Talk:Gigi Ibrahim/GA1
Latest comment: 2 years ago by Vacant0 in topic GA Review
GA Review
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Reviewer: Vacant0 (talk · contribs) 12:39, 6 January 2022 (UTC)
Hi! I will review this article due to the ongoing GAN backlog. I will start the review soon. Cheers, --Vacant0 (talk) 12:39, 6 January 2022 (UTC)
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Comments
editGeneral
edit- Image caption can be shortened to just "Ibrahim in 2011".
- Done
- Add birth location in the infobox → Long Beach, California, U.S.
- Done
- Implement a horizontal list in the infobox → {{hlist|Citizen journalist|activist}}
- Huh, I've never used that template! Neat. Done
- Are there sources that call her "Gihan Ibrahim"?
- Revolutionary socialist seems to not be that important to be mentioned in the first sentence. It can be moved somewhere elsewhere in the lede.
- Done – fits well in second sentence, so I moved it there.
- Only 21k bytes–the lede will have to get rewritten. Twitter is linked twice, "
her political views were rarely mentioned
" mentioned twice.- Trimmed the lede a bit, and fixed those specific issues. How much more is needed?
- @Ezlev: Here, I re-wrote it a bit.
- Gigi Ibrahim (also mentioned as Gihan Ibrahim) is an Egyptian citizen journalist and activist. During the Egyptian revolution in 2011, she reported events about the protests and became a face of the events for much of the Western media.
- Ibrahim was born in Long Beach, California to Egyptian parents although she soon moved to Egypt, where she lived until she was 14. Her family subsequently returned to California, where she began attending a local Catholic high school. She graduated from high school in 2005, attending Orange Coast College at first before transferring to The American University in Cairo in 2008. She became involved with the Revolutionary Socialists organization and graduated in 2010 with a degree in political science.
- Ibrahim became an organizer of the protests in 2011 and used Twitter to document events that took place during the revolution. Western news media treated her as a face of the revolution. After the 2013 coup d'état, Ibrahim chose to stay and continue her involvement in activism and protests. She later co-founded a shoe manufacturing company in Cairo.
- Trimmed the lede a bit, and fixed those specific issues. How much more is needed?
- Add her birth date in the "
Early life
" section.- Done, although the degree of precision based on the sources isn't great.
Images
edit- All alright, would prefer the addition of alt texts.
- Alt texts added, though they might not be great.
Sources
edit- Move the Ourdan 2011 source to "
Early life
" section.- Done
- "Some find Time Magazine cover controversial" has a dead URL.
- I just noticed that too, and I can't seem to find an archive. I've removed that source – luckily another source supports the same content. I've tried to run IAbot to prevent future issues with other sources, but AbuseFilter seems to be blocking it.
- Unlink Quehacer and Centro de Estudios y Promocion del Desarrollo.
- Done
- Rest of the sources are alright.
@Ezlev: On hold until these issues get fixed. --Vacant0 (talk) 18:44, 6 January 2022 (UTC)
- Issues addressed, Vacant0! Thanks for reviewing this! ezlev (user/tlk/ctrbs) 19:16, 6 January 2022 (UTC)
- Promoting. Good job. Vacant0 (talk) 19:47, 6 January 2022 (UTC)