Talk:I Don't Care (Cheryl song)/GA1
Latest comment: 9 years ago by Calvin999 in topic GA Review
GA Review
editThe following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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Reviewer: Calvin999 (talk · contribs) 20:50, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
- General
- Info box
- Genres should be in alphabetical order
- Lead
- , John Newman → , and John Newman
- which features breezy synthesizers and pumping bassline and lyrically sees Cheryl taking on a "fuck you" attitude to former lovers and critics. → which features breezy synthesizers, a pumping bassline and contains a "fuck you" lyrical sentiment.
- "fuck you" → fuck you
- Upon its release, → Not needed
- The song became a commercial success, debuting at → It debuted
- , giving Cheryl tenth number-one single, including those from when she was part of Girls Aloud, and fifth as a solo artist, making Cheryl the first and only English female to do this, overtaking then current record sharers Geri Halliwell and Rita Ora. → ,It became her fifth number-one as a solo artist, breaking her tie with Geri Halliwell and Rita Ora. It also became her tenth number-one song including those achieved with Girls Aloud.
- past collaborator → Not needed
- The music video was met with → It received
- ; the performance was questioned by fans and critics, who accused Cheryl of miming. → , which later drew accusations of lip-syncing.
- Background
- Following the release of Cheryl's third studio album, A Million Lights, in June 2012 and embarking on her debut solo headlining tour, Cole confirmed that a Girls Aloud's reunion would occur in November 2012.[2][3] The group released their second greatest hits compilation, Ten on 26 November 2012 and In 2013, the group embarked on Ten: The Hits Tour.[4] In March 2013, following the completion of the tour, Girls Aloud released a statement via their official Twitter to confirm that they were splitting permanently.[5][6] → Not needed. "Crazy Stupid Love" might be better home for this perhaps as it was the first single and bares a little bit of relevance.
- Chart performance
- It charted in other places than just the UK and Belgium, and this section should reflect that.
- her ninth number-one single → the lead says ten?
- Live performance
- This is such a small section, that I would move it into the Music video section and re-name that section as Promotion
- Remixes
- I'd also remove this section and instead put it at the end of Critical reception
- Credits and personnel
- I'd make this two columns to reduce the amount of white space in the article.
- External links
- Should be after References section
- References
- 2 is missing work
- 3 is missing accessdate
- Some have work and publisher, others just have publisher. I think it's generally accepted that publishers are not included in articles anymore
- 10 needs an accessdate, a date and to have Digital Spy not in italics
- 16 is missing work, date and accessdate
- 18 is missing work, date and accessdate
- 19 is missing date and accessdate
- 22 is missing work and accessdate
- 28 is missing date and accessdate
- 33 missing date an accessdate
- 34 missing date and accessdate
- Outcome
Honestly, this article feels rushed. There are numerous basic errors in terms of grammar, factual information and referencing. I'm sorry but I'm failing this article. — ₳aron 15:43, 26 April 2015 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.