User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/15 per page (alphabetical)/28


Suggested updates to Sustainability, Operations, Brands and Carbon footprint sections

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Disclosure: I am not employed by SSAB. However, I am working as a communications consultant assisting SSAB with factual content updates. In line with Wikipedia's conflict of interest guidelines, I am proposing these changes on the Talk page for independent editors to review.


I would like to suggest a few source-supported updates to the article:

  1. Sustainability section - adding information about SSAB's participation in the HYBRIT initiative, the first fossil-free steel delivery to Volvo Group in 2021, and the launch of SSAB Zero in 2023 as follows:


Sustainability initiatives (2020s) suggestion of new section:

SSAB sponsors the Swedish Steel Prize and has been involved in various government-supported research programs, such as the "Steel Eco-System" initiative.

No changes made to the text, just position in paragraph changed.

SSAB is a partner in the HYBRIT initiative, a collaboration launched in 2016 together with mining company LKAB and energy company Vattenfall to develop fossil-free steelmaking using hydrogen instead of coal-based processes. The project opened its pilot plant for hydrogen-based sponge iron production in Luleå in 2020. In 2021, SSAB delivered the first fossil-free steel produced using the HYBRIT technology to Volvo Group for testing and prototype applications.

Sources: Vattenfall “HYBRIT – pioneering fossil-free steel production to cut industrial emissions at the root”:https://group.vattenfall.com/sustainability/climate-action/industry-decarbonisation/hybrit/, Vattenfall "HYBRIT – The world's first fossil-free steel ready for delivery": https://group.vattenfall.com/press-and-media/pressreleases/2021/hybrit-the-worlds-first-fossil-free-steel-ready-for-delivery/, Steel Times International “HYBRIT presents culmination of fossil-free steel research in final report”: https://www.steeltimesint.com/news/hybrit-presents-culmination-of-fossil-free-steel-research-in-final-report

In 2023, the company launched SSAB Zero™, a steel product manufactured from recycled steel with fossil-free electricity and biogas.

Sources: Eurometal “Rheinmetall signs up for SSAB Zero steels”: https://eurometal.net/rheinmetall-signs-up-for-ssab-zero-steels/, SSAB Newsroom “SSAB launches new zero-emission steel - SSAB Zero™”: https://www.ssab.com/en-us/news/2023/03/ssab-launches-new-zeroemission-steel--ssab-zero

In 2024, SSAB announced that it would build its €4.5 billion fossil-free steel mill in Luleå, Sweden, rather than in Raahe, Finland. The decision, which was made after considering both locations, is expected to reduce Sweden's carbon dioxide emissions by 7% upon completion in 2028. In 2025, the company announced that it has postponed the plan to the end of 2029.

Mention of postponing of the plan added. Sources: Eurometal, “SSAB postpones Luleå mill amid power delays” https://eurometal.net/ssab-postpones-lulea-mill-amid-power-delays/


2. Operations section: Adding a short overview in the Operations section describing SSAB's geographical footprint in Sweden, Finland and the United States, and its five business segments.

SSAB operates steel production facilities in Sweden, Finland and the United States.

The company is organized into five business segments: SSAB Special Steels, SSAB Europe, and SSAB Americas, as well as the distribution company Tibnor and Ruukki Construction, which focuses on building products and construction solutions.

Source: SSAB Annual Report 2025 PDF s. 4: https://www.ssab.com/en/news/2026/03/ssabs-annual-report-2025-is-published


3. North America operations clarified, addition the the start of the section:

North America

SSAB Americas is the group's North American division and is responsible for sales of heavy plate in North America and for steel and plate production in Montpelier, Iowa. SSAB's operations in the United States also include steel production facilities in Mobile, Alabama, which are part of the SSAB Special Steels division. Both facilities use electric arc furnace technology and are based primarily on recycled steel scrap.

Sources: SSAB Annual Report 2025, s. 4–5 "Business segments, markets and major production sites" & p. 28 “SSAB Americas”: https://www.ssab.com/en/news/2026/03/ssabs-annual-report-2025-is-published


4. SSAB Brands and brand names updated accordingly:

Brands

SSAB's brands and product names include:

  • Hardox®
  • Strenx®
  • GreenCoat®
  • Toolox®
  • Armox®
  • SSAB AM
  • SSAB Boron
  • SSAB COR-TEN
  • SSAB Docol®
  • SSAB Domex®
  • SSAB Form
  • SSAB Laser®
  • SSAB Multisteel
  • SSAB Weathering

Source and list updated: SSAB “Corporate identity and brands”: https://www.ssab.com/en/company/about-ssab/ssab-in-brief/corporate-identity-and-brands


5. Suggested removal of the Carbon footprint table and replacement with a new section. The comparability between the table’s older reporting methodology and the emissions data reported in recent annual reports is unclear, which means that it may not be reliable to extend the table with figures for 2021–2025.

Carbon footprint

SSAB is one of the largest carbon dioxide emitters in Sweden and Finland due to its blast furnace-based steel production.

As part of its transition to fossil-free steelmaking, the company is replacing blast furnaces with electric arc furnaces at its Nordic production sites. In 2025, SSAB reported Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse-gas emissions of approximately 10.7 million tonnes CO₂e.

The company has set science-based targets to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by 48% by 2033 and by 93% by 2045, compared with 2018 levels, and aims to achieve net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions across its value chain by 2045.

Sources: Reuters “Sweden's SSAB to invest $4.8 bln in fossil-free steel mill” https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/swedens-ssab-invest-48-bln-mln-fossil-free-steel-mill-2024-04-02/, Eurometal “Approval has been granted for SSAB’s new electric arc furnace facility in Luleå”, https://eurometal.net/approval-has-been-granted-for-ssabs-new-electric-arc-furnace-facility-in-lulea/, SSAB Annual Report 2025, p. 82 GHG emissions (E1-6) & p. 78 "SSAB's climate targets", https://www.ssab.com/en/news/2026/03/ssabs-annual-report-2025-is-published

Dingle JS (talk) 08:25, 8 July 2026 (UTC)

Disclosure: I am not employed by SSAB. However, I am working as a consultant assisting SSAB with communications and factual content updates. To comply with Wikipedia's conflict of interest guidelines, I am proposing these changes on the Talk page rather than making the edits directly. Dingle JS (talk) 08:25, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: update for currency and accuracy (June 2026)

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I have a conflict of interest with this subject and am not editing the article directly, per WP:COIEDIT. Requesting the following sourced changes. The article is materially out of date (it lists ANT1 as the network for Dragons' Den when the show moved to SKAI, names a superseded production company, and omits the subject's principal business activity).

1. Lead sentence. Change the opening from "is a Greek TV host, producer and entrepreneur" to:

Sakis Tanimanidis (Greek: Σάκης Τανιμανίδης; born 30 April 1981) is a Greek entrepreneur, television host and producer.

Rationale: the body now documents substantial entrepreneurial activity (below); the reordering reflects the current balance of coverage.

2. Add to the business/entrepreneurship section:

Tanimanidis is co-founder, with Miltos Kambourides, of Paradox Museum, a chain of immersive-experience attractions launched in 2022. As of 2026 the brand operates in 16 cities across 13 countries and has received more than 10 million visitors, with a stated target of 55 locations by 2030. The business uses a franchise-led expansion model.

Source: Forbes Greece, "Σ. Τανιμανίδης: Η διεθνής επέκταση του Paradox Museum, οι επενδύσεις σε startups, το Dragon's Den" (forbesgreece.gr, 2026).

3. Add:

In 2026 Tanimanidis and his wife Christina Bompa co-founded the BeWell Festival, a fitness and wellness event held at the OAKA complex in Athens, which organisers describe as the largest of its kind in Europe. The 2026 edition drew over 20,000 attendees.

Source: News247, "Το μεγαλύτερο fitness & wellness φεστιβάλ της Ευρώπης έρχεται στην Αθήνα" (news247.gr, 4 June 2026).

4. Correction (Dragons' Den network). The article states Dragons' Den Greece airs on ANT1. It premiered on ANT1 in 2023 and moved to SKAI for its fourth season in 2026. Requesting:

Dragons' Den Greece, the Greek adaptation of the Dragons' Den / Shark Tank format, premiered on ANT1 in January 2023 with Tanimanidis as host. In 2026 the show moved to SKAI for its fourth season.

Source: Mononews, "Στον ΣΚΑΪ ο Σάκης Τανιμανίδης και το Dragons' Den" (mononews.gr, 5 March 2026).

5. Correction (production company). The article names "Baby Blue Project" as the subject's production company. The company behind Dragons' Den is now BetterKnown Entertainment. Requesting the production-company reference be updated to BetterKnown Entertainment.

Source: Mononews, same article as above.

Greekfixer (talk) 08:49, 22 June 2026 (UTC)


Requested update: Company name, infobox and article content

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  • What I think should be changed (include citations):

1. Rename the article from Salutem Health Care to Salutem Care and Education.

Evidence for current name usage: - The organisation’s official website clearly uses the name “Salutem Care and Education”.[1] - Independent business profiles and directories also list the organisation as “Salutem Care and Education”.[2] - Professional listings (e.g. LinkedIn) show the current operating name as “Salutem Care and Education”.[3] - Independent care-sector news refers to the organisation as “Salutem Care and Education” in its reporting.[4] - Regional news coverage also uses the name “Salutem Care and Education” when reporting on the organisation’s services.[5]

2. Update the infobox to:

Salutem Care and Education
TypePrivate
IndustrySocial Care, Special Education
Founded2016; 10 years ago (2016)
Headquarters
Windsor
,
United Kingdom
Area served
England and Wales
Key people
John Godden MBE (Chief Executive Officer)
Websitehttps://www.salutemcareandeducation.co.uk/

3. Replace or update the lead and article content with the following neutral, factual version:

{{short description|UK social care company}}

Salutem Care and Education is a privately held provider of specialist social care, education, and supported living services for children and adults with complex needs, including learning disabilities, autism, and mental health conditions. The organisation operates across England and Wales and is headquartered in Windsor.

History

The organisation was founded in 2016 and has grown through acquisitions and service expansion.[6]

Services

Salutem Care and Education provides a range of services including:

  • Adult residential care and supported living
  • Children’s residential services
  • Specialist education for individuals with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND)
  • Community-based and supported living services[7]
Organisation

The organisation employs several thousand staff across England and Wales.[8]

Regulation

Services are regulated by statutory bodies in England and Wales, including the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and Ofsted.

See also

References

  1. Salutem Care and Education, Official website, https://www.salutemcareandeducation.co.uk/
  2. PitchBook, “Salutem Care & Education Company Profile”, https://pitchbook.com/profiles/company/222156-01
  3. LinkedIn, Salutem Care and Education company profile, https://www.linkedin.com/company/salutemcareandeducation
  4. "Salutem and Emma AI launch partnership". Caring Times. 6 June 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  5. "Care provider unveils new supported living development in Worcester". Worcester News. 20 February 2024. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  6. Wikipedia contributors, “Salutem Healthcare”, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salutem_Healthcare
  7. Salutem Care and Education, Official website, https://www.salutemcareandeducation.co.uk/
  8. Salutem Care and Education, About Us, https://www.salutemcareandeducation.co.uk/about-us/

4. Add reliable sources confirming: - The organisation’s current name - Its services and operations - Leadership and structure

Why it should be changed:

The organisation is currently operating publicly under the name “Salutem Care and Education”, as evidenced by its official website and third‑party business listings. Updating the article would ensure Wikipedia reflects the organisation’s current and commonly used name.

I am suggesting these edits via the talk page in line with Wikipedia’s guidance on conflict of interest and request that an independent editor review and implement them.

Yasmin Skinner (talk) 14:59, 13 May 2026 (UTC)

References


Correct lead scope and remove misleading network wording

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Paid/COI disclosure: I work for Samsung Medical Center in South Korea in a communications/brand strategy role. Samsung Medical Center is my employer. I am not editing the article directly and am asking independent editors to review this request.

The current lead says that Samsung Medical Center "is composed of Samsung Seoul Hospital, Kangbook Samsung Hospital, Samsung Changwon Hospital, and Samsung Life Sciences Research Center." I believe this wording is misleading for readers because the article topic appears to be the Seoul hospital at 81 Irwon-ro, Gangnam-gu, while Kangbuk Samsung Hospital and Samsung Changwon Hospital are separately listed hospital institutions. The word "Kangbook" is also misspelled.

Could an uninvolved editor please replace the first paragraph:

'''Samsung Medical Center''' ('''SMC'''; [[Korean language|Korean]]<span title="Korean-language text"><span lang="ko-Hang">삼성의료원</span></span>) is a [[Tertiary referral hospital|tertiary hospital]] located in [[Irwon-Dong]] of [[Gangnam-Gu]], [[Seoul]], [[South Korea]]. SMC is composed of Samsung Seoul Hospital, Kangbook Samsung Hospital, Samsung Changwon Hospital, and Samsung Life Sciences Research Center. SMC was founded on November 9, 1994.
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'''Samsung Medical Center''' ('''SMC'''; [[Korean language|Korean]]<span title="Korean-language text"><span lang="ko-Hang">삼성서울병원</span></span>) is a [[Tertiary referral hospital|tertiary hospital]] in [[Gangnam District]], [[Seoul]], [[South Korea]]. It opened in 1994.

Supporting sources:

If editors prefer, the network relationship can be addressed later in a separate body section rather than in the lead. Thank you for reviewing. MaxLee0121 (talk) 06:10, 30 April 2026 (UTC)

 Done MaxLee0121 Thank you for your edit request. Best, SpencerT•C 06:36, 6 May 2026 (UTC)


Correct Korean name and infobox image

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Paid/COI disclosure: I work for Samsung Medical Center in South Korea in a communications/brand strategy role. Samsung Medical Center is my employer. I am not editing the article directly and am asking independent editors to review this request.

Thank you to Spencer for implementing the previous lead-scope request.

I have a follow-up request about the Korean name and infobox. The article is now correctly described as the hospital in Gangnam District, Seoul, but the Korean name still appears as 삼성의료원 in both the lead and infobox. The infobox also still displays an image and caption for Kangbuk Samsung Hospital, which is a different hospital.

Could an uninvolved editor please make these changes?

1. In the lead, please replace:

{{Korean|hangul=삼성의료원}}

with:

{{Korean|hangul=삼성서울병원}}

2. In the infobox, please replace this line:

| native_name      = 삼성 의료원

with:

| native_name      = 삼성서울병원

3. Please remove these current infobox lines unless editors prefer to replace them later with a freely licensed image of Samsung Medical Center itself:

| image            = Kangbuk Samsung Hospital.JPG
| caption          = Kangbuk Samsung Hospital


Supporting sources:

I am not requesting any promotional wording. This request is only to align the Korean name and infobox media with the article topic. Thank you for reviewing. MaxLee0121 (talk) 02:07, 7 May 2026 (UTC)

Just a brief follow-up on this pending COI edit request. If it is easier for an uninvolved editor to review this in parts, the Korean-name correction alone would be helpful as a first step:
  • In the lead, change Korean: 삼성의료원 to Korean: 삼성서울병원.
  • In the infobox, change | native_name = 삼성 의료원 to | native_name = 삼성서울병원.
The image/caption issue can also be reviewed separately if preferred. Thank you. MaxLee0121 (talk) 00:22, 26 May 2026 (UTC)
@MaxLee0121:  Done, amendments made. plicit 06:59, 12 June 2026 (UTC)


Add basic history and operations sections

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Paid/COI disclosure: I work for Samsung Medical Center in South Korea in a communications/brand strategy role. Samsung Medical Center is my employer. I am not editing the article directly and am asking independent editors to review this request. Thank you to Spencer and Explicit for reviewing and implementing the earlier requests about the article scope, Korean name, and infobox image. The article is currently very short and still contains only one outdated operational-statistics sentence from 2015. I would like to request a narrow factual update: add short History and Facilities and operations sections, update the infobox staff figure to match the cited annual report, and keep the existing MERS paragraph under its own section heading. The proposed wording uses VISITKOREA, the Ministry of Health and Welfare, and the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service (HIRA) for public basic information, and Samsung Medical Center's annual report and official website only for non-evaluative operational facts. I understand that hospital-published sources are self-published, so I am not using them for promotional or evaluative claims. Could an uninvolved editor please make these changes? 1. In the infobox, please replace:

| num_staff        = 6718
| num_staff_year   = 2024

with:

| num_staff        = 7929
| num_staff_year   = 2024

2. Please replace the two short body paragraphs after the lead with the following sectioned text:



Proposed neutral update to current use and location wording

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I have a disclosed professional connection with San Clemente Palace Venice and would like to propose a neutral, sourced update to the article. I am not requesting promotional language; the aim is to make the current-use wording more accurate, concise and encyclopedic.

Suggested change: Please replace the current final paragraph of the History section with the following wording:

The church was restored in 2003 as part of a wider project that adapted the adjacent buildings for hotel use. The complex now forms part of San Clemente Palace Venice on San Clemente Island, in the Venetian Lagoon. The hotel’s published visitor information describes a scheduled boat connection between San Clemente Island and San Marco of approximately 10 minutes. In 2013, Permak Group acquired the property and announced a further renovation programme for the complex.

Reason: The proposed wording keeps the focus on verifiable facts: restoration, present use, location, connection to San Marco, ownership change and preservation of the historic complex. It avoids promotional language such as “private island”, “luxury retreat”, “hidden paradise” or broad size-based marketing claims, while still giving readers a clearer understanding of the site’s current role within Venice.

Suggested sources:

Thank you for reviewing this request. ErdemGWiki (talk) 11:54, 20 May 2026 (UTC)


Sanmina request: edits for infobox

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Hello there, this is a request made for Sanmina Corporation. As I've disclosed on my user page and using the banner above, I'm an employee of the company and have a conflict of interest. Can editors review and make the following updates for the infobox table? The below are confirmed by the 2025 10-K listed in the infobox footnotes and which you can check here.

1. Adding a new image of the company Headquarters, which I've recently added to Wikimedia Commons here: File:Sanmina HQ in 2026.png

2. Adding Original design manufacturers and Data center services to the Industry field:

[[Electronics Manufacturing Services]]
+
[[Electronics Manufacturing Services]]<br>[[Original_design_manufacturer|Original design manufacturers]]<br>[[Data center services]]

Why: Adding "original design manufacturers" helps clarify that (as the article mentions) Sanmina designs and manufactures products for other companies, it isn't manufacturing and selling its own products. Also, adding "data center services", to more specifically call out this that Sanmina provides services to this industry.

3. Adding the company's co-founder Jure Sola to the Founder field:

[[Milan Mandarić]]
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Jure Sola<br>[[Milan Mandarić]]

Why: Both founders are mentioned in the History but only Mandaric is included in the infobox currently.

4. Adding a Products field and including the following list of products:

n/a: no current Products field
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[[printed circuit board]]s; [[backplane]]s and backplane assemblies; [[cable harness|cable assemblies]]; [[metal fabrication|fabricated metal parts]]; [[microelectronics]]; precision machined parts; plastic injected molded parts; optical components and [[Radio-frequency engineering|RF]]

Why: Provides an overview to readers about the types of products the company manufactures, without having a big list within the main article text.

5. Adding a Services field and including the following list of services:

n/a: no current Services field
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[[product design]] and engineering; direct order fulfillment and logistics; [[Aftermarket (merchandise)|after-market product]] service and support; [[supply chain management]] and manufacturing

Why: Similar to the above, provides an overview to readers about the types of services provided by the company, keeping this a succinct list.

6. Adding ZT Systems into the Divisions field:

Viking Technology, SCI, Viking Enterprise Solutions, 42Q MES
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Viking Technology, SCI, Viking Enterprise Solutions, 42Q MES, ZT Systems

Why: ZT Systems was acquired and became a division of Sanmina in 2025. The completion of the acquisition of ZT Systems is confirmed by this reference: [1]

Thanks for reviewing this and let me know how I can help and improve my requests in future! DarrenPress Sanmina (talk) 17:31, 12 June 2026 (UTC)

User:Ptrnext I saw in the page history that you've maintained financials etc. in the infobox most recently, I hope it's ok to see if you'd review this infobox edit request? DarrenPress Sanmina (talk) 17:37, 18 June 2026 (UTC)
It looks like User:Ptrnext hasn't been on Wikipedia lately, so I wanted to ask if User:Ksu6500 or User:Ash.tahno can take a look, as you're the most recent editors in the page history. I've also been looking around at WikiProjects to see if there is a relevant and active place to look for help, and the ones I've looked at don't seem like they have a lot of editors responding to posts, so if anyone has suggestions I'd appreciate it! DarrenPress Sanmina (talk) 17:36, 24 June 2026 (UTC)


Sanmina request: better sourced early History

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Hello there, this is a request made for Sanmina Corporation. I am an employee with a paid conflict of interest with this Wikipedia article. While I'm waiting for review of the infobox edits, I've been working on putting together some other edits to this article to fix some issues like poor sources or missing sources.

To start with, the first paragraph of the History has just two sources: one of which is a YouTube link and the other is an archive link to an old page on the Sanmina website. In my draft, I've tried to keep the main points, and add missing milestones and context, while adding sources: books, news coverage, and an SEC link to confirm the month for the IPO. If a source wasn't online, I included a quote in the citation template to verify the specific detail.

Here's a comparison of the current paragraph vs. my draft (I've just included the text, not the formatting and citations to make it easier to read):

Sanmina was founded by Jure Šola and Milan Mandarić in 1980 as a printed circuit board manufacturer. It was named after Milan Manadarić's daughters Sandra and Jasmina. During the 1980s, it expanded into manufacturing backplanes and subassemblies for the telecommunications industry. During the 1990s, the company grew, producing complete products for major OEM companies and completing a number of acquisitions. Jure Sola became CEO and Chairman of Sanmina in 1991. The company completed an initial public offering on Nasdaq in 1993.
+
Sanmina was founded by Jure Sola and Milan Mandarić in 1980 as a manufacturer of printed circuit boards. It later expanded into manufacturing backplanes and backplane subassemblies. By 1989 the company's revenue had grown to around $60 million and it was focused on providing electronics manufacturing services for several customers in the telecommunications industry. That year, Sola led a management buy-out of his co-founder's share in the company with investment from Morgan Stanley and became its president. In 1991, Sola became Sanmina's chairman and CEO.In the 1990s original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) had increasingly begun outsourcing production to firms like Sanmina. Sola was able to rapidly grow the company in the early 1990s by focusing on providing contract manufacturing, and Sanmina established itself as an electronics manufacturer for OEMs. The company increased its annual revenue by more than $20 million over the 5 years following the management buy-out. In February 1993, the company went public.

Here's just the draft of the new proposed paragraphs and suggested subheading, with the formatting and citations:

Founding and early years
Sanmina was founded by Jure Sola and Milan Mandarić[2] in 1980 as a manufacturer of printed circuit boards. It later expanded into manufacturing backplanes and backplane subassemblies.[3] By 1989 the company's revenue had grown to around $60 million and it was focused on providing electronics manufacturing services for several customers in the telecommunications industry. That year, Sola led a management buy-out of his co-founder's share in the company with investment from Morgan Stanley and became its president.[4][5] In 1991, Sola became Sanmina's chairman and CEO.[4][6]
In the 1990s original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) had increasingly begun outsourcing production to firms like Sanmina.[6] Sola was able to rapidly grow the company in the early 1990s by focusing on providing contract manufacturing,[6] and Sanmina established itself as an electronics manufacturer for OEMs.[3] The company increased its annual revenue by more than $20 million over the 5 years following the management buy-out.[4] In February[7] 1993, the company went public.[8]

Thanks for reviewing this! DarrenPress Sanmina (talk) 17:42, 10 July 2026 (UTC)


Request for major update to filmography and awards.

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I am the subject of this article. I am requesting an update to the filmography and awards sections to reflect my official professional credits correctly. The current page is missing nearly 20 years of career history. I have cited independent industry publications, official academic profiles, and the Television Academy for verification.

Sgaudemar (talk) 16:43, 21 April 2026 (UTC)

Reply 10-JUN-2026

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🔼  Clarification requested  

  1. To have these works listed, each work needs to be independently notable in Wikipedia along with a reference to a reliable source. Please note that IMDb is not an appropriate source to use on Wikipedia for these claims. (See WP:CITINGIMDB.)
  2. To ensure that these works are independently notable, kindly provide their H:WIKILINKS with your request. Please feel free to place those Wikilinks in the text already provided by you above, instead of repeating the information in a newer request below.
  3. In place of listing works which are not independently notable, the {{IMDb name}} template may be placed in the External links section of the Wikipedia article to provide readers with a direct link to that information on IMDb. Kindly submit a new edit request below to use this template. (See WP:IMDB-EL.)
  4. When ready to proceed with the list of independently notable works, kindly change the {{Edit COI}} template's answer parameter to read from |ans=y to |ans=n.

Regards,  Spintendo  19:32, 10 June 2026 (UTC)

Response

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Thank you for the clarification. I have revised the request to include only independently notable productions and replaced IMDb as a citation source, per WP:CITINGIMDB. I have added Wikilinks for each work and supporting citations from official production credits, institutional sources, and editorial databases where applicable.

Proposed filmography additions:

Proposed awards addition:

  • 2006 – Primetime Emmy Award, Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation, for Robot Chicken (“Easter Basket”) – Won[37]

Per the suggestion above, IMDb may also be added via the external links template:

Sarah de Gaudemar at IMDb

--Sgaudemar (talk) 20:01, 12 June 2026 (UTC)


Official remix release

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Hello. I have a conflict of interest because I am the remixer/producer of the official remix mentioned below. I am therefore not editing the article directly and would like to request review by an uninvolved editor. I would like to propose adding neutral, sourced information about the official remix of “Scatman (Ski-Ba-Bop-Ba-Dop-Bop)”. Suggested text: “In [2026], an official remix of ‘Scatman (Ski-Ba-Bop-Ba-Dop-Bop)’ by [Al Päär] was released by [Iceberg Records].” Sources:

Thank you for reviewing this request. Alpargebe (talk) 11:44, 30 June 2026 (UTC)


Update: Production and Manufacturing

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Hi all, I would like to suggest an update to the section. First, Schott Pharma now has locations across 15 countries instead of 14. Second, I propose replacing the current list structure (which is both incomplete and inaccurate) with a summary of Schott Pharma's production locations. Then the incomplete template could also be removed.

Proposed text:

The company is headquartered in Mainz and operates in 17 locations across 15 countries. Its main manufacturing activities are located in Europe, the Americas, and Asia.
In Europe, the company’s production sites are located in Germany, Switzerland, Hungary, Serbia, Russia, Italy, and France.
Schott Pharma operates production facilities in the United States and in Mexico, and in South America in Brazil, Argentina, and Colombia.
In Asia, it operates productions in China, Indonesia, and India (through a joint venture with the Serum Institute of India and TPG).

Sources:

Let me know if this would work. Thanks! Elisabeth at SCHOTT (talk) 13:47, 2 March 2026 (UTC)

Edit request reply 22-MAY-2026

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  Edit request declined  

Regards,  Spintendo  13:02, 22 May 2026 (UTC)

@Spintendo, thanks for reviewing the edit request. I may not have explained my intention clearly enough. My aim was to replace the existing list-style “Production & Manufacturing” section with a concise prose summary, not to add to the list.
I would also be happy with a shorter version, for example:
== Production and Manufacturing ==
Schott Pharma is headquartered in Mainz, Germany, and operates manufacturing sites across Europe, North America, South America and Asia.[38]
Its business is divided into two divisions: …
Would this address the WP:NOTDIRECTORY concern? Thanks in advance. Elisabeth at SCHOTT (talk) 08:15, 15 June 2026 (UTC)


Revised edit request: concise manufacturing summary

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Hi, I would like to submit a narrower version of my previous request, taking into account the concern raised under WP:NOTDIRECTORY. I am asking to replace the list of manufacturing sites in the "Production and Manufacturing" section with a brief prose summary.

Suggested replacement:

Schott Pharma is headquartered in Mainz, Germany, and operates manufacturing sites in Europe, North America, South America, and Asia.[39]

This would avoid a directory-style list while still giving readers a concise overview of the company’s manufacturing footprint. Thanks for considering this revised request. Elisabeth at SCHOTT (talk) 09:14, 29 June 2026 (UTC)


Edit suggestions

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I have promised to assist SIF in working to improve this article, which I hope to do in collaboration with the engaged editors here. Looking through the article, I believe there are some pretty uncontroversial improvements that could be made. Hence, some suggestions:

1. Infobox

I suggest we start getting the infobox referenced. Suggest to add these references:

References

  1. Hsiao, Jingyue (October 30, 2025). "AMD completes divestiture of ZT Systems manufacturing business to Sanmina". Digitimes. Retrieved April 12, 2026.
  2. Fork, Donna (May 8, 2007). "Local Sanmina-SCI division on the rise". Huntsville Times (Alabama). The Sanmina portion of Sanmina-SCI was founded by Milan Mandaric and Jure Sola in 1980, as a printed circuit manufacturer.
  3. 1 2 International Directory of Company Histories 2010: Vol 109. Detroit, Michigan: St. James Press. pp. 482–486. ISBN 1414441053. Retrieved April 10, 2026.
  4. 1 2 3 Hammond, Libbie (November 2005). "Total customer focus" (PDF). Manufacturing Today Europe. Schofield Publishing. Retrieved April 9, 2026.
  5. Meikle, Brad (September 11, 2000). "DB Capital and Behrman Invest". Buyout Insider. Retrieved June 1, 2026. Behrman said the firm's attraction to Kinetics dates back to 1989 when his brother, Grant Behrman, who was then with Morgan Stanley Capital Partners acquired Sanmina, a specialty circuit board manufacturer. "He invested $5 million of equity into the company...
  6. 1 2 3 Schlager, Neil (2005). International Directory of Business Biographies Volume 4: S-Z. Thomson Gale. pp. 120–121. ISBN 1-55862-558-5. Retrieved April 10, 2026.
  7. "SEC News Digest Issue 93-40" (PDF). SEC.gov. March 3, 1993. Retrieved April 10, 2026.
  8. "Chipmaker AMD Agrees to Sell AI Server Assets to Sanmina". Bloomberg. May 19, 2025. Retrieved April 6, 2026.
  9. Wendell & Wild (Film end credits). 2022.
  10. "Wendell & Wild Credits". Metacritic. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  11. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  12. Santa Inc (Series end credits). 2021.
  13. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  14. Ron's Gone Wrong (Film end credits). 2021.
  15. "Ron's Gone Wrong Credits". Metacritic. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  16. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  17. The Lego Batman Movie (Film end credits). 2017.
  18. "The LEGO Batman Movie". Animal Logic. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  19. "AAA Founding Members". New York University Tisch School of the Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  20. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  21. Anomalisa (Film end credits). 2015.
  22. "AAA Founding Members". New York University Tisch School of the Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  23. "Anomalisa". American Film Institute. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  24. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  25. Elf: Buddy's Musical Christmas (Television special end credits). 2014.
  26. "Elf: Buddy's Musical Christmas Credits". Metacritic. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  27. "AAA Founding Members". New York University Tisch School of the Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  28. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  29. "Coraline". LAIKA. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  30. Coraline (Film end credits). 2009.
  31. "AAA Founding Members". New York University Tisch School of the Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  32. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  33. "Sarah E. Meyer – Emmy Awards & Nominations". Television Academy. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  34. "58th Annual Creative Arts Emmy Awards – Press Room". Getty Images. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  35. Robot Chicken (Series end credits). 2005.
  36. "Mentor: Sarah de Gaudemar". School of Visual Arts. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  37. "Sarah E. Meyer – Emmy Awards & Nominations". Television Academy. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  38. "About us". schott-pharma.com. SCHOTT Pharma AG & Co. KGaA. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
  39. "About us". schott-pharma.com. SCHOTT Pharma AG & Co. KGaA. Retrieved 29 June 2026.
  40. 1 2 3 "Science of Identity Foundation (1977 - Present) - Religious Group". ARDA. Retrieved 14 April 2026.
  41. 1 2 3 "Science of Identity Foundation". Nonprofit Explorer. ProPublica. Retrieved 14 April 2026.
2. Intro

I suggest we remove "A secretive group," from the introduction, as this general claim is neither referenced there nor covered in the article.

3. Intro

Instead of the phrase "A secretive group", I suggest we add "Since 2019," for context and to avoid wp:recentism.

Looking forward to any questions or concerns so far. Many thanks, /Urbourbo (talk) 10:13, 14 April 2026 (UTC)

I agree with the suggestion that instead of the phrase "A secretive group", I suggest we add "Since 2019," for context and to avoid wp:recentism, and as previously mentioned "secretive group," claim is neither referenced there nor covered in the article. Thanks. RogerYg (talk) 05:27, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
I've restored "secretive". I agree that it needs to be addressed in the article body. Please read the main references at least. --Hipal (talk) 17:22, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
Wouldn't it be more in line with WP:LEAD to remove the "secretive" claim as long as it's actually not supported elsewhere in the current version of the article? /Urbourbo (talk) 23:01, 19 April 2026 (UTC)
Apologies for my not adding some basic coverage to the article body yet, based upon the main references. It appears to be an aspect of their notability. --Hipal (talk) 18:41, 20 April 2026 (UTC)
I have moved the references for "secretive group" to the article body, and found theology section appropriate.
I have summarized & paraphrazed the relevant content from NY Times: The Science of Identity Foundation, a secretive offshoot of the Hare Krishna movement... Thanks. RogerYg (talk) 02:20, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
Thanks both for constructive responses here. Given the strong source support, I can't argue against including "secretive" in the body text, and I appreciate the (indirect) attribution ("has been considered"). However, is it really and objectively a prominent enough trait of the subject to merit inclusion in the lead as well? Perhaps we could reach consensus to satisfy with the mention in the Theology chapter? Thanks, /Urbourbo (talk) 13:50, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
Reading up on WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV, I believe that the "secretive group" opinion needs in-text attribution to stay policy compliant. Hence, my suggestion would be to switch the phrase "SIF has been considered a secretive organization" to: "SIF has been considered a secretive organization by authors in The Atlantic and The New York Times".
Also, I can't find support in the references for the second half of that sentence about SIF obfuscating its views. Hence, unless I'm missing anything here it seems we need to remove that part of the sentence, also considering that Butler's relation to islam is already mentioned earlier in the same paragraph. Thanks, /Urbourbo (talk) 13:05, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
I suggest reading more of the sources to start. This article has a long history of editors removing proper sources (See Talk:Science_of_Identity_Foundation#Potential_refs) in order to steer the POV against policy. --Hipal (talk) 17:58, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
Well, I used obfuscate is in the context of denying, from the New Yorker article. i can add that ref.
I guess, disavow is better based on the sources. Thanks. RogerYg (talk) 21:25, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
Circling back to my WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV question here. Any feedback on my suggestion above from May 5 would be appreciated. I believe your responses only related to the second part of my latest message. Thanks, /Urbourbo (talk) 16:07, 2 June 2026 (UTC)
Can you be more specific about what statement is your concern, and possible suggestions. Thanks. RogerYg (talk) RogerYg (talk) 16:37, 2 June 2026 (UTC)
Thanks, happy to clarify. The point I'm trying to make is, that the "secretive" phrase is an opinion rather than factual, and hence needs to be attributed in the text, per WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV. But I'm now realising that in order to suggest more specific wording that makes sense, I need to understand which of the sources that support "disavows" - but some of the sources were paywalled. Any chance you could clarify which source you drew that from? /Urbourbo (talk) 17:51, 2 June 2026 (UTC)
Hi /Urbourbo,
Actually, I agree with you that "secretive group" is more of opinion, rather than factual, and therefore I suggest adding a qualifier: purportedly secretive group
We could also use reportedly or supposedly.
Regarding "disavow", I used the New Yorker article, which mentions that Butler denies the charges of homophobia and Islamophobia.
The New Yorker What Does Tulsi Gabbard Believe? By Kelefa Sanneh, October 30, 2017
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/11/06/what-does-tulsi-gabbard-believe
Thanks. RogerYg (talk) 18:04, 2 June 2026 (UTC)
Whose opinion is it, and how is it presented? We should be careful not to change the pov against sources to meet coi requests. --Hipal (talk) 18:28, 2 June 2026 (UTC)
Many thanks @RogerYg, to add "purportedly" as per your suggestion sounds like a reasonable solution to me. Would it work to change these phrases:
  • "Since 2019, the secretive group has come under [...]"
  • "SIF has been considered a secretive organization that disavows [...]"
...to:
  • "Since 2019, the purportedly secretive group has come under [...]"
  • "SIF is purportedly a secretive organization. They have disavowed [...]"
/Urbourbo (talk) 20:21, 2 June 2026 (UTC)
Proposal rejected for reasons stated. This article has a long history of editors attempting to ignore or downplay references. Let's not continue that.

And please review past comments of this very topic. --Hipal (talk) 00:13, 3 June 2026 (UTC)

Just to be clear, I have already accepted that several reliable sources have described the organization as secretive. I am not suggesting that these should be ignored or downplayed, and it's good that this is now supported by inline citations.
My suggestion was simply to add attribution in the text so that the characterization is clearly tied to the relevant sources. However, I was also happy with @RogerYg's alternative suggestion to use the word "purportedly" instead, or another similar wording that clarifies that the characterization originates from sources.
I'll leave it to uninvolved editors to determine whether attribution or a similar qualifying formulation would improve the wording. /Urbourbo (talk) 21:13, 4 June 2026 (UTC)
You're both wasting time by ignoring the past discussions. --Hipal (talk) 22:35, 4 June 2026 (UTC)
Reliable sources, not anonymous editor's personal views, determine whether content in those sources is factual or opinion. The notion the group is secretive is stated as fact in the sources. Cambial foliar❧ 23:47, 4 June 2026 (UTC)


Regarding my point 1 above on sourcing, I'll add these with a coi edit myself soon unless there are any objections or concerns here. /Urbourbo (talk) 23:01, 19 April 2026 (UTC)

Now done. /Urbourbo (talk) 13:50, 21 April 2026 (UTC)
4. Association with Tulsi Gabbard

In this final section, I suggest to repeat the year for the same reasons as above. I.e. at the end of this sentence: "SIF has received a great deal of media coverage due to Tulsi Gabbard's strong ties with the group" add "since 2019". Thanks in advance, /Urbourbo (talk) 14:01, 21 April 2026 (UTC)

Okay, yes adding 2019 makes sense. Thanks. RogerYg (talk) 06:54, 23 April 2026 (UTC)


Proposed revision — factual updates, citation fix, corrected books section, updated awards

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I am Scott H. Irwin, the subject of this article. I am disclosing my conflict of interest per Wikipedia's COI guidelines and am proposing the following changes rather than editing the article directly. The proposed changes: · Fix a broken citation in reference 4 (the OECD paper) · Correct and expand the books section to accurately reflect authorship · Add missing awards including two 2021 AAEA awards · Expand biographical content based on reliable independent sources · Remove the "multiple issues" flag by addressing sourcing and neutrality concerns throughout All claims are supported by citations to independent, reliable sources including AAEA award pages, the News-Gazette, Google Scholar, Wiley Online Library, and the New York Times. Proposed full wikitext follows:

Scott H. Irwin
Academic background
Alma materIowa State University (B.S.)
Purdue University (M.S., Ph.D.)
Academic work
DisciplineAgricultural economics; commodity markets
Websitescotthirwin.com

Scott H. Irwin is an American agricultural economist who holds the Laurence J. Norton Chair of Agricultural Marketing in the Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He is known for his research on commodity markets, speculation, and biofuels policy, and for his leadership of the farmdoc agricultural extension project at the University of Illinois. He has testified before the United States Congress and international bodies on commodity market regulation.


Requested edits (COI).

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COI Edit Request - Update Presentation Count

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I am requesting this edit as a representative of Scribd/SlideShare and have a conflict of interest. **Proposed change:**
SlideShare is an online platform featuring over 15 million presentations from subject matter experts
+
Slideshare is an online platform featuring 25 million presentations uploaded by subject matter experts.
**Reason:** The current figure of "over 15 million" is outdated. The updated figure of 25 million presentations is cited in a reliable, independent source. **Source:** MediaPost, "Mother Design Rebrands Scribd Modern Look Enhanced" — https://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/403758/mother-design-rebrands-scribd-modern-look-enhanced/ Islewis (talk) 20:10, 25 March 2026 (UTC)
Done Discourses on Livvy (talk · contribs) 02:16, 26 March 2026 (UTC)


URL Update

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I am requesting this edit as a representative of Scribd and have a conflict of interest.

  • Requested change: Replace the URL in the Infobox with

https://www.scribdinc.com/

  • Reason: The current URL is for Scribd the product, this URL is for

the company overall. Thanks! ~~~~ Islewis (talk) 13:49, 24 June 2026 (UTC)

Done Completed under the WP:ELOFFICIAL policy with requestor's reasoning. FlammablePizza (talk) 15:54, 26 June 2026 (UTC)
@FlammablePizza: Thank you! Islewis (talk) 15:27, 7 July 2026 (UTC)


Infobox update #2

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Hello, I am requesting this edit as a representative of Scribd and have a conflict of interest.

  • Request: In the Infobox, change the Subsidiaries field to Products

and add Scribd and Fable.

  • Reason: "Subsidiaries" is an inaccurate field, these are products

offered by Scribd, Inc. The company has four products: Scribd, Everand, SlideShare and Fable. This information is already verified in the article body. Thanks, ~~~~ Islewis (talk) 15:29, 7 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: corrections and additions (disclosed paid editor)

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I am a paid editor working on behalf of Sean Mason. Per WP:PAID, I am disclosing this conflict of interest and am not editing the article directly. I have already made this disclosure on my user page. Please review the following itemized requests, each with a source. I've kept each change small and specific to make review easier, and I'm happy to answer questions about any of them.

1. Lead section: factual corrections

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Current text:

Sean Mason is an American jazz pianist, composer, and record producer. He was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2024 and has been the recipient of a Bessie Award and Bistro Award. In 2023, he released his debut album, The Southern Suite, and in 2024 co-released Chrome Valley with Mahogany L. Browne's and My Ideal with Catherine Russell. In 2025, he released, A Breathe of Fresh Air.

Requested text:

Sean Mason is an American jazz pianist, composer, and record producer. He has been nominated for a Grammy Award, and is the recipient of a Bessie Award and Bistro Award. In 2023, he released his debut album, The Southern Suite; in 2024, he co-released Chrome Valley with poet Mahogany L. Browne and My Ideal with vocalist Catherine Russell. In 2025, he released A Breath of Fresh Air.

Reason: Three factual/grammar corrections:

  • "nominated...in 2024" is misleading — the nomination was announced for the 67th Annual Grammy Awards, held February 2025.[1]
  • "Mahogany L. Browne's" has a stray possessive.
  • "A Breathe of Fresh Air" is a misspelling; the correct title is "A Breath of Fresh Air".[2]

2. Early life and education: add missing details

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Current text ends with:

...At age 17, Mason won the inaugural McGlohon Young Jazz Competition, an award that included an opportunity to perform as guest soloist with Delfeayo Marsalis.

Requested addition (new paragraph after that sentence):

In 2016, Mason enrolled at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where he studied jazz under John Salmon. In 2017, while attending UNC Greensboro, Mason met Branford Marsalis, who was giving lessons there...

Reason: Adds his undergraduate enrollment year and named teacher, which the current article omits. Also note the competition's full name is the "Loonis McGlohon Young Jazz Competition."[3]

3. Career section: correct Broadway role description

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Current text:

In theater, Mason has been involved in various musical roles in Broadway productions such as Hadestown and Phantom of the Opera and has served as music director for The Soapbox Presents, a Harlem-based performing arts organizabtion.

Requested text:

In theater, Mason has contributed to Broadway productions, serving as on-call pianist for Hadestown and as music copyist for The Phantom of the Opera. From 2020 to 2024, he served as Artistic Director of The Soapbox Presents, a Harlem-based performing arts organization.

Reason: Fixes a typo ("organizabtion"), and corrects/specifies his roles — he was Artistic Director of Soapbox Presents (not "music director"), and his Broadway roles were specific (on-call pianist / music copyist), not general.[4]

4. Career section: add reception detail for The Southern Suite

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Requested addition (end of Southern Suite paragraph):

...received favorable reviews.[19] The Bitter Southerner named it one of the Best Southern Albums of 2023.[5]

5. Career section: replace vague sentence about A Breath of Fresh Air

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Current text:

Later that same year Mason released, A Breath of Fresh Air, which received a fair amount of radio airplay and favorable reviews.

Requested text:

Later that same year, Mason released A Breath of Fresh Air on Taylor Christian Records. The album debuted at number four on the JazzWeek chart[6] and was included in Goldmine's "Best of the Best" jazz releases of 2025.[7]

Reason: Replaces an unsourced, vague claim ("a fair amount of airplay") with specific, cited facts.

6. Discography section: add missing sourced entries

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The article currently has no dedicated Discography section. I'd suggest adding one, sourced to the reviews/announcements already cited elsewhere in the article and above:

As leader
  • The Southern Suite (2023)
  • A Breath of Fresh Air (2025)
As co-leader
  • Chrome Valley — with Mahogany L. Browne (2024)
  • My Ideal — with Catherine Russell (2024)

7. Awards section: add Bessie Award detail and fellowships

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The article mentions Mason is a Bessie Award recipient but doesn't specify what it was for. Requested addition:

The Bessie Award was for Outstanding Sound Design and Music Composition (39th Annual Bessie Awards, 2023), awarded for The Jazz Continuum (with Charles Turner).

I'd also suggest adding, if editors agree it is due weight:

Mason received a Chamber Music America New Jazz Works Grant in 2025, and was named an Arts & Science Council Creative Renewal Fellow in 2026.
edit

Requested additions to the External links section — official site and verifiable database/social profiles:

I did not include social media (Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, X, YouTube) in this request, since Wikipedia's external links guideline (WP:ELMINOFFICIAL) generally allows only one official social link if it's the primary channel, and I'd defer to reviewer judgment on which one (if any) is appropriate to include, per WP:ELOFFICIAL.

References

  1. "Catherine Russell and Sean Mason Earn GRAMMY Nomination for My Ideal (Dot Time Records)". CatherineRussell.net. November 2024.
  2. "Sean Mason: A Breath of Fresh Air". Jazzwise.
  3. "Sean Mason". Loop Productions. {{cite web}}: Text "Loop productions" ignored (help)
  4. "Sean Mason". Loop Productions. {{cite web}}: Text "Loop productions" ignored (help)
  5. "Best Southern Albums of 2023". The Bitter Southerner.
  6. "Sean Mason: A Breath of Fresh Air". UK Jazz News.
  7. "Fourth Quarter Jazz Roundup: End of Year 2025". Goldmine.

Stevieee28 (talk) 11:56, 1 July 2026 (UTC)

Partly done: I've enacted some of the requested changes- copyediting was done and added things like "The Bitter Southerner named it one of the Best Southern Albums of 2023." which were cleanly verified and appeared in what seems to be a reputable publication. Other requests I did not enact. For example, I don't see the provided UK Jazz News source discussing any charts or rankings, so I have not added "The album debuted at number four on the JazzWeek chart". I am also a little wary of extra specificity about his Broadway work based on a source that seems to be a musical artist promoter company. Thank you for disclosing your COI and using the edit request process. Zzz plant (talk) 20:01, 6 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request: Add additional review scores

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I have a conflict of interest regarding this article (see disclosure on my user page), so I'd like to propose the following change via an edit request rather than making it myself:

Proposal: In the {{Video game reviews}} table in the "Release and reception" section, add two additional reviewers whose scores are already cited in the prose:

  • Retro Dodo: 8.5/10
  • Daily Nintendo: 4/5 stars

Specifically, the table would change as follows:

Current: {{Video game reviews |NWR=9/10<ref name="NWR"/> }}

Proposed: {{Video game reviews |NWR=9/10<ref name="NWR"/> |rev1=Retro Dodo |rev1Score=8.5/10<ref name="RetroDodo"/> |rev2=Daily Nintendo |rev2Score=4/5 stars<ref name="DailyNintendo"/> }}

Both sources already have full citations in the prose (or will be added with named refs). Retro Dodo is listed at WP:VG/RS. Thanks for checking! Attackemartin (talk) 09:24, 19 June 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. I've edited the template to the correct one for you already. pattersonuwu njz (talk) 14:43, 19 June 2026 (UTC)

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