you for looking at this. Dschrier13 (talk) 21:26, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: Decade of Pop and TikTok sound play count

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I have a conflict of interest: I am Jordan Roseman, known professionally as DJ Earworm, the subject of this article. I am not editing the article directly and would appreciate review by uninvolved editors.

I would like to suggest a short addition about Decade of Pop. TIME covered the project in 2019, describing it as a 100-song compilation looking back at the 2010s pop landscape. The official YouTube upload is titled “DECADE OF POP • 100 Song Mashup | DJ Earworm,” also known as “Celebrate the Good Times.” A later TikTok post by mason.conner/conner.boi for “Celebrate the Good Times” includes on-screen text saying “Dj Earworm released a Decade Mashup” and “Go check it out on youtube.” An archived Tokboard page for “Celebrate the Good Times by conner.boi” reported more than 8,376,468,981 plays for that TikTok sound, last updated August 1, 2022.

Suggested wording:

In 2019, Roseman released Decade of Pop, a 100-song mashup of popular music from the 2010s. The mashup was later credited in a TikTok post by mason.conner/conner.boi associated with the “Celebrate the Good Times” sound and containing the Decade of Pop audio; archived Tokboard data reported more than 8.3 billion plays for that TikTok sound by August 2022. TikTok’s sound page also listed more than 1.2 million videos using the sound as of July 2026.

Suggested sources:

I understand that TikTok and Tokboard are platform/primary sources, so I am requesting review rather than making the edit myself. Zanzex (talk) 20:18, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Proposed updates to Talmage Boston article

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Disclosure: I am employed by Commercial Ideas and am requesting edits on behalf of Talmage Boston. I have a conflict of interest and am not editing the article directly.

Request 1: Replace the current lead sentence with the following:

Talmage Boston (born October 1, 1953) is an American attorney, author, and historian whose published work has focused on baseball, law, and U.S. presidential history.

Reason: This wording is neutral, concise, and better supported by independent and institutional sources.

References:

  • Dallas Innovates profile on Boston and his work as a litigator and historian.
  • Dallas Morning News author page noting his history books and more than 30 years of op-eds and book reviews.
  • Washington Independent Review of Books review of How the Best Did It.

Request 2: Add the following career section:

Boston has written books on baseball, law, and presidential history. His 2024 book, How the Best Did It: Leadership Lessons From Our Top Presidents, was reviewed by the Washington Independent Review of Books, which described it as a study of leadership centered on eight U.S. presidents.

Reason: This adds independently sourced career information without promotional language.

References:

  • Washington Independent Review of Books review of How the Best Did It.
  • Dallas Innovates profile.
  • Dallas Morning News author page.

TiffanyLoraineBudd (talk) 21:21, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Infobox Request

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Requesting that the following infobox be added at the very top of the article, before the lead sentence:

{{Infobox tennis biography
| name          = Vivian Glozman
| image         = Vivian Glozman 260623 1.jpg
| caption       = Glozman in June 2026
| country       = United States
| residence     =
| birth_date    =
| birth_place   = Bellevue, Washington, U.S.
| height        = {{height|ft=5|in=11}}<ref name="airforcevg" />
| turnedpro     = 2023
| plays         = Right-handed
| college       = United States Air Force Academy
| website       = {{URL|https://vivianglozman.com/}}
}}

Note: birth_date is left blank — I could not find a published source (checked her Air Force Academy roster, TennisRecruiting.net, PickleWave, pickleball.com, and her own site) that states an exact date, so I'm not requesting one be added. The lead sentence's existing "(born c. 2000)" is unaffected by this request.

Vivian.mgmt (talk) 23:39, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Add MedalBox and CareerFinals-Request

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Requesting that the current "Career finals" section (table only, no medal box currently exists) be replaced with the following. This adds a medal-tally box under the "Professional pickleball career" heading, adds a "Discipline" column to the results table, color-codes results by medal tier (gold/silver/bronze colors match the 2024 Summer Olympics medal table legend), and splits the single table into three subsections — APP Tour, PPA Tour, and D-Joy International — cross-linked from the medal box above. All citations are already present in the article; none are new.

{{MedalBox
|sport = Women's [[pickleball]]
|country = {{USA}}
|medals = {{MedalCount
|total=yes
|[[#APP Tour finals|APP Tour]]|2|3|3
|[[#PPA Tour finals|PPA Tour]]|1|1|2
|[[#D-Joy International finals|D-Joy International]]|1|1|0
}}
{{MedalCompetition|[[#APP Tour finals|APP Tour]]}}
{{MedalGold|2023 Chicago Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalGold|2026 AARP Open (Seattle)|Mixed doubles}}
{{MedalSilver|2023 Sunmed New Jersey Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalSilver|2023 Philadelphia Open|Mixed doubles}}
{{MedalSilver|2026 Sacramento Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalBronze|2023 Sunmed Atlanta Metro Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalBronze|2023 Sunmed Atlanta Metro Open|Mixed doubles}}
{{MedalBronze|2023 Philadelphia Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalCompetition|[[#PPA Tour finals|PPA Tour]]}}
{{MedalGold|2025 Australia Pickleball Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalSilver|2024 Veolia Los Angeles Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalBronze|2024 Bristol Open|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalBronze|2025 Mesa Cup|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalCompetition|[[#D-Joy International finals|D-Joy International]]}}
{{MedalGold|2026 Tour, Leg 2 (BIDV Cup)|Women's doubles}}
{{MedalSilver|2026 Petrolimex Cup, Leg 1|Mixed doubles}}
}}

=== Career finals ===
Through the 2026 season, Glozman has reached 15 documented professional finals or podium matches, with the results below drawn from independent tournament coverage.

==== {{subst:Anchor|APP Tour finals}} APP Tour finals: 9 (2 gold, 3 silver, 3 bronze, 1 fourth-place) ====

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Result !! Year !! Tournament !! Discipline !! Partner !! Opponent !! Score
|-
| style="background:#FFD700;" | Gold
| 2023
| APP Chicago Open
| Women's doubles
| Alix Truong
| Megan Fudge<br>Susannah Barr
| 11–6, 11–9, 15–12<ref name="forbes-chicago"/>
|-
| style="background:#C0C0C0;" | Silver
| 2023
| APP Sunmed New Jersey Open
| Women's doubles
| Alix Truong
| Simone Jardim<br>Allison Harris
| 11–2, 11–3<ref name="forbes-nj"/>
|-
| style="background:#CC9966;" | Bronze
| 2023
| APP Sunmed Atlanta Metro Open
| Women's doubles
| Alix Truong
| Susannah Barr<br>Megan Fudge
| 7–11, 4–11<ref name="forbes-atlanta"/><ref name="picklewave-atlanta-wd"/>
|-
| style="background:#CC9966;" | Bronze
| 2023
| APP Sunmed Atlanta Metro Open
| Mixed doubles
| Rob Nunnery
| Andrei Daescu<br>Susannah Barr
| <ref name="forbes-atlanta"/>
|-
| style="background:#CC9966;" | Bronze
| 2023
| APP Philadelphia Open
| Women's doubles
| Alix Truong
| Mari Humberg<br>Allison Harris
| 10–12, 8–11<ref name="pbt-philly-standings"/><ref name="picklewave-philly"/>
|-
| style="background:#C0C0C0;" | Silver
| 2023
| APP Philadelphia Open
| Mixed doubles
| Rob Nunnery
| Andrei Daescu<br>Susannah Barr
| <ref name="howarth-philly"/>
|-
| style="background:#FFA07A;" | 4th place
| 2023
| APP U.S. Indoor Championships
| Women's doubles
| Alix Truong
| Susannah Barr<br>Megan Fudge
| 9–15<ref name="pbcom2023"/><ref name="picklewave-indoors"/>
|-
| style="background:#FFD700;" | Gold
| 2026
| AARP Open (Seattle)
| Mixed doubles
| Casey Diamond
| Max Manthou<br>Christine Maddox
| 11–7, 11–2<ref name="forbes-aarp"/>
|-
| style="background:#C0C0C0;" | Silver
| 2026
| APP Sacramento Open
| Women's doubles
| Roos van Reek
| Sofia Sewing<br>Megan Fudge
| <ref name="forbes-sacramento"/>
|}

==== {{subst:Anchor|PPA Tour finals}} PPA Tour finals: 4 (1 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze) ====

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Result !! Year !! Tournament !! Discipline !! Partner !! Opponent !! Score
|-
| style="background:#C0C0C0;" | Silver
| 2024
| PPA Veolia Los Angeles Open
| Women's doubles
| Lacy Schneemann
| Anna Bright<br>Rachel Rohrabacher
| 11–5, 11–5, 11–5<ref name="willdfirst"/><ref name="forbes-laopen"/>
|-
| style="background:#CC9966;" | Bronze
| 2024
| PPA Bristol Open
| Women's doubles
| Jorja Johnson
| Judit Castillo<br>Ewa Radzikowska
| 11–8, 7–11, 11–9<ref name="forbes-bristol"/>
|-
| style="background:#FFD700;" | Gold
| 2025
| PPA Australia Pickleball Open
| Women's doubles
| Lacy Schneemann
| Allyce Jones<br>Tyra Black
| 11–7, 11–3, 7–11, 11–9<ref name="willdfirst"/>
|-
| style="background:#CC9966;" | Bronze
| 2025
| PPA Mesa Cup
| Women's doubles
| Jorja Johnson
| Lacy Schneemann<br>Meghan Dizon
| 11–1, 11–5<ref name="forbes-mesa"/>
|}

==== {{subst:Anchor|D-Joy International finals}} D-Joy International finals: 2 (1 gold, 1 silver) ====

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Result !! Year !! Tournament !! Discipline !! Partner !! Opponent !! Score
|-
| style="background:#C0C0C0;" | Silver
| 2026
| D-Joy Petrolimex Cup (Leg 1)
| Mixed doubles
| Quang Duong
| Jack Munro<br>Sofia Sewing
| <ref name="forbes-djoy"/>
|-
| style="background:#FFD700;" | Gold
| 2026
| D-Joy Tour, Leg 2 (BIDV Cup)
| Women's doubles
| Roos van Reek
| Megan Fudge<br>Domenika Turkovic
| <ref name="forbes-djoy2"/>
|}

'''Key:''' {{color box|#FFD700|border=darkgray}} Gold   {{color box|#C0C0C0|border=darkgray}} Silver   {{color box|#CC9966|border=darkgray}} Bronze   {{color box|#FFA07A|border=darkgray}} Non-podium

Vivian.mgmt (talk) 23:42, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Add Asia Open 2026 gold medal

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Requesting the addition of a June 2026 gold medal (women's doubles, with partner Roos van Reek) at the Michelob ULTRA Asia Open in Ho Chi Minh City, defeating Kaitlynn Hart and Nicola Schoeman 21–7, 21–19 on June 7, 2026. Source: official tournament bracket at Sporttora (https://www.sporttora.com/muao2026/brackets?tier=open&cat=womens____doubles&bracket=open_womens_doubles____open), independently corroborated on dates/venue/participants by a June 4, 2026 Vietnamese news preview of the tournament. I could not find secondary recap coverage of the final result specifically — the Forbes/Todd Boss article already cited elsewhere in the article covers a different, later event (the D-Joy BIDV Cup), not this one. Happy to hold this addition if reviewers would rather wait for secondary coverage.

Note: this request assumes the medal box and per-tour Career finals tables from my prior request ("Requested updates: medal box and Career finals tables") have already been added. If those haven't been added yet, this should be applied after that one.

1) Insert this sentence into "Continued APP Tour play and international events (2026)", immediately before the existing sentence about the D-Joy Tour, Leg 2 (BIDV Cup):

In early June 2026, Glozman and van Reek won the women's doubles title at the Michelob ULTRA Asia Open in Ho Chi Minh City, defeating Kaitlynn Hart and Nicola Schoeman in the final, 21–7, 21–19.<ref name="sporttora-asiaopen">{{cite web |no-tracking=true|title=Michelob ULTRA Asia Open 2026 – Women's Doubles Bracket |work=Sporttora |url=https://www.sporttora.com/muao2026/brackets?tier=open&cat=womens____doubles&bracket=open_womens_doubles____open |access-date=July 8, 2026}}</ref>

(And change "In June 2026, Glozman and van Reek won..." to "Later that month, the pair also won..." for the existing BIDV Cup sentence, so the two don't read as duplicates.)

2) In the medal box, add this line inside {{MedalCount}}, after the D-Joy International line:
|[[#Asia Open finals|Asia Open]]|1|0|0

3) In the medal box, add these two lines after the D-Joy International medal entries:
{{MedalCompetition|[[#Asia Open finals|Asia Open]]}}
{{MedalGold|2026 Michelob ULTRA Asia Open|Women's doubles}}

4) In "Career finals," change "15 documented professional finals" to "16 documented professional finals", and add this new subsection after the D-Joy International finals table:

==== {{subst:Anchor|Asia Open finals}} Asia Open finals: 1 (1 gold) ====

{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Result !! Year !! Tournament !! Discipline !! Partner !! Opponent !! Score
|-
| style="background:#FFD700;" | Gold
| 2026
| Michelob ULTRA Asia Open
| Women's doubles
| Roos van Reek
| Kaitlynn Hart<br>Nicola Schoeman
| 21–7, 21–19<ref name="sporttora-asiaopen"/>
|}

Also flagging: "Asia Open" doesn't belong to the APP Tour, PPA Tour, or D-Joy International brand — it's run by a separate organizer — so I gave it its own subsection above. If reviewers would rather fold it into D-Joy International instead, I'm fine with that.

Vivian.mgmt (talk) 23:44, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


COI Edit Request: Add United States expansion history to Expansion section

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Note: I am disclosing that I have a conflict of interest regarding this page because I serve as an administrator for a Brahma Kumaris entity in the United States.

I am requesting a neutral editor to add information regarding the organization's initial expansion into the United States, which is currently omitted from the "Expansion" section. Adding this documented fact will ensure the page's history is more complete and help prevent the spread of inaccurate historical timelines online.

  • Information to be changed: Add a new subsection or paragraph regarding United States expansion under the "Expansion" section.
  • Proposed Text to Add:

The organization expanded its presence to the United States in 1976. Following an initial public lecture series in San Antonio, Texas, in January 1976,[1] the first official Raja Yoga Center in the U.S. was established in San Antonio in December 1976 by early practitioners including Sister Denise and Brahma Kumari Chandru.[2] The Brahma Kumaris was subsequently legally incorporated as a Texas nonprofit organization in August 1977.[3]

  • Existing text to remove: None (this is a new addition).

Thank you to a neutral editor for reviewing and incorporating this historical milestone.

DocsNavigator (talk) 01:31, 9 July 2026 (UTC) DocsNavigator (talk) 01:31, 9 July 2026 (UTC)

I have corrected the third reference to fix the access-date template error and adjusted the parameters for a database lookup. DocsNavigator (talk) 08:12, 11 July 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: founding of GPX Stream

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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."[4]

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)


Edit Request: Updates to Career and Selected Works.

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I am Esther Eidinow, the subject of this article.

In line with Wikipedia's conflict of interest guidelines (WP:COI), I am submitting the following factual updates for independent review and implementation.

Change 1: Prior career in scenario planning

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  • Section: Career (Beginning of section)
  • Type of change: Addition
  • Text to add: Before becoming an academic, Eidinow was a writer and editor, specialising in scenario planning.[5][6]

Change 2: Virtual Reality Oracle project

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  • Section: Career (Paragraph 2)
  • Instruction: At the end of paragraph 2, after "history" and before "In July", please insert:
  • Text to add: From 2020–2023, she was the principal investigator of the Virtual Reality Oracle project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, leading an interdisciplinary team to create a VR experience of the Ancient Greek oracle of Zeus at Dodona in the fifth century BCE.[7][8]

Change 3: Additions to Selected Works

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  • Section: Selected works
  • Instruction: Please append the following publications:
  • Text to add:
  • Eidinow, Esther; Geertz, Armin, W.; North, John, eds. (2022). Cognitive Approaches to Ancient Religious Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-51533-4.
  • Eidinow, Esther; Schliephake, Christopher, eds. (2024). Conversing with Chaos: Writing and Reading Environmental Disorder in Ancient Texts. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-350-34419-8.
  • Eidinow, Esther; Gordon, Richard, eds. (2025). A Cultural History of Ancient Magic, vol 1: Antiquity. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-350-12379-3.
  • Eidinow, Esther (2025). Metamorphosis, Landscape and Trauma. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-880773-5.
  • Eidinow, Esther; Bowden, Hugh, eds. (2026). Visiting Dodona: Contexts of Unknowing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-63224-9.

Thank you for your time and assistance! FigsnWalnuts (talk) 16:01, 7 July 2026 (UTC) FigsnWalnuts (talk) 16:01, 7 July 2026 (UTC)


Proposed correction to Release section (Dec 1960 trade reports)

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Disclosure: I am Anthony McKay, author of Little Shoppe of Horrors #52, currently cited in this article.

Please correct Release section to match trade sources and confirm infobox dates.

Proposed infobox line (keep refs outside template):

| released =

  • 24 December 1960 (Japan)
  • 10 February 1961 (Philadelphia)
  • 27 October 1961 (London)

[9][10][11]

Proposed ==Release== text: Gorgo had its world premiere in Japan on 24 December 1960.[10] On 16 December 1960 The Hollywood Reporter reported MGM would employ American-style saturation techniques for the Japanese release, then set for 3 January 1961, after twelve prints of the theatrical trailer had been sent to Tokyo the previous week and television trailers of varying content and length had been broadcast on 75% of stations across the country.[9] By 22 December the release had been brought further forward to Saturday, 24 December, considered a "better playing time" due to exceptional exhibitor and public interest, making the screening in Japan the world premiere of Gorgo.[10]

In the United States the film had its domestic debut at the Fox Theatre in Philadelphia on 10 February 1961.[11] It premiered in the United Kingdom in London on 27 October 1961.

References for this request: [9]

[10]

[11] Anthony McKay (talk) 06:09, 9 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit proposals 09/07/26

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Hello,

I have a declared conflict of interest, as I work with Knight Frank. I am therefore not making any edits directly, but would like to ask whether independent editors would be willing to review and consider the proposed changes below.

I noticed that the article currently includes a conflict of interest tag.

With that in mind, I wanted to raise these suggestions transparently on the Talk page for editors to review. My aim is to suggest factual updates that may improve the accuracy and usefulness of the article for readers.

1. Updating the figures in the lead

The current lead states:

“Knight Frank's global network has more than 488 offices across 57 territories and more than 20,000 people managing commercial, agricultural and residential real estate worth more than US$817 billion (£498 billion).”

I suggest updating this to:

Knight Frank's global network has more than 600 offices across 50 markets and more than 20,000 people managing commercial, agricultural and residential real estate.[12]

This would update the office and market figures based on a more recent source.

I have also suggested removing the reference to “commercial, agricultural and residential real estate worth more than US$817 billion (£498 billion)”. My understanding is that figures of this kind may be difficult to keep current over time, so I wanted to check whether editors would be comfortable removing this from the lead unless a more recent reliable source is available.

2. Considering a short description of the firm’s operations

I also wanted to ask whether editors would consider it helpful to include a short, factual description of Knight Frank’s operations, to give readers a clearer summary of the firm’s activities.

One possible wording could be:

Knight Frank is a property consultancy partnership advising on residential and commercial real estate globally. Its services include property transactions, valuation, capital markets and advisory work across international markets.[13][14][15]

I appreciate that editors may prefer different wording, placement or sourcing, particularly given that some of the supporting sources are from Knight Frank itself. I would be grateful for any feedback on whether a brief operational description would be appropriate for the article.

Thank you for your time and consideration. Sable57 (talk) 09:20, 9 July 2026 (UTC)


Update the history section

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Hi, I work for PA Consulting Group. The company recently announced a new CEO, and I would like to add the following sentence to the end of the 2015-present subsection of the History section:

  • In 2023, Christian Norris was named as CEO. [16] [17]

Additionally, in the infobox, under Key people, I would like to replace Ken Toombs with Christian Norris as CEO.

References

  1. "Raja Yoga lecture set". San Antonio Express-News. San Antonio, Texas. January 25, 1976. p. 19-A.
  2. "Raja Yoga center first in US". The San Antonio Light. San Antonio, Texas. January 1977. p. 23.
  3. "Franchise Tax Account Status Search: Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual Organization". Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. 2026. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Invalid |url-status=na (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  4. "GPX Stream Partners with USAC for Live On-Board Camera Tech". Sportscar365. 25 February 2025. Retrieved 8 July 2026.
  5. "Obesity scenarios". Wellcome Collection.
  6. Wilkinson, Angela; Eidinow, Esther (2008). "Evolving a narrative approach to planning scenarios". Environmental Research Letters. 3 (4): 045017. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/3/4/045017.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: article number as page number (link)
  7. "The Virtual Reality Oracle: An Immersive Experience of the Ancient Greek Oracle at Dodona". Virtual Reality Oracle. Retrieved 2026. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  8. "The Virtual Reality Oracle (VRO): An Immersive Experience of the Ancient Greek Oracle at Dodona". UKRI Gateway to Research. Retrieved 2026. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  9. 1 2 3 "Utilizing U.S. Trailers For 'Gorgo' In Japan". The Hollywood Reporter. Vol. 163, no. 11. December 16, 1960. p. 13 via ProQuest. MGM would be employing American-style saturation techniques... now brought forward to January 3... Twelve prints of the theatrical trailer had been sent to Tokyo... TV trailers... broadcast on 75% of television stations
  10. 1 2 3 4 "'Gorgo' Preem Moved Up". The Hollywood Reporter. Vol. 163, no. 15. December 22, 1960. p. 11 via ProQuest. brought further forward to Saturday, December 24... better playing time... world premiere of "Gorgo"
  11. 1 2 3 "Gorgo". AFI Catalog. Retrieved July 9, 2026. 15 Feb 1961 Var noted Gorgo's recent domestic debut at Philadelphia, PA's Fox Theatre on 10 Feb 1961
  12. "Knight Frank appoints new senior partner and group chair". CoStar. Retrieved 1 July 2026.
  13. "Keeping closer to home pays off for Knight Frank". The Times. Retrieved 1 July 2026.
  14. "Valuation and advisory". Knight Frank. Retrieved 1 July 2026.
  15. "Capital markets". Knight Frank. Retrieved 1 July 2026.
  16. "Norris takes reins at burgeoning PA Consulting". Business Weekly UK. August 30, 2023.
  17. "Christian Norris announced as CEO of PA Consulting". PA Consulting. August 29, 2023.

Thank you for your help. Sunnyday825 (talk) 11:54, 7 September 2023 (UTC)

 Done  Spintendo  23:04, 7 September 2023 (UTC)


Updates to Lead and History sections

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Hello, I am requesting updates to the lead and the history sections of this article.

In the third paragraph of the lead, the second sentence says: "It operates in these industries from offices across the UK, US, Nordics and Netherlands." Please add Ireland to this list, so that the sentence reads:
  • It operates in these industries from offices across the UK, Ireland, US, Nordics and Netherlands.
The source for this is: [1].
Next, In the last paragraph of the lead, it says: "The company is privately held with 65% of shares owned by Jacobs Engineering Group". Please change the name of this company to Jacobs Solutions, as that is now the correct name.
The name should also be changed to Jacobs Solutions in the 2015-present subsection of the History section where it says: "In November 2020, PA’s Board announced its recommendation to accept a proposal by Jacobs Engineering Group to acquire a 65% stake in PA."
Lastly, in the 2015-present subsection, in the paragraph that says: "Most recently, in November 2020, PA acquired San Francisco- and Boston-based Cooper Perkins, a technology development and engineering company.", please add the following lines to end of that paragraph:
  • In 2022, they acquired Design Partners based in Ireland, and the Cambridge Group based in Chicago. [2] [3]

References

Thank you for your help, Sunnyday825 (talk) 14:08, 20 September 2023 (UTC)

Reply 22-SEP-2023

edit

✅  Edit request partially implemented  

  1. Green tick Ireland was added to the lead.
  2. Green tick Jacobs Solutions was substituted for the company's previous name in the lead and in the 2015-present section. (Please note that the Wikilink was only added to the first instance of the name being mentioned in the lead, per MOS:LINKONCE).
  3. Red X The information regarding the acquisition of Design Partners and the Cambridge Group was not added, as those companies do not appear to be independently notable in Wikipedia.

Regards,  Spintendo  22:59, 22 September 2023 (UTC)

Thanks for your help, Spintendo! Sunnyday825 (talk) 14:11, 26 September 2023 (UTC)


Update to infobox

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Hello, I am requesting further updates to the article:

  • In the infobox, please change the number of locations from 21 to 19 - this information is supported on the company's website in the fast facts section, and should fall under WP:ABOUTSELF: https://www.paconsulting.com/about.
  • In the lead, in the second sentence of the second paragraph, it says: "It has also acquired seven specialist consultancies since December 2017...". Please change this to nine specialist consultancies, and delete the rest of the paragraph since the companies are not independently notable on Wikipedia. 7 of these are companies are already sourced in that paragraph, and the last 2 sources can be found here: [1] [2]
  • In the history section, in the last paragraph of the 2015-present subsection, where it says that Will Lamb is the CFO, please change this to Guy Rudolph, as he replaced Will Lamb. [3].

References

  1. "PA Consulting Bolts on Design Partners". Business Plus. May 28, 2022.
  2. "PA Consulting acquires strategy consultancy The Cambridge Group". Consulting US. Dec 1, 2022.
  3. "Leadership". PA Consulting. Retrieved 21 Sep 2023.

Thank you for your help, Sunnyday825 (talk) 14:13, 26 September 2023 (UTC)

Partly done The lead and infobox sections were updated. The information regarding Will Lambe was not changed, because it does not state that Will Lambe is the CFO, it merely states that he was appointed CFO in 2022, which is not factually inaccurate. Regards,  Spintendo  20:00, 26 September 2023 (UTC)
Hi Spintendo, thank you again for your help, and for cleaning up the article. It certainly appears to be much improved. Given that the non-neutral language has been deleted, would you consider removing the two tags that are currently on the page?
Regarding the CFO- you are correct, Will Lamb was in fact CFO for a time. In that case, would it be possible to update the text with the current CFO, Guy Rudolph, as well? You can find that information here.
I appreciate the time you are taking to improve the page. Sunnyday825 (talk) 11:10, 28 September 2023 (UTC)


Disputed neutrality

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{{Connected contributor (paid)}} should only be used on talk pages.

Hi! My name is Victoria and I work for PA Consulting Group. I'm on Wikipedia to make suggestions for improving this article. The first thing I notice is the box at the top of the page that says "The neutrality of this article is disputed" plus another box under "Technology and innovation" that says "The neutrality of this section is disputed". I would like to take steps to address these concerns by flagging text I think could be removed, either because of low source quality or because there is no source at all.

At the start of the article, I suggest removing:

  • "Today, PA employs more than 4,000 people globally."
    • This has no source.
  • "PA works with organisations in seven industries: consumer and manufacturing; defence and security; energy and utilities; financial services; public services; healthcare and life sciences; and transport. It operates in these industries from offices in the UK, US, Ireland, Nordics and Netherlands."
    • The source is PA's website.
  • "It is also a member of the United Nations Global Compact, a non-binding UN pact that encourages businesses to adopt sustainable practices, and the WePROTECT Global Alliance, a network of governments and companies aiming to tackle online child exploitation and abuse. PA produced the first two Global Threat Assessments for WePROTECT."
    • These facts are true but the sources are WePROTECT Global Alliance's website and United Nations Global Compact website and PA's website.
  • "The company is privately held, with 65% of shares owned by Jacobs Solutions and the remaining 35% owned by current and former employees. Staff can buy shares during an annual share-trading period."
    • The source is PA's website.

Under "History", I suggest removing:

  • (1970–1992): "Towards the end of the '80s, PA's management took the firm public. The Butten Trust, after an application to the courts in the UK, agreed to give 15% of its shares to its employees. However, the company changed its strategy after 1992 to one of staff ownership"
    • This has no source.
  • (2015–present): "In October 2017, PA relocated its global corporate headquarters."
    • The source is PA's website.
  • "In April 2018, PA's chairman, Marcus Agius, announced he would step down and assume the role of deputy chairman, with John Alexander replacing him. Alexander made the move from environmental and sustainability consultancy ERM, where he took the company through two rounds of private equity funding."
    • The source is PR Newswire.
  • "In 2021, John Cala joined PA's business in the Americas. In 2022, PA appointed a new chief financial officer and chief information officer, and created new roles for a chief research officer, head of alliances, platforms and products, and head of markets. Chartered Accountant Will Lambe joined as CFO, moving from KPMG, while Kelly Olsen joined as CIO. Charlene Li, co-author of Groundswell and founder of Altimeter, became chief research officer. Rina Ladva joined the firm as head of alliances, platforms and products, making the move from Microsoft. And Tracey Countryman took on the role of Head of Markets, joining PA from Accenture."
    • The sources are PA's website and press releases.

There is probably more text that needs to be removed from the article, and I invite editors to do so. There are some facts I think should be added to this article, which I will work on, but for now I hope this helps get some of the non-neutral text off the page. Thanks! PAVictoria (talk) 11:01, 27 February 2026 (UTC)

Partly done I removed some info, tagged some statements as needing citations, and added some more independent sources. Marking as closed. STEMinfo (talk) 18:43, 26 June 2026 (UTC)


Revenue and employee count

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Hi again! The £785m revenue figure (based on this 2022 report) and 4,200 employee count in the infobox are outdated. This 2024 report says £752.9m for 2024 on page 5 and 3,895 for the total average number of employees on page 51. Based on this more recent source, can editors make £752.9m the Revenue in 2024 and 3,895 the employee count in 2024? Thanks! PAVictoria (talk) 19:48, 5 March 2026 (UTC)

 Done You might find some info to add here. STEMinfo (talk) 21:57, 26 June 2026 (UTC)


Updates for review

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In my first request above, I tried identifying text I think should be removed because of low source quality. For this request, I am identifying a few facts I think may be relevant to add (or use as replacement text) as a way to improve the article:

  • In 2025, The Times reported PA Consulting's innovation team based at its Global Technology and Innovation Centre sees "the majority of its revenues coming from Diageo, Procter & Gamble, Unilever, and major pharmaceutical companies".[1]
  • PA Consulting was among five award winners at the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority's annual supply chain event, being recognised in the "best example of applying creative and innovative solutions" category.[4]

References

  1. Tyler, Richard (September 16, 2025). "How cutting-edge start-ups go from lab to market". The Times.
  2. "DFW Airport selects Jacobs, PA Consulting for digital operations project". Airport Technology. October 17, 2025.
  3. Asher, Sydney (October 23, 2025). "DFW Airport partners with Jacobs on different kind of upgrade". Dallas Business Journal.
  4. "NDA supply chain event honours award winners". Nuclear Engineering International. February 3, 2025.

These are a few things that came to mind and I'll let editors determine if these should be used in the article. Thanks again! PAVictoria (talk) 19:08, 12 March 2026 (UTC)

Partly done I added the customers and most of the sources to the operations section, without adding too much detail. I didn't add the award, since there's growing consensus to not add awards that are not notable enough to have their own articles, but I added the source to the operations section for the NDA client. STEMinfo (talk) 21:20, 26 June 2026 (UTC)


Jacobs

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I have another suggestion I'd like to share, so editors can consider updating this article. In January 2026, Jacobs Solutions agreed to acquire the remaining ownership stake in PA Consulting. I can provide a couple sources for confirmation:

  • Engineering News-Record says "Jacobs Solutions announced Jan. 5 that it has agreed to acquire the remaining ownership stake in PA Consulting, completing a transaction that expands the firm’s advisory and transformation services alongside its traditional engineering and program management work."
    • If additional context is helpful, the article also says "Jacobs said full ownership of PA Consulting will allow deeper integration of advisory and digital capabilities into its broader portfolio and accelerate growth in higher-margin consulting services tied to complex infrastructure and technology-driven programs."
  • Reuters says "Engineering services provider Jacobs Solutions (J.N) said on Monday it will acquire the remaining stake it does not already own in UK-based firm PA Consulting for 1.216 billion pounds ($1.64 billion). Amid robust investments in AI infrastructure, Jacobs aims to utilize PA Consulting's services in providing additional client services, especially in high-growth and historically resilient sectors such as advanced manufacturing, life sciences and critical infrastructure, including energy and transportation."

Can editors update the history section with this development? Thanks again! PAVictoria (talk) 09:22, 18 March 2026 (UTC)

 Done STEMinfo (talk) 22:43, 25 June 2026 (UTC)


Jacobs updates for review

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Hi again, I have an update for one of my pending requests (subject: Jacobs) that I'd like to share with editors for their consideration. In March 2026, Jacobs Solutions completed its acquisition of PA Consulting. I can provide a source for confirmation:

  • says: "Accelerating its growth strategy to redefine the asset lifecycle, Jacobs has completed its acquisition of the remaining equity interest in PA Consulting, a leading innovation and transformation consultancy."
    • If additional context is helpful, the article also says: "The combined business will serve clients across sectors, including government and private organizations, supporting work from strategy and design through execution across major capital programs, digital innovation and operational change."
  • says "Jacobs has completed its £1.2 billion acquisition of PA Consulting, taking full ownership of the innovation and transformation consultancy as part of a move to accelerate growth in digital and advisory services."

Can editors update the history section with this latest development? Thanks again! PAVictoria (talk) 14:58, 16 April 2026 (UTC)

 Not done The info I already added looks sufficient. I'm not sure the reader will get more out of the more florid phrasing you suggest. STEMinfo (talk) 21:21, 26 June 2026 (UTC)


Leadership appointment

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{{Connected contributor (paid)}} should only be used on talk pages.

Hi @STEMinfo - thanks so much for your support and guidance on our latest update requests.

I have a further suggestion for improving the page accuracy to reflect the most recent changes at PA Consulting.

  • (2015–present): In June 2026, Jiten Kachhela was appointed President of PA Consulting.
    • The sources are PA's website and Public Now.

Thanks! PAVictoria (talk) 08:38, 1 July 2026 (UTC)

 Done Press releases are usually discouraged as sources, but it's unlikely this would be unreliable. I couldn't find an independent source. I noted in the phrasing that the the source was a press release. STEMinfo (talk) 18:42, 1 July 2026 (UTC)
Hi @STEMinfo, I noticed a typo has been made when adding this update. Jiten's last name is spelt Kachhela (double 'h') as per my original request. Can you help correct the spelling? PAVictoria (talk) 16:51, 10 July 2026 (UTC)
I'm not sure how that happened. Fixed in the article and the infobox. In the future, minor typos and other uncontroversial edit corrections are ok for you to do yourself. STEMinfo (talk) 19:03, 10 July 2026 (UTC)


Update to revenue count

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Hi @STEMinfo, hope you're having a good day - it's roasting hot here in the UK at the moment! Really appreciate your support and guidance so far on improving the page. The £752.9m revenue figure (based on this 2024 report) in the infobox is now outdated since my last request was actioned. This 2025 report says £767.6m for 2025 on page 5 and 3,859 for the total average number of employees on page 50. Based on this more recent source, I'd be really grateful if you could make £767.6m the Revenue in 2025 and 3,859 the employee count in 2025 to help further improve the accuracy of the page. Thanks! PAVictoria (talk) 11:19, 9 July 2026 (UTC)

@PAVictoria: Do you have an independent source for the info that's not on the company website? STEMinfo (talk) 22:39, 9 July 2026 (UTC)


Corrections and additions to the Notable deals section

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Hello, I represent Stonepeak and am requesting the following correction and additions to the Notable deals section of the article.

  • Modify the current seventh listing in the section to reflect the accurate outcome of the Assura transaction. Changes indicated in gray:
In April 2025, it was announced that Stonepeak and KKR had agreed to buy Assura plc, a UK-listed real estate company, in a deal worth £1.6 billion.[1] The deal is set to complete in autumn 2025 and is subject to approval. Primary Health Properties submitted a competing bid, which was accepted by shareholders in August 2025.[2][3][4]
  • Add the following deals not currently included in this section:
In March 2024, Stonepeak completed the acquisition of Textainer, a marine cargo container leasing company, in a deal that valued the company at approximately $7.4 billion including debt.[5]
In May 2025, Stonepeak acquired a 65% majority interest in the German and Austrian retail fuel brand JET in a joint venture with Phillips 66.[6]
In August 2025, Stonepeak introduced WahajPeak, its first renewable energy platform in the Middle East, focused on industrial-scale solar, wind, and battery storage projects across the Gulf Cooperation Council and broader MENA region.[7]

References

  1. Oliver, Joshua (9 April 2025). "Stonepeak, KKR Agree to Buy UK's Assura in £1.6bn Deal". Financial Times.
  2. Awasthi, Shashwat (23 June 2025). "UK's Primary Health Properties offers $2.4 billion for Assura". Reuters.
  3. Summerfield, Richard (August 2025). "PHP leads in Assura takeover battle with £1.79bn offer". Financier Worldwide.
  4. Voase, Natasha; Sidders, Jack (12 August 2025). "PHP Pips KKR in Battle to Buy UK Health-Care Landlord Assura". Bloomberg News.
  5. "Big Shipping Container Firm Nears Sale". The Wall Street Journal. 20 October 2023.
  6. "Phillips 66 Closes Partial Sale of German, Austrian Fuel Retailer". Rigzone.com. 2 December 2025.
  7. Warner, Kelsey (18 August 2025). "$76B Stonepeak to develop Gulf renewables". Semafor.

I look forward to discussing these changes with the community. Thank you. QuartzHarbor (talk) 13:15, 9 July 2026 (UTC)

@QuartzHarbor - 9 July 2026 "Modify"" request completed with a few changes. Added another reference for initial deal, as the FT citation is subscription only. Made slight wording modifications as well. ERcheck (talk) 15:28, 13 July 2026 (UTC)


Request: update "RunPod" styling to "Runpod" in portfolio list

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The portfolio section mentions "RunPod". The company changed its brand styling to "Runpod" (lowercase p), which is how its official site (https://www.runpod.io) and current independent coverage style it, e.g. the June 2026 financing coverage: "Runpod Raises $100M Led by Summit Partners" (https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/runpod-raises-100m-led-by-summit-partners-to-accelerate-the-ai-developer-cloud-302808689.html). Per MOS:TM (follow the styling used by current independent reliable sources), please update the visible mention to "Runpod". The existing 2024 reference and its title should stay as they are. Disclosure: I am a Runpod employee, per WP:PAID. Thank you. Dan.stotts (talk) 14:23, 9 July 2026 (UTC)


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