Talk:Jonathan King/Archive 1

Latest comment: 14 years ago by SlimVirgin in topic Appeal
Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 5

This is a heading to fix the TOC

Just wanted to record my reasons for removing the reference to sex offences from the first paragraph. I'm no fan of the man, and the offences were appalling, but Jonathan King is only famous for his involvement in pop music. The sex offences, while extremely serious, are not the most important thing to say about him. The first sentence as it stands has 5 words about his music and 25 about sex offences. This is disproportionate. I feel the article has fallen into the common trap of stressing recent events too much. There's the same problem with the external links: 5 out of 8 links concern his sex offences. --Auximines 11:22, 10 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Auximines comments from three years ago needed reviving - he was quite right and it was getting out of shape again! Meelar 13:03, 16 Jun 2007 (UTC)

I don't really know anything about the case. It's just that unless it's in the lead, it gets buried in the bottom, and I thought we should put all important details in the lead for people looking for a quick overview. Best, Meelar 13:03, 10 Jun 2004 (UTC)
As a compromise, how about a little more pop and a little less sex? :) Something like this:
"Jonathan King is the stage name of Kenneth George King (born December 6, 1944, London), a major figure in UK pop music. He has been a pop producer, singer, publisher and writer since the mid-1960s. He is currently in prison for sexual offences against boys."
And reduce the 5 sex offence links to 1 or 2.
P.S. Just noticed: it seems most of the first sentence was plagiarised from the first external link, so it needs rewriting somehow.
--Auximines 14:01, 10 Jun 2004 (UTC)
You're rewrite seems acceptable (again, I don't know anything about the case), although I'd suggest a little more specificity, e.g. "He is currently in prison for sex offences against (X) underage boys". As far as the links, I'd say leave them in--we have 3 pop and five molestation. If anything needs to be done, add another music link or 3--maybe some from his bands? Just my thoughts. Best wishes, Meelar 20:36, 10 Jun 2004 (UTC)

He's guilty, right? [posted 31/3/05 by anon IP - please sign your comments]

Look, wikipedia is not The Sun. We must keep NPOV, and not make any assumptions. These "He is guilty" comments in the main article are vandalism. If you want to masturbate over his presumed guilt then go and read the rhetoric in the tabloids. The JPS 23:37, 31 Mar 2005 (UTC)

I came for first time to find out more about Entertainment in the USA - one of my cherished memories as a teen/twentysomething. It hardly mentions it but goes on about his convictions which we all know about anyway. Lots of biased commentary like "disgraced"; Oscar Wilde's Wiki concentrates on his brilliant plays, books and poems, noy on his being gay. For God's sake, Wikipedia is meant to be a balanced factual account, not a tabloid (see The JPS above). Jennifer

I don't understand the "presumed guilt". He was legally charged with the crime and served time, thus he's guilty.

I'm happy to concede that. It was a response to the sentence in the main article concerning an appeal, and also the amount of infantile 'he is guilty' comments. The JPS 10:23, 4 May 2005 (UTC)
The only dodgy bit was the "delighted" adjectival phrase, which I've removed. The rest of it is absolutely fine. The JPS 22:10, 19 March 2006 (UTC)

Actually it's not. the line "to quash his convictions" is not needed and too non-NPOV. We already mentioned he claims to be innocent, so there is no need to add he is hoping his convictions will be quashed, all that's needed is a mention of a future appeal, unless (of course) any one can prove that JK will get his convctions quashed. 66.66.161.1 21:44, 7 June 2006 (UTC)

I'm curious to know how he intends to quash them - as I understand it (and I can't find anything on on his site about this amongst the noise) he doesn't deny that sex happened, but says it was consensual. It may well have been, but at the time the age of consent for male homosexual acts was 21, and for indecent assault with someone under 16, there was also no defence of thinking that the person was, in fact, at least 16. Lovingboth 12:53, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
The age of consent may have been higher in the past, but I don't think that is relevant to King's case. By the time King was convicted, the gay age of consent had been reduced to 16 - you cannot be convicted for doing something that's legal, even if it was illegal at the time that you did it. All of the charges King faced related to under-16s (specifically boys aged 14 and 15). As for his claims of innocence, at the time of his release he said: "I am not guilty of ever going with anyone who didn't want to go with me and I am not guilty of going with children." [1] Make of that what you will. 217.155.20.163 20:58, 7 November 2006 (UTC)

Furthermore. Is the word "wealthy" needed? I haven't removed that yet, but unless anyone can prove he is wealthy (as of 2006) then I think this should be removed. JK himself has done nothing but moan and groan about how he's not got much money since he got out of jail. 66.66.161.1 21:44, 7 June 2006 (UTC)

I must tell you I have just viewed his film Vile Pervert The Musical on www.VilePervert.com (I was nervous typing that in!!!) and I am now convinced he was seriously stitched up. You should take a look - it is not as awful as you might fear. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 193.95.75.249 (talk) 09:37, 2 July 2008 (UTC)

Record Of The Year

It's claimed here that King's "Una Paloma Blanca" was named "Record Of The Year" in 1975, yet later in the article the "Record Of The Year" phenomenon is credited to King himself! Did King's record "win" an award he himself invented?217.155.20.163 23:06, 21 October 2006 (UTC)

I think he won the 'Record of the Year' award at the Ivor Novellos in 1975. His 'Record of the Year' music awards started in 1998. Confusing!

like the idea above that he wrote this entry himself - wasnt he in prison when 99% of it was on here? or did he write it from prison? strikes me there are as many contributors with a negative agenda as there are positives.

JK has actually been out of the clink for quite some time. In any case, he is a bit of an internet fanatic - putting loads of video diaries onto YouTube, and you should look at the message boards on www.kingofhits.co.uk - loads of entries each day and at all hours of the night. I find it very difficult to imagine that somebody that internet-literate would not want to amend their Wikipedia entry. Anyway, wouldn't a solution to all of this suspicion be to lock amendment of his article to new/anonymous users? Milvinder 00:03, 4 November 2006 (UTC)
Having said all of this, there are people who are anonymously editing the profile for the worse re: JK, although not so anonymously that they haven't discussed how they are doing it online at www.malesurvivor.org - one of the forums, couldn't find it on Google just now but you get a running commentary of how their edits get removed then they try putting them on again.

- - :Milvinder 17:14, 14 November 2006 (UTC)

I cannot stand JK or any of his music but Milvinder and 217 155 20 163 seem as biased against him as they claim the entry is possibly composed by his PR - so I spent some time checking the facts; for example, leaving the crimes aside, I found that ORSON were indeed ignored in Los Angeles where I happen to live and that it was JK who heard them after his release and raved about them on his Tipsheet Message Board..... here is an excerpt from another music site - the Record Of The Day in the UK.....

"Our music editor Joe Taylor first heard about Orson on a visit to the Tip Sheet messageboard. Joe tracked Orson down via MySpace and we took the decision to feature “No Tomorrow” as our daily soundclip on August 11. The response Orson received from being featured on RotD was phenomenal, though not surprising for a fully-rounded band who already had a completed album packed with hit songs. Crucially however, being featured as an RotD meant that our recommendation of Orson was sent to the inboxes of execs around the world, who were instantly able to hear the track, visit the band’s site and get their own feel for the group".

They seem to claim credit but admit it was JK who started it. I think the entry is reasonably fair and agree with The JPS above.

For the record, I'm not heavily biased against JK! I'm just being a bit of a devil's advocate, not to mention a bit of an anorak in trying to spot the signs of somebody editing their own profile, for example, if there is any positive news re: JK the profile is updated swiftly and anonymously, and any changes such as changing "boys" into "teenagers" are also anonymous. I don't suppose JK is the only celeb to edit their own profile but at least people shouldn't make it too obvious! If it were not for the likes of me then every celeb's profile would turn into a hagiography.


I'm not biased against King either - just wanted to point out some apparent anomalies in the article. I do like some of his music, for what it's worth! 217.155.20.163 23:34, 19 November 2006 (UTC)

Compensation

The Daily Mail on 19 February 2005 revealed £156,644 had been paid out in compensation to 14 men (he was only convicted of offences against five) by the Government compensation board (an indication of possible motive).

I'm curious to know how this compensation system operates, particularly in relation to the nine men that King was not convicted of offences against. How can one claim such compensation if it can not be proven beyond reasonable doubt that a crime took place? 217.155.20.163 23:29, 19 November 2006 (UTC)

I would assume that the system operates on the basis of proving liability on the balance of probabilities rather than guilt beyond reasonable doubt. OJ was sued by the relatives of the people he was acquitted of murdering, so I guess it's a bit like that. Milvinder 01:45, 20 November 2006 (UTC)

Current article violates LIVING policy

The last two sections have been removed in strict accordance with our WP:BLP policy. Please do not replace them until they've been fully referenced, citing reliable sources. Thank you, Can't sleep, clown will eat me 09:31, 22 November 2006 (UTC)

Constant vandalising by same user - suspect those noticed by Milvinder above; reverted.


If people really are trying to wreck JK's reputation by altering Wikipedia, I can't quite see the point as it's been given a pretty comprehensive kicking already and Wikipedia hardly has as much influence as The Sun.... Milvinder 14:50, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
Fed up with people trying to support King but even more those hiding their obsession behind bent logic. Wikipedia is not a tabloid. We give simple facts not emotive rubbish. All his career - good and bad - seems properly covered without playing silly games.


Wikipedia deals with facts not vendettas. The edits reverted by Milvinder, Clown, James and other admins show the intent of the changes and are childish and malicious.
I think this will probably be the last contribution I make to this debate or indeed the JK article. It's all turned into a running battle between anonymous users and those who try to delete their amendments, and I'm sure there are more interesting subjects covered on Wikipedia. Milvinder 10:54, 28 November 2006 (UTC)


I noticed that some users' have made lots of edits to the JK page, mainly vandalism, but no other contribution to wikipedia. Is there not a policy of blocking further edits from the IP of users like this? DavidFarmbrough 09:41, 29 November 2006 (UTC)


OK, I said I wouldn't be joining the debate again but here goes... The contribution by Daveegan06 proves why this article is getting to be a good candidate for being protected by anti-vandalism measures. Contributions are supposed to be from a neutral point of view, and as ERcheck has said, it is already mentioned that he is a convicted paedophile. I don't see the point of these persistent subjective changes because as I've said before, his reputation is already pretty dire, if you asked people what word they most associated with 'Jonathan King' it would be 'paedophile'. Wikipedia is not a tabloid newspaper. Milvinder 21:04, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
  • It's not really worth discussing the madness of the vandal; we might as well mention every individual member of Genesis and 10cc three or four times if we were to repeat endless items. I should write here that I was only inspired to look up this Wikipedia article after watching a TV show in which the accusers were clearly unreliable and I commented to my wife that it was extraordinary they had been believed and she said they hadn't; if I'd paid attention their allegations had been thrown out. I still cant stand King but the obsessive insanity of the vandals on here have made me (and my wife) far more sympathetic to the poor man. Or should I say the poor ugly man?
Well, as I said previously, it's not a matter of whether or not what you say is true. It's that Wikipedia isn't the right place to be making such attacks. If somebody has been convicted of something you are quite at liberty to set up your own website and say whatever you like there without the threat of libel. As for the victims being distraught on reading the Wikipedia entry, I wouldn't think they would be any more distraught than on seeing an advert with one of JK's tunes in it in which the word "NONCE" failed to appear in huge flashing letters all over the screen. The guy's been convicted so that should be the end of the matter really. Although some might take issue with the harshness of the penalty, the fact that he is guilty has already been proved (at least pending an appeal) so no need to keep highlighting the fact. Milvinder 18:56, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
It's interesting how King's critics emphasise his "ugliness", as if that makes his crimes somehow worse. I suppose if he was a hunky 20-something male model, it would be perfectly alright for him to diddle around with younger boys? 217.34.39.123 11:38, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
It already states that he has been convicted of sexual offences against teenagers, then in the second paragraph specifies exactly how old those teenagers were. A pretty unambiguous statement of fact which, along with other statements, means that the article is hardly a glowing testimonial. And whatever his crimes, and whatever one might think of his music, he did have a global hit with 'Everybody's Gone to the Moon', he was a top record producer etc. etc. So any neutral account would have to mention all of that as well. I believe that the article is pretty neutral in tone now (unlike when the subtle pro-King edits were being made). Milvinder 20:20, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

Is this true...?

The article states "The convictions are currently being reviewed by the official Government body, the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC)." My concern is that this is a line that JK has given (like Jeffrey Archer's oft-mentioned appeal) and that it hasn't actually happened - I can't find a reference to a CCRC review on the BBC news website but if someone can source this it should remain - otherwise it should be modified to state that King intends to do this. DavidFarmbrough 15:04, 20 December 2006 (UTC)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4660558.stm

added to main article

If you check out the following hyperlink you will see his columns for Inside Time, the national newspaper for prisoners: http://www.insidetime.org/king.htm.
OK, so JK wrote it all but still it's from an independent publication so what appears there must be true. In his May 2006 column it says at the end that the matters were being referred to the CCRC, more recent columns haven't specifically mentioned about this, so what the exact state of play is, I don't know. I believe he is being represented by "lawyer" Giovanni di Stefano, so it may say something on his site. Things like this only tend to make headlines if the CCRC referral has been successful, if it hasn't or it's still work in progress they are hardly going to put out a press release. Milvinder 18:56, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
"JK wrote it all but still it's from an independent publication so what appears there must be true" Sorry, but that isn't necessarily the case. The quote from King's May 2006 Inside Time column says in the third person (indicating that it was written by someone other than King, but not proving it) "He recently heard that the Criminal Cases Review Commission has decided to re-open their review into his convictions, as he discovered he was in America when one of the convictions was meant to have been committed in London". I don't have any axe to grind against him, but I think this article needs to be very carefully monitored to avoid POV. THE CCRC has a searchable database on its web site of those cases referred, and if this happened in May 2006, then seven months later, wouldn't this have happened by now? DavidFarmbrough 09:05, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
I dont give a shit one way or the other and havent bothered to change it back but since there are dozens of links on Google (this taken from contact music) I think your axe is blunt David! Quote - "According to British newspaper The Mail On Sunday, CCRC commissioner TONY FOSTER has written a letter to King's lawyers, which reads, "I have decided that the Commission should accept your client's renewed application for review of conviction."—Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.12.7.244 (talkcontribs) 11:47, 21 December 2006(UTC)

It now seems to have gone the other way. I've adapted. Special:Contributions/Joneseyboy2007


Please, under no circumstances use the term "convicted paedophile", you are conflating two things (pedophilia, a mental affliction) with criminal behavior. Most pedophiles are not offenders (they are, rather, sad and lonely but law-abiding people) and most child sex offenders are not pedophiles (they are, rather, people who aren't picky about who they screw and have no character or impulse control). Use "child sex criminal" or something like that instead, thx. Herostratus 17:57, 2 January 2007 (UTC)

Please elaborate, im not sure if im intrigued or just confused. cheersEnglandtillidie 18:05, 2 January 2007 (UTC)

Dave, stop it. It's been explained to you. Stop this childish, simplistic, tabloidesque vendetta. Reviewing your contributions, some the edits you have made are embarrassingly immature. The JPStalk to me 18:11, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
It needs to be carefully worded so not make Wikipedia look like a tacky tabloid. If the word 'pedophile' has POV/accuracy issues, then we should use more encyclopedic accurate language. This article is lacking inline sources, which is dismal for such a controversial figure. Please see Chris Langham as a fairly decent model of how to handle sensitive issues. The JPStalk to me 00:33, 3 January 2007 (UTC)
WHAT IS WIKIPEDIA FOR? from Arthur Grant

I came here looking for the answer to a pub question last night "Who sang The Sun Has Got His Hat On in the 1970s?" (Answer Jonathan King under the name NEMO - I've added this - found it elsewhere). My parents know Jonathan King for the Moon song. I know him for Genesis and hits in the Seventies. My kids know him from Entertainment USA which they watched religiously. A friend who is a Eurovision nut knows him for steering the UK to a WIN in 1997. "Dave" under many names but similar spelling here knows him as a convicted sex offender. The main page rightly reflects all these things.

But this discussion page reads like the letters page of the News Of The World! Crazy nitpicking and tabloid insanity.

We check Wikipedia for accurate information about Roman Polanski's films, not hysterical claims about whether we should describe him as a convicted paedophile!

Facts not malice. As a point of accuracy, surely nobody is convicted of paedophilia just as nobody is a convicted heterosexual. ARTHUR GRANT (172.200.219.46 06:03, 3 January 2007 (UTC)) 3 January 2007

As an aside, sexual attraction to teenagers is called ephebophilia, so maybe JK's offences were really ephebophilic in nature. But that's just splitting hairs over terminology, doesn't make such offences any less serious. Milvinder 20:30, 3 January 2007 (UTC)
As the article says, ephebophilia is sexual attraction to pubescent adolescents, not teenagers per se. Sexual attraction to a physically mature 18-year-old would not (I hope!) be called ephebophilia, and the phrase "splitting hairs" is a little unfortunate given what's being discussed... ;-)
Anyway, all of these semantics arise from confusing paedophilia (which is a sexual orientation, or a psychological state, or whatever you want to call it) with actual, physical, crimes such as child molestation and making child pornography. Such crimes may be motivated by paedophilia, but that's not the same as paedophilia itself being a crime.
Calling someone like King a "convicted paedophile" is akin to calling someone jailed for bank robbery a "convicted greedy person". Firstly, it's very sloppy, and secondly, it presupposes that greed was the motive for the robbery. The phrase "convicted paedophile" may be a tabloid convention in Britain and elsewhere, but I don't think that's a good reason to use it in a Wikipedia article. AdorableRuffian 15:51, 27 May 2007 (UTC)

thank you

thanks to whoever redid the opening paragraph, it reads a lot fairer, and saves me getting into trouble again, cheersDaveegan06 01:34, 17 January 2007 (UTC)

Everyone's Gone to the Moon

If he was born in 1944, King was not a teenage undergraduate in 1965. IXIA 21:16, 6 February 2007 (UTC)

Maybe he sang and recorded it as a teenager, then it was released when he was 21 - and add on some further delay between it being released and becoming a hit. Not that I'm an expert on the music industry or anything, but that's just a guess. Milvinder 18:41, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

Hello!

Hi folks - and apologies that i didn't leave a note here before making some of the changes the other day.....

I'm going to put some of them back - here's some of the reasoning.....

1) The opening - let's just cut to the chase and describe what JK accurately and fairly - i would say that means he's a record producer and convicted sex offender - both of these aspects of his life / career are very well known i would say.....

2) I think it's a huge stretch to associate JK with Madonna via. Abba, don't you? - It just seems to be a clumsy attempt at claiming credit where none is due - i don't think anyone would claim that JK was behind Madonna's single (maybe they do!? maybe there's a source???) - so this doesn't belong in the article.....


...... Purples 23:31, 27 May 2007 (UTC)

the conviction review thing.....

...I've taken it out for now, because it actually only seems to say that King claims that his case is under review (or was over a year ago...) - it only really makes sense to say that King claims this - but I think that it's probably better just left out... Purples 00:12, 28 May 2007 (UTC)

Opening section

He continues to protest his innocence of these convictions, insisting that anything that did go on was consensual with persons over the age of 16 years.

This isn't really backed up by the cited source, namely a statement on King's website. No specific age is mentioned there, and he doesn't talk about things "that did go on", just things he claims didn't happen.

Actually, I'm struggling to follow the logic of his statement, and to be honest I would advise against citing it as a source. My interpretation of it is that he isn't denying that these people (the alleged victims, who he calls false accusers) visited his home "again and again", but he is denying that anything illegal happened. I can't be sure, however. AdorableRuffian 15:21, 28 May 2007 (UTC)


Good point Adorable; I think perhaps it should read "Insisting that anything that did go on with other people was..." - he's saying his convictions were wrong, and nothing sexual went on at all with those men who continued to visit him again and again, but he admits to having had relations with both genders over 16 when it was illegal (though it is no longer) with one of those genders.

There is definitely a homophobic aspect to his prosecution.

No, he was convicted of assaulting 14 and 15 year olds. If he was straight, it would still be a crime, plus he was much older at the time. I won't go into the 'ins and outs' of speculating about people's reasoning on this, but it's not necessarily homophobic- it's paedophilophobic.:)


I think the point is - would any prosecutions have been proceeded with if the claimants had been female? Bill Wyman, for example, and many other pop stars with "groupies" in the 60's and 70's? The original allegations seem to be from people who were over 16 at the time (still illegal for male2male then). Those got dropped and replaced conveniently with 14/15 year olds. It does look suspiciously like disguised homophobia but "definitely" might be a bit strong.

"miscarriages of justice"

"He continues to campaign for his own convictions to be quashed, and for other similar but less high profile miscarriages of justice to be corrected."

This is POV, shouldn't this be "He continues to campaign for his own convictions to be quashed, and for other similar but less high profile cases he considers to be miscarriages of justice to be corrected." Because they are not all found to be miscarriages of justice, are they? It's just his belief/argument.Merkinsmum 18:21, 16 June 2007 (UTC)

"over the age of consent"

The article when I found it said that King says on his website that the boys were over the age of consent. He doesn't. He denies it happened at all, and says he is a victim due to people wanting money from him due to his celebrity. This is what source (1) actually says

"No juror would have believed anyone would return again and again if they had not enjoyed themselves so, to avoid the obvious conclusion that nothing untoward had happened, the false accusers were told to say it had been with their consent.

In fact, it never happened. That was why they returned again and again. "

Note no claim that they were over 16.Merkinsmum 18:39, 16 June 2007 (UTC)

This has been covered above Merkinsmum and was generally agreed that you are right, he says it never happened, but whatever DID happen with others was with over 16's.

We don't want to get into these same complicated issues again so I've reverted to the agreed version 217.155.20.163 16.50, 8 July 2007 (UTC)

discussion over lead

hi again - i'm going to put the version back to the reworded lead, and having read the above would say that there's certainly not a clear consensus for an agreed version - there hasn't really been much debate. As i'm sure we're all aware - what we should be trying to do is write a balanced, fair article that reflects what various verifiable sources say about Jonathan King.

Off the bat, i would say that we would certainly need a source for the 40million record mark, probably one for the 'one of britain's top producers' line, and to reword the very beginning - for example i would say that while it's true he was a media personality, it seems his career in this regard has dwindled to the point where we can't really claim he is - also, virtually all of the post 2001 sources that my 'more than cursory, less than rigorous' search showed up refer to King as 'disgraced' or guilty of sexual offenses right at the outset.

That's my rationale for the lead as it is - thoughts? - Purples 00:45, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

Much of the earlier discussion was removed as it turned into a battle between those simply determined to focus on his convictions and those looking to be balanced. Wiki philosophy was much covered. It was concluded that the successes of the first 40 years warranted more attention and the convictions less. So the rewording was decided. This went on throughout 2004 when King was in prison and 2005 after his release. User:Arthur/Arthur 06:39, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

I can't see where the earlier discussion was removed - do you know where it has gone? - There are notes above from 2004 onwards, but not much substantive debate.

At this point, i think we've got to examine the whole thing properly - I would say without prejudice that it doesn't hold much sway that a previous agreement may or may not have been reached - what matters is that we don't go round and round the same arguments (it shouldn't be too hard to provide links to issues that have been discussed).

I'm going to revert once again, mainly because you haven't addressed my comments directly above (sourcing, weight and balance etc.) - thanks! - Purples 06:49, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

The last reversion also (accidently?) took out an edit of jossi's to refactor the page slightly in a way that made sense to me.... - Purples 06:51, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

The earlier discussion was partly removed - the points by Milvinder, Clown, James, JPS and others indicate it though. General consensus was that the opening covers everything without using emotive POV words like "disgraced" and balances his career with the more recent scandal without getting into a tabloid approach. Sourcing and references to such points as "40 million records sold" should be found and inserted if possible (I've never seen any such claims actually specified with facts, for any artiste, even The Beatles, and suspect every boast is exaggerated). User:Arthur/Arthur 18:48, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

Just found this in The Guardian article by Jon Ronson...

It was a remarkable career path: a lovely, plaintive debut, followed by a string of silly, deliberately irritating hits.

One of King's friends later suggests to me that it was his look - the big nose, the glasses, the weird lop-sided grin - that determined this career path, as if he somehow came to realise that it was his aesthetic destiny to play the clown. But one cannot categorise his career as a downward spiral from Everyone's Gone To The Moon onwards. In fact, he has sold 40 million records. He's had a hand in almost every musical movement since the mid-1960s - psychedelic, novelty bubblegum pop, alternative pop, Eurovision, the Bay City Rollers, 10CC, the Rocky Horror Show, Genesis, Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine, the Brit awards, and so on.

Within two years of leaving Cambridge, he was running Decca Records for Sir Edward Lewis, with his own West End offices and a Rolls-Royce parked outside. "Genesis," he once said, "would have become accountants and lawyers if I hadn't heard their concealed and budding musical talent when they were 15 years old."

He is at once seen to be the quintessential Broadway Danny Rose - the buffoonish loser who was forever nearly making it - and also a powerful multi-millionaire whose influence is as incalculable as it is overlooked. He's hosted radio shows in New York and London, presented the successful and long-running Entertainment USA TV series for the BBC, written two novels, created a political party - the Royalists - and published The Tip Sheet, an influential online industry magazine that, he claims, is responsible for bringing the Spice Girls, Oasis, Blur, Prodigy, R Kelly, and others "exploding on to musical success. We find and help break new stars around the world."

In 1997, he was honoured with a lifetime achievement award by the Music Industry Trust. In a letter read out at the ceremony, Tony Blair acknowledged King's "important contribution to one of this country's great success stories". A galaxy of stars - Peter Gabriel, Ozzy Osbourne, Simon Bates - came out to praise him.

It's at http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,3605,609185,00.html User:Arthur/Arthur 18:58, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

That's a good article....

Thanks for the link above ( [2] ) - and i rather think that the article itself goes someway to explaining my perspective - because it's one of the more detailed, and honest explorations of King's character and behaviour (i think - complete with quotes from JK about his respect for Jon Ronson!) - and almost all of the 10,000 words are to do with King's sexual behaviour and conviction for sexual offenses.

The 40 million reference from that article is good - but it's also pretty evident to me that the article also acts as a reference for the balance of the article as it was.

I think jossi's movement of the second paragraph in the lead describing the conviction to a separate section was fair, so am putting the whole lot back...

I'm also trying to get some extra eyes on this article to make sure that i'm not reading this one wrong.... Purples 23:27, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

Re : Discussion Removed

About the discussion removed thing - i've looked through the history of the page (you can browse every revision ever using the history tab at the top) and can't find any substantive discussion removed / archived anywhere - you're probably aware that if material is removed, then the wiki keeps an open record of its deletion.

I'd like to consider this point moot though - it's probably best not to refer to previous agreements as a means of argument or persuasion, particularly when we can't find them! - thanks, Purples 23:36, 9 July 2007 (UTC)

Material from the History of the Page

The Guardian article found by Arthur above also acts as a good source for the material relating to King's convictions removed here by Can't Sleep Clown person - i'm going to hold with the re-insertion of the material for now, because i'm not sure about the weighting of the article... but it would all be sourced at least.... hmmmm.... Purples 00:14, 10 July 2007 (UTC)

Good point but Wikipedia is surely intended as a factual overview not a detailed biography; there must be hundreds of other articles about other aspects of his career which could be referenced. Why simply pick on the latest? On the other hand he is disgraced in most peoples' eyes. Perhaps we should forget the earlier stuff and just concentrate on that. Point taken about earlier discussion - I must have imagined that protected stuff. getting bored - signing off and moving on to more interesting topics! User:Arthur/Arthur 04.54, 10 July 2007 (UTC)

Thanks for the note, Arthur - I'm sure there are other great articles and sources out there - i was just talking about the one that you found (that I quite liked!) - and I know it can get boring when you feel a bit stuck on particular issues - come back here anytime for more chit chat - hopefully not too dull! - Purples 00:31, 11 July 2007 (UTC)

THANK GOD FOR PURPLES at last someone ready to see KIng as the pervert he is and ignore the apologists. Daveegan06 09:14, 11 July 2007 (UTC)

Good for you Purples and Dave - got the fucker now!

we're after an honest record.......

so i'm neither out to be an apologist, or a member of a mob - this article needs to reflect fairly and neutrally the balance of what reliable, verified sources have written about JK to date.

Examples of poor arguments would be 'i remember this, so that's what the article should say', or 'fuck the fucking fucker' (!) - we just need to be calm and neutral.

There are reams and reams of published, reliable sources detailing much information from King's sexual behaviour, (and crimes) - which I've not included ( / restored from the history) because i'm not sure that 4 or 5 long paragraphs detailing everything serves an encyclopedic purpose.

However, research from cursory to in-depth reveals that clearly this is now one the defining aspects of the man (the balance of what has been written / published / reported) and as such has to be mentioned in the opening.

It's my belief that this is now done in a fair way, and that there is an appropriate amount of detail in the article - it's also my belief that editors merely removing it based on memories of 20 year old telly, without engaging in discussion here, are harming the quality of the article - stop it! - Purples 00:38, 12 July 2007 (UTC)

Words like "disgraced" are POV - I've added it to the "convictions" section so it doesn't seem tabloid. Your point about memories is taken but if I remember that series so well it must be of importance to others - still, I've taken it out on your advice. The Oscar Wilde entry seems far better balanced because, I think, it has the benefit of a century of hindsight. My complaint about allowing the recent scandal to dominate this page is because it overshadows the achievements. Jennifer

Hi Jennifer - thanks for coming here to discuss changes etc. You're right that the word 'disgraced' is reasonably strong - but you're wrong to say that it's 'POV' because it is actually a fair and calm description of what the reliable sources say about JK (in fact, as you'd be aware, the tabloids are far worse, but 'disgraced' is how the BBC refer to JK - which for me is a good source...)

Re : Memories of tv - memory is a great starting point for looking for info. - there's nothing wrong with it, but it has to be backed up with reference to a reliable source - for example an article from a newspaper citing JK's show as one of the most successful of the 80s - as you're no doubt aware, our individual memories are often found to be fallible!

You say you have a complaint about the recent scandal dominating the page, and overshadowing achievements, and I'm afraid i can't agree with you that the mention in the lead (as explained above), and the small 'Convictions' paragraph constitute dominance - in fact, i think they're appropriately weighted, and veering on the side of too little information (again, which i've supported, and explained above.....)

cheers - Purples 04:30, 12 July 2007 (UTC)

points taken Jennifer

added refs now off to work!

The 'disgraced' reference

...hi folks - please don't move the reference to 'disgraced' to a reference for JK's convictions - it really isn't the best for that job, and doesn't make much sense! - and I'd really appreciate editors rolling back to older revisions coming here as well to discuss their changes - otherwise it seems a bit unilateral... thanks - Purples 00:14, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

The reference was left in but the "disgraced" removed for the reason stated in the edit summary. The rest of the sentence was moved to the bottom of the lead for the reason stated in the edit summary. Both edits were reverted without addressing the reasons given. So I have reinstated them, adding more detail in the place of the unencyclopedic "disgraced" (I mean, we don't do that even in the Hitler article; see WP:NPOV#Let the facts speak for themselves). The readers don't need editors to tell them how to think about what King did. I have also removed the reference for "disgraced" since your edit summary indicates you do not want to use it without "disgraced" being in the sentence. Please discuss instead of reverting. At the very least, if we reach a consensus that "disgraced" is to be used here, it should be made clear that it's a quote, not a statement of fact (adding a reference does not make that clear at all) by attributing it. Avb 07:32, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
PS I see Jheald just added how the prison sentence worked out in practice -- good one, IMO. Perhaps we could add something like "widely reported (in the UK)" to put across a good argument I saw in one of Purples' comments above: that it has become one of the defining aspects of the man. I should add that's probably UK only; I don't live in the UK and first heard about the sexual abuse when I noticed this article at WP:BLPN. All I knew about the man was from the early history of Genesis. Avb 08:10, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

..a small point - i find it a little strange to be invited to discuss, not revert, given the balance of this page! - i quite agree!!! - Purples 13:16, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

After checking out some of what went before, I fully understand your original response. I think we are pretty much on the same page here, figuratively speaking. Avb 13:46, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

please don't put back broken references!

....and please don't mark substantial edits as 'minor' - it's a little unhelpful - we can talk about rewording / improving the article in detail here - so please please please make comments here before (preferably) or at the very least after making reversions......

thanks.. Purples 07:06, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

Although I have not reviewed the edits this is about, I do note that edit summaries can be perfectly adequate for the purpose of making comments/explaining the edit. You can respond to the edit summaries in your own edit summary when reverting, or here on the talk page, for example if you prefer to follow WP:BRD. Avb 07:41, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

edit summaries are great for summing up - i was just pointing out that it's incorrect to mark an edit where you change portions of text as minor - and i was just requesting that people join in here, because i think it's helpful. I was trying to avoid the situation where action precludes discussion, that's all! - Purples 13:00, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

Fair enough. Avb 13:24, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

AVB very good points.

The difference between Wikipedia being a factual encyclopedic site and a gossip one. Vandals start in small ways ("disgraced"... "children"...) but their intentions are clear. Let's keep this simple and informative, not emotive. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Germing (talkcontribs).

..well i don't like the connotation that to say JK is disgraced is vandalism - it's fairly obviously not - we're just trying to be honest and calm in this article, and it doesn't help to throw words like 'vandal' around. To accuse the BBC and the Guardian of being 'gossip' in nature is just plain wrong - Purples 13:03, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

...and here's a more philsophical wiki question.....

..is it wrong for wikipedia to describe anyone as 'disgraced'? - Purples 13:12, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

As a statement of fact in a BLP, it's inherently POV in most cases (as it is here). As a fully sourced, clearly attributed statement ("according to ...") it might be used if there are no other concerns such as WP:WEIGHT. The question here would be whether or not the referenced sources make it clear that the word has (1) sufficient weight in the context of the subject's life to appear in the article body and (2) sufficient (additional) weight in the context of the subject's life to be used in the introduction. A related problem is that attributing one word may result in ugly or misleading prose. Avb 13:34, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

..i suppose what i read from that is that it is your contention that it is not possible for JK to be 'disgraced' fundamentally - that it would only be encyclopedic to refer to JK as 'disgraced according to.... (for example, The BBC, the British Press etc.)'.

The arguments of Weight I understand, and have discussed above (ie. all sources I have found in the research i've been doing over the last little while have made a similar reference) - and of course the prose has to be acceptably coherant.

I just popped a note on your talk page asking what you thought about my editing of the page in the last few hours, because I was surprised to find quite such a volume of slightly ambiguous / unsourced claims in the body of the text. Purples 14:00, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

See our talk pages; your recent edits look good to me. By the way, I've warned Germing not to cross WP:3RR. Avb 14:15, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

sorry 'bout the last edit summary.....

might not have been that clear if you look at the consecutive edits....

basically i had just made a whole bunch of edits to remove claims that didn't seem to have sources, and all of those edits were reverted - please don't do that, it's really not helpful, and seems to indicate a refusal to engage in productive discussion about this article - seriously - stop! Purples 14:16, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

the veracity of King's campaign to quash convictions.....

here's the bit from the article;

'He still maintains that anything that did go on with other people was consensual with persons over the age of 16 years and continues to campaign for his own convictions to be quashed.[6][7]'

to take a look at the two references given, this one (which is a mirror of this article) describes King putting new evidence to the Criminal Cases Review Commission in early 2006 - the BBC takes a bit more of a pragmatic line here describing the case as it was then, and also detailing how 5% of cases go forward, two thirds of which result in an acquittal. I can't find any source since then indicating whether or not the matter is still being considered.

The second ref links to two statements on his website - more recent, but not particularly substantive (here is King's riposte for the Judge's exact words when giving sentence, and the other link here is just a bio / synopsis of King's career.

Do these constitute a suitable ref for the statement '..continues to campaign for his own convictions to be quashed.'? - i'm undecided, but certainly not sure (which i guess is why i removed them!) - just thought i'd spell out my thinking here.... Purples 15:24, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

I tend to view his massively posting stuff like this on his own (presumably well-read) website as campaigning, so I didn't look any further. Avb 16:36, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
Having mulled this over a bit, I'd say you have a point regarding veracity. Maybe we can say something like "on his website he regularly posts opinions regarding what he views as miscarriages of justice"?
By the way, I found a source for the Shipman song: [3]
Avb 14:23, 15 July 2007 (UTC)

'disgraced' in the lead....

here's another one as a ref. for the adjective (describes JK as 'disgraced music producer') - here - Purples 16:16, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

I searched Wikipedia for "disgraced" and found it enlightening. Avb 16:38, 13 July 2007 (UTC)

Good clean revisions by Purples and AVB. Ooopsie poopsie 08:55, 22 July 2007 (UTC)

regarding recent bbc coverage

reading the article on the BBC about the Harold Shipman song King's released {here) - I note that they've gone for "convicted paedophile Jonathan King" - per this, and the above, and further consideration I'm going to put 'disgraced' back in the lead as a softer, more netural phrase than 'convicted paedophile' - which would of course be justifiable as a matter of fact, and sourcing..... thoughts here are welcome - thanks... Purples 01:15, 24 July 2007 (UTC)

bbc and others

agreed years ago when bbc was impartial; times have changed (The Queens "storming out" - Wikipedia prides itself on being impartial. (this comment left by IP editor 81.48.20.140)

Wikipedia aims to reflect the balance of verifiable, reliable sources. What you seem to be saying is that the BBC is somehow not impartial concerning Jonathan King. That argument might be stronger if we can point to the BBC as holding a particularly atypical point of view. The fact is however that almost all reliable, verifiable sources now reflect the weight of JK's convictions with descriptors - one of the mildest of which is 'disgraced'. This word is not out of place, and per discussion here, and above, I'm going to return it to the article..... - Purples 12:45, 24 July 2007 (UTC)

read all this and must say I agree with the POV point so took out the word but left ref. As in Article comments: 17:37, 17 July 2007 Liquidfinale (Talk | contribs) (7,062 bytes) (You are right about the POV and release stuff of course. I yield. However, the Guardian link is still not of use.) (undo)... Helen

Mmmm? Wassa? Someone mentioned my name? Ah, yes, there it is. To elaborate, my comment (reproduced above) about the Guardian related to a statement someone put in about the Mercury nominations. The link to an opinion piece on CiF by Charlie Brooker barely mentioned JK, and contained nothing about his consideration for the award. As proof of "controversy" it didn't stand up either, being as it was a glorified blog entry, but that wasn't why it was there in the first place. Best regards, Steve TC 08:15, 25 July 2007 (UTC)

Hi Helen - thanks for coming here. It's not really going to work to leave a reference hanging out by itself, we'll need to resolve whether or not 'disgraced' or other moniker should be there at all. We should be aiming to reflect the balance of reliable, verifiable sources in the article, and my thought was that 'convicted paedophile' was perhaps too aggressive - would you see that as less POV however, being after all a statement of fact backed up with a reliable source? - i'm going to pop 'disgraced' back in for now to fix up the ref pending further discussion..... Purples 08:13, 25 July 2007 (UTC)

While I'm here, I will say I have no particular problem with the word disgraced as long as the ref is hanging on the word itself. However, as there is disagreement, how about "convicted sex offender"? Steve TC 08:18, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
I'm fine with either really too.... Purples 08:24, 25 July 2007 (UTC)

Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde (October 16, 1854 – November 30, 1900) was an Irish playwright, novelist, poet, and author of short stories. Known for his barbed wit, he was one of the most successful playwrights of late Victorian London, and one of the greatest celebrities of his day. As the result of a famous trial, he suffered a dramatic downfall and was imprisoned for two years of hard labour after being convicted of the offence of "gross indecency". "Disgraced"??? Helen

In 2001 he was convicted of sexual abuse of boys aged 14 and 15 in the 1980s[3] for which he served three and a half years in jail.... says it fine for me; no replication needed surely? Helen

Look, by all means edit the article as you see fit, remove the word disgraced, I don't really care. However, when you revert to a previous version willy-nilly, what you actually do is revert lots of other good edits which were subsequently made to the article (grammar, refs, etc). So my advice is: if you want to make the changes, at least do it properly. Otherwise it'll just keep getting undone. Best regards, Steve TC 19:11, 25 July 2007 (UTC)

a collection of sources to consider when wording the lead......

ok folks - edits from several different IP addresses have removed references to 'convicted sex offender' and 'disgraced' from the lead. It's my contention that we need to have some such description there, because that will properly reflect the balance of the reliable, verifiable sources available - here's a collection;

  • The BBC open with "Convicted paedophile Jonathan King" - here
  • there is also of course the BBC reference that keeps being removed, describing King as 'disgraced' and collating many more vituperative British press opinions here
  • The Guardian open with "The fall of a pop impresario. Jonathan King was last week exposed as a serial abuser of young boys." in Jon Ronson's article from 2001 here
  • Jon Ronson elaborates further - describing "....a show business paedophile ring... and of the now infamous Walton Hop disco, where King would pick up many of the boy" here

there are also many less reliable sources, not to be used as primary sources, but indicative of the coverage out there - eg;

These sources, and the reasoning explained above indicate why i don't consider it acceptable to remove a description from the opening sentence of this article. I'm not really persuaded by comparisons with Oscar Wilde, and there's certainly no problem with 'replication' - the text is not in any way confusing, just being written in a way that balances the article fairly when related to the reliable sources.

I'm going to put the word back... Purples 03:23, 26 July 2007 (UTC)

See Dominique below and Auximines and others above - "disgraced" is an opinion and no matter which media sources use it, it remains an opinion. The man achieved so much before his downfall... let's stay factual (including recent events as now covered). Helen

One small point I'd add is that "disgraced" was in the BBC story on the day that King's "disgrace" was the big story about him. In that context it was appropriate, because it was namechecking the big current story of the moment in line 1. But today I think it makes us sound a bit shrill.
What matters here is the hard information "In 2001 he was convicted of sexual abuse of boys aged 14 and 15 in the 1980s, for which he served three and a half years in jail". The more shrill we sound, actually, the weaker that information comes over. It is serious, and should be seen as such. The more authoritative and dispassionate we sound, the more seriously our readers will take us. Jheald 09:13, 27 July 2007 (UTC)
Good point, and well made! Dominique 11:28, 27 July 2007 (UTC)

The Weight of careers....

I've removed writer and TV personality for now from the lead as placing undue weight on those aspects (notable within the text) of his career. JK seems to be referred to mainly as a 'pop mogul', 'producer', or 'impresario', and it's wrong to present his writing career (for example) as on a par with his pop industry contributions. I'd be happy to replace producer with any of the descriptions just given, but to have a longish list of different careers comes across as clunky, and perhaps reads too much like a puff piece.... Purples 03:58, 26 July 2007 (UTC)

It may also be worth noting that the reference used for JKs career/s really only supports the singer / music producer description also.... Purples 05:42, 26 July 2007 (UTC)

Press sources

If I may refer back to the earlier debate, it cannot be denied that even 'respectable' newspapers cater for the reading public at large, and indeed rely on their support and approval (and consequent sales), and for that reason one cannot assume that the 'collective' or 'editorial' views that they express are always disinterested or neutral. The situation in the U.K. today regarding 'child' sex offenders is arguably more hysterical than in many other countries, and there have been a number of recent cases involving prominent men being brought down by middle-aged accusers reliving the 'horrors' of alleged childhood sexual attacks. I do not know the details of this particular case, but I would suggest that any serious biographer would do well to avoid emotional and/or judgmental terms so typical of press coverage (tabloid or not) of such cases. The matter of J.K.'s arrest and conviction has of course to be mentioned, but this (unpalatable) fact should not be allowed to affect the tone of article as a whole - and certainly not the opening lines - unless it is the intention of the author to present the subject as a felon rather than a musician etc. I believe 'controversial' is less destructive as an opening epithet, while still opening the way for negative commentary later. Dominique 18:50, 26 July 2007 (UTC)

With thanks to the anonymous helper re technical issue. Dominique 11:02, 27 July 2007 (UTC)

You seem open to suggestion Purples, then defiantly go back to a POV "disgraced". Shouldn't you then go through all the others... was he a "brilliant" or "awful" singer, a "wonderful" or "dreadful" producer, a "good" or "bad" TV host? Come off it, this is Wikipedia, not the Mirror! Helen

Oh i'm not really defiant - I'm just trying to explain why i hold the opinion/s that i do. I don't really think it follows that if we say 'disgraced' then we'd have to go for all those other adjectives - that would be silly, no?! - Also, as I've explained above, i think JK's crimes have become part of the defining aspects of his life, and I've backed up why i feel this with the links to the sources above which support that perspective. cheers, Purples 08:04, 28 July 2007 (UTC)

Don't think any of us disagree with the defining aspect Purples, nor seek to lessen the crimes, but any POV about anything (quality of talent, behaviour) should be avoided if Wikipedia is to remain a great factual source of information and I think including the facts, as we do, in the intro is sufficient without qualifying it. After all there must be some who think his prosecution was suspect, just as some actually liked - and bought - his awful music! Helen

quite serious... some analysis of the above and the page....

I've just revisted some of the above discussion, and had a look through the article page history and recent-ish edits, and there's a few things i've noticed that worry me, and I wanted to put my concerns on the record here.

First of all - I bit my tongue at the time, but must record here my disgust for the impression I have taken from Dominique's comments above - it really is truly offensive to discuss sexual offences against children in general terms using apostrophes that undermine or trivialise the seriousness and horrific nature of these offences - writing 'child' sex offenders, and 'horrors' of alleged childhood sexual attacks at very best portrays ignorance and insensitivity, and at worst is paedophile apologetics - in short, it's repulsive.

Also, I feel we're now at the point where we must highlight some of the editing patterns emerging on this page. Wikipedia is the encyclopedia that anyone can edit, but when there seems to be a collection of accounts created for a single purpose - ie. editing this page in a similar way - we are encouraged to apply 'gentle scrutiny' - this is my intention in highlighting to the interested editor the following accounts who have in common the lack of a userpage, and edits to this article;

A perusal through the history will also highlight a collection of anonymous (eg. 196.217.243.10) editors whose edits to this page represent all, most, or some of their contributions.....

This information may be useful when weighing consensus - thanks.... Purples 00:39, 4 August 2007 (UTC)

Come on Purples - so everyone else is involved in a conspiracy theory?! We are real people here (I assume) - Dominique Blanc and JHeald and Helen and all the other recent commentators... all just trying to help be fair. "Gentle scrutiny"? How about the recent "subtle" revivals of the "disgraced" word from an anonymous editor? Oopsie Poopsie 10:19, 4 August 2007 (UTC)
Hmm, User:Pottersham has made exactly one edit to this page, concerning spelling; none of their other contributions appear even remotely related to King. User:Joneseyboy2007 has made a fair number of edits to this page, yes, but not only to this page. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 10:17, 4 August 2007 (UTC)

hey ho folks - no, there's no conspiracy.. and i'm sorry if you feel there have been inappropriate aspersions - the observations above are honest, and not intended to prejudice, just to be laid out for the record - I also meant to mention the habit of Arthur, Jennifer and Helen above to sign their anonymous posts in the same idiosyncratic way, and am happy to have done that now.... meanwhile while i do still feel 'disgraced' is suitable for the lead, I haven't added it as an anon - purples isn't shy at all, and would be proud to repeat that edit! - so I do stand by my words above. Also, I've (once again) sought further impartial input to help with this article - cheers all.... Purples 12:07, 4 August 2007 (UTC)

Sounds like a case for Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser, SqueakBox 12:13, 4 August 2007 (UTC)

Another go at the lead.....

I've reworded the lead with an attributed description of King, reflecting the balance of sources out there. It's my estimation that we need some description of King's convictions in the lead per due weight, and this will suffice - thoughts? - Purples 12:27, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

I think it was fine as it was - on all levels it then expands in the main body. Oopsie Poopsie 19:35, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

I agree with Purples. It should be covered in the opening as highly notable. We think of King not as merely an entertainer but as a convicted criminal too, SqueakBox 16:37, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
Isn't that already the case? The version I'm looking at has three sentences, the third of which is as follows:

In 2001 he was convicted of sexual abuse of boys aged 14 and 15 in the 1980s[3] for which he served three and a half years in jail.

As far as I can see, that's a pretty clear and prominent statement about his crimes. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 16:50, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

Common Sense

Ok - Oopsie has reverted all of my edits. It seems common sense to me that these events are part of the defining aspect of the man, the expanded section for example now approximately the same length as the detail of his time with Decca and UK records.

Please discuss rationale for further edits below - that's probably the best way to move this article forward, thanks.....! Purples 21:31, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

....and as a direct reply to Mark above - could I ask you how you feel about the extra information in the conviction section - does that fit ok? - I hope we can discuss this sensibly! - thanks, Purples 21:44, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

Possibly more detailed than needed, given that it appears to rely heavily on one report. Moreover, some of the attribution and phrasing isn't quite what it should be: for example, we have that Ronson reported that some of those who came forward when King was charged with the offences said, "he cruised them in his Rolls-Royce in London." You've put that in as

"King would cruise the streets of London..."

which not only makes it sound as if he were on regular patrol (the source isn't sufficient to determine this), but it also doesn't make clear from whom this description comes (King? Court witnesses? Ronson?). --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 22:07, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
Oh, and a word on citing references: it's possible to give a single reference a name via the <ref> tag. For example, you could call one instance <ref name="Ronson"> and then use the single tag <ref name="Ronson"/> in other places, saving you the trouble of repeating the same URL (and any additional info) for each cite. Not that you quite need to cite after every sentence in what you've written. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 22:15, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

Thanks Mark - your comments are helpful, and I'll try to address some of them - let me know what you think...... Purples 23:16, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

Re: the cite-itis that i may have caught - it just seems like such a sensitive topic that we need to be careful to highlight exactly where our sources for various statements are. I've emphasized the Ronson report partly because of King's own praise for him as a journalist, and partly because it's appropriate for the content written - you're probably aware that there are other reliable sources out there reporting the same information (eg. the BBC articles already referenced) , and there is also the primary source of the court documents which support the whole section also.

Your point about 'cruising' is well taken - it's important that we get facts like this straight to be fair, so thanks - I can't see any other info. currently there which is materially controversial - ie. it is now fairly indisputably on the record - is that a fair assessment of the status quo? - thanks.... Purples 23:34, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

the lead....

we definitely need something in the lead (as in first sentence) to comply properly with weighting policies - how's this version? - thanks, Purples 06:25, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

How about the seperation idea? - one quick sentence, then two para.s with more detail on the aspects of his career, then on to the main body.....(see it here Purples 06:35, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

...and out of curiosity.....

i wonder if JK himself has ever edited this article? - Apparently he is fairly active online, and it would be interesting if he had edited this article? - say hello if you're there JK!

....Purples 06:27, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

I take you back to the start of this discussion page by Auximines in 2004. The opinions and thoughts of contributors, editors or journalists should not be a part of a factual page. Ronson admits to liking King and being on his side - even if he were negative his views should not be a part of the main body but a reference for separate consumption and examination. We are not a tabloid (as TheJPS points out above). Clever disguising of agenda and motive and polite manners cannot replace FACT. Adding emotive words like "exposed" and "disgraced" simply illustrate the real motive. Don't muddy the water with suggestions Purples - vandalism comes in many disguises.

...Oopsie Poopsie 08:27, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Ooopsie - almost all that you removed was factual, and not reference to the opinion of a journalist, please stop removing the important, sourced information. Purples 08:42, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

3RR

It seems there's a bit of an edit war going on. Ought I to start making a count of how many reverts each editor has made and then send out warnings/make out 3RR reports accordingly? A brief look at the edit history tells me some people (and that's definitely plural) need to back away from the computer and allow things to settle for while.

And if any of you don't quite understand that genuine edit conflicts don't call for the use of vandalism templates, I suggest you stop handing out warnings for the time being. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 08:51, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Hey mark - i think oopsie was templated by an uninvolved editor using a javascript tool designed to show editors removing chunks of text - that's not to say that your advice to calm down a little isn't good... thanks.. Purples 08:57, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

...I would further add that I think that user was correct to do so - the template s/he received warned against blanking page contents, which is a fair assessment of oopsie's edit. Oopsie has justified this by saying that the text removed was 'POV additions' and (above) has compared it to vandalism. I don't agree (obviously!) - and I think it's disruptive to accuse editors of behaving like vandals (stop it please, oopsie...) - Purples 09:08, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Then your thinking is incorrect. Blanking templates are for the purposes of dealing with vandalism, this being defined as "any addition, removal, or change of content made in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of Wikipedia". Removing material from Wikipedia is not, in itself, a policy violation. In the case of a content dispute which results in a revert war — which this clearly was — an appropriate policy to invoke is WP:3RR, the rule which limits editors to three reverts on an article in a given 24 hour period. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 09:25, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
I understand your points Mark - I don't think we need to discuss the template thing further - could you help resolve the edits oopsie has made since? thanks...! UPDATE - sorry, I see that you already had done so - thanks... - Purples 09:30, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Apologies Purples - your edits I'm sure are intended to be factual and not emotive. Shouldn't we change your words MASTURBATING to WANKING and BUGGERY to FUCKING - surely more tabloid and applicable? Hope this doesn't cause offence. ...Oopsie Poopsie 10:17, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

...um - not sure what to say about oopsie's last edit here - except that i hope s/he can calm down, maybe self revert, and not add silly sections to an article in an attempt to make a point - this is very much frowned upon here, culturally and in our policies. This very talk page is for making points, not the article...... Purples 09:20, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
Oopsie Poopsie, I'm afraid extensive use of quotation is neither encyclopaedic or good practice in terms of copyright. Perhaps you could bring the relevant article links to the page in order that people can discuss how they might be used? --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 09:31, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Too much detail...

This article has too much detail about his sexual crimes and jail time. Causes the article to not be balanced. This is not the reason for his fame. The quotes from the judge and detailed description are far too much detail for a general encyclopedia. This needs to be trimmed back. I'll bring it here so we can discuss it. FloNight 11:34, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

I support this trimmed back version. [4] Some one else did it but it is similar to the changes I was going to make. FloNight 12:00, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Thanks for coming by Flo - a couple of quick responses;

  • I would argue that King's convictions are a defining aspect of the man, in terms of his notability, and character, the areas which I believe we should seek to encapsulate. I hope I've provided some sources that support this perspective at least a little
  • The quotes from the judge are intended to illustrate and describe King and his behaviour, and my intention with the section as a whole was to stick to 'just the facts' - I see the facts of his behaviour and convictions as vital to the balance of the article.
  • One of the interesting aspects of King is his absolute refusal to communicate any sense of guilt or shame, in fact quite the opposite. We have seen here (from a variety of pro-King editors, as discussed above) comparisons to Oscar Wilde (a comparison King has made on the record repeatedly), and the argument put forward that mention of detail of his crimes is either 'POV' or vandalism. I am sincere in my belief that it is important for us to fairly communicate the truth of King's behaviour and actions - the facts of the matter stand alone, and should be there.
  • ...or to put it another way, King was found guilty of committing sexual offences during significant parts of his career, and that these offenses were intrinsically linked to that career.
  • If your point is that the lurid nature of the section detracts from the quality of the article, then I think there is merit in that - but we may need to reach consensus about whether or not a section should exist before debating its content......

And most of all - a big thank you for coming and engaging here - i think the article will benefit massively from editors like yourself who may have time to help out.... thanks..... Purples 12:08, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

What do you think of the lead as it is now? - Purples 12:17, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Please tell me you haven't just performed a partial revert. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 12:27, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
I think i probably did..... please put it back if you think it's wrong... I'm not clear from the above that we weren't conflating discussion on the lead and the conviction section, so (in particular for Flo's attention) re-tried the reworked lead..... that was the intention. Purples 12:29, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
"and convicted sex offender[1]." does not belong in the lead sentence. The second paragraph of the lead as written is fine. We are not burying it at all. But the lead sentence needs to describe the reason for someone's fame. Stating why the person is in the encyclopedia. The next paragraph of the lead expands on other important details. FloNight 12:33, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Suggestion Purples, why don't you self revert your recent change of the lead and discuss here first. FloNight 12:37, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Firstly, I hope you can see above, and throughout the article's recent history, that I've been constantly seeking to engage in discussion here, and i hope I didn't rankle you at all - I've really been trying to get conversation going here for quite a long time..... Secondly, I disagree that it doesn't belong, primarily because I believe that King is equally notable as a sex offender, and TV personality, and also because it has become a defining characteristic of the man. Clearly, if weighed on face value, the weight of consensus is against my position (I think only SqueakBox and I have expressed this opinion so far) - could I then ask your advice re. weighing the input of the various anonymous and rarely-used accounts that have consistently removed this info. (see above for more info....) - thanks, Purples 12:43, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

Have you had the opportunity to take a look at some of the older revisions of the lead by any chance? - per. discussion above and revisions like this one - what do you think of the adjective 'disgraced' both fundamentally, and specifically in this article?

I've already noted this above, but descriptions of King's crimes feature in the lead of all the reliable sources out there, which perhaps is the corner stone of my opinion, that not to include such a descriptor is in fact the deviation from our policy ('disgraced' is the mildest of the descriptions of JK that I've seen, and I think it would work quite well here - thoughts?) - Purples 12:54, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

I support this trimmed back version. [5] Some one else did it but it is similar to the changes I was going to make. Oddly enough, this was the version we had. I prefer it to the changes Purples was introducing: it doesn't shy away from the charges, it doesn't go into lurid detail, it apportions adequate space to each part of King's career. It may not be perfect, but then, no article is. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 16:10, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

another angle....

I'm afraid I don't agree that the article as it stands is balanced... further reasoning;

  • The section on King's crimes is currently roughly equal in weight to the coverage of a single Private Eye cover of 2001, and considerably less weighted than King's 1997 BMI Man of the Year award. This does not conform with our policies, given that the balance of reliable sources clearly places more emphasis on King's crimes and convictions.
  • King's conviction is deemed important enough to be in the Lead (meaning we see it as one of the 'most important points' per our guidelines on leads) - yet the follow up in the main body is an almost direct repetition of the lead - thus we fail twice, once in detailing an 'important point' and once in avoiding repetition.

I shall endeavor to compose a less lurid section giving appropriate weight - thoughts? - thanks, Purples 22:18, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

the new section....

I've tried to be less lurid! - thoughts welcomed... Purples 22:59, 7 August 2007 (UTC)

I shall obey the earlier suggestion to leave it for a while - it is no obsession of mine and if Purples believes one aspect needs far more coverage than the rest it is up to others to agree or disagree. Possibly this says more about Purples than King. I came here looking for a link between King and Chumbawamba on Tubthumping - I had heard he wrote the song or played a part in its success (seems not)... then I was interested in his other connections which I didn't know about (I've tinkered with the Who Let The Dogs Out info - I personally think most Wikipedia users would be far more interested in links to such global hits than in the parochial morality of England's laws). I simply felt the balance was far too biased towards recent tabloid news (now old news). I'd be interested in main body information of similar length about the other achievements but still feel Wikipedia should provide pocket facts not detailed information especially not opinion pieces - those are for links and references. How did he create Genesis? What part did he play in 10cc? Refs not lectures. It seems Purples is far more concerned with sex than with music or TV. Oopsie Poopsie 10:10, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

....um .. ok - have a good week! - yours, in parochial morality, Purples 13:31, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

...sorry, I just read this again and wanted to put on the record that the laws you refer to as embodying 'parochial morality' seem to be those prohibiting middle aged men from having sex with 14 and 15 year old boys - if that is the case then I'm afraid i find your choice of words revolting - Purples 01:27, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

Ah - "revolting"... that puts your flag up nicely Purples... don't whatever you do go and live in many European or Asian countries. I agree; repulsive and nauseating. Mind you I feel the same way about the thought of sleeping with many fat, middle aged men - or women, come to that. Do continue to stamp your morality on Wikipedia. We need more subtle bigots on here. How about Jews and Homos - can you discreetly insert negatives on various pages about them too? Oopsie Poopsie 08:30, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

..that's pretty offensive stuff mr. poopsie - please retract it. - Purples 08:51, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

Illiterate editing

What the hell has been going on with this page? Just cleaned up a dozen basic spelling, punctuation, grammar and accuracy points. Shouldn't Editors be educated? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.189.71.66 (talkcontribs)

I'm sorry to sound snappy but this page and the discussion really does appear to have lost control. The pared down, factual original was much better. Why this obsession with sex? An entire section devoted to a simple conviction? Surely the Wkipedia readers would prefer expanded sections on Genesis and others if anything were to be expanded? And how an "editor" (I use the word lightly after an hour of correcting the most basic spelling and punctuation faults) can put "the 1980's" when the simplest Google tells him or her it was "28 years earlier than 2000" is beyond belief. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.189.71.66 (talkcontribs)

I think your edits are quite good - thanks! Your eye for the basics would be welcome around wikiepdia - idiot as I am, I fear I may not be the only one. Re : A whole section for the conviction - I think it's probably not accurate to relate this to an obsession with sex - I think in fact that it's both encyclopedic and appropriate... Purples 23:30, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

Belmarsh or Broadmoor....?

i've changed the reference to food back from belmarsh to broadmoor beacause that's what the source says here - but I suspect belmarsh could well be accurate - can anyone find a source? - Purples 23:52, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

...Thanks oopsie for fixing this one - Purples 08:36, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

Acquittal

Good solution to many problems - ask King on his website what is true and demand proof... I did that and got the certificate posted! Oopsie poopsie 15:14, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

Good, but in future, don't remove the other reference unless you're sure it wasn't being used to support something else in the paragraph. In particular, when a reference is named (eg. <ref name="NameOfThisReference">), there's a chance it may be used elsewhere in the article; removing it would mess up the other cites. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 15:31, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

..if you're in touch with JK

... could you ask him for a picture to be released under a license compatible with wikipedia? - probably into the Public Domain would be easiest... cheers, Purples 00:32, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

the judge's comments.....

This bit;

The presiding Judge, Judge Paget, addressed King directly describing the crimes as a serious breach of trust and saying "You used your fame and success to attract adolescent and impressionable boys".

has been removed a few times now as excess detail - my feeling is that it is useful detail, from an extremely reliable source, and is fundamentally interesting, pertinent information.. could we discuss why some editors feel it's not suitable? - thanks.... Purples 06:07, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

It's more detail than needed. All it adds to the article is lurid colour; which is hardly encyclopaedic.
Oh, and note that I'm far from being alone on this one. Please don't put it back in unless you think you're in danger of getting a consensus. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 06:21, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
totally agree about the consensus - but disagree that the comments are lurid ("horrible in fierceness or savagery" according to Princeton / Google) - a Judge's comments at the end of a trial constitute a reliable, useful source in this, and many other instances, so to write them off as lurid colour seems a little off to me..... Purples 07:14, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
The tone of court theatrics are not really the concern of this article. The facts have been laid out. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 07:16, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
Well, yes - but what i'm disagreeing with is us, as editors, writing off the Judges comments as 'lurid' and 'court theatrics' - a Judge's summing up is a world away from a Daily Mail hatchet job - are we really qualified to judge the Judge? - Purples 07:21, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
You're clearly not familiar with the British Justice system. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 07:23, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
That's true! - I think we can leave this one for now - I'll not return the info. unless support grows... cheers, Purples 07:29, 10 August 2007 (UTC)


I totally agree that it is appropriate to mention what the Judge said at the end of the trial. I do not think a Judges words could be called court theatrics and including the words of the Judge on King can help anyone reading the article get a clearer picture of circumstances. We could apply "not the concerns of this article" to just about any item on the site. My opinion is that the more accurate information on any article, the better. Michael1001 16:18, 30 September 2007 (UTC)

market research thing....

i'm thinking of adding some detail on King's use of market research - thoughts? - Purples 06:14, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

If you can source it, knock yourself out, provided it doesn't verge on original research. It should probably go in s separate section to the biography. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 06:21, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

okey dokey.... I'll draft it and drop it here before the article for thoughts.... Purples 07:15, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

Decca

I've replaced 'ran' with 'was involved with' pending some sourcing / further info;

I just watched one of his video blogs where he mentions that the work for Decca was all unpaid - and the one source i've spotted for now here referes to him initially as 'chief talent scout' and 'assistant to the chairman' - and upon his return as 'effectively' running it..... i think we need something more concrete for this inclusion..... Purples 07:29, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

"At 22 he became manager of Decca Records".[6] --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 07:38, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

hmmmm... I suppose there are two issues, one being what the sources say, and one being what we present as truth - I note that nypress and The Guardian seem to disagree a little - it's also probably worth pointing out that JK's video blog probably isn't a reliable source for mentioning that this role was voluntary / upaid...

There's no doubt in my mind that JK and Sir Ed. were close, and that he was involved with Decca in various capacities, if we were to accept the fact that King was unpaid, then i don't really think it could be correct to state that he either 'ran' (or even 'managed') the label - I feel sure that people would misconstrue this as being paid employment..... though p'raps it doesn't matter.... thoughts? - Purples 07:47, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

"Ran" is a suitably vague term for his various capacities. Add both cites if you fear misleading the reader. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 12:23, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
sorry Mark, but I can't agree here - to say someone 'Ran' something to me clearly implies that they ... er... 'ran' the place ie. were in charge. I would very surprised to learn that the person i thought was 'running' any company was in fact unpaid, and not formally contracted, thus I feel we're being somewhat deceptive.... Purples 12:56, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
"Involved in running", then. And please get the hang of indenting your comments. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 13:07, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

sure - "involved in running" would probably be ok.... sorry about the formatting - i'm not sure how you prefer your indentations (i'll happily keep the same indentation, or go one more, or whatever! - let me know....) cheers - Purples 13:13, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

King

I don't intend to bother asking King for other things but suggest Purples does since he/she is clearly determined to get this accurate. Oopsie poopsie 08:08, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

...um - well, i'd love to hear from JK, but understand if you don't want to research further... Purples 13:14, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

Worried

There seems a mean spirited kind of approach by some editors to belittle and downgrade some of King's past achievements and inflate or colour up the sex area. Have others noticed this? For the moment I've simply done minor edits (replacing "ran" for example - the alternative seems pointless to mention, if he WASN'T running it, why put anything in?) but I think certain editors ought to examine their past changes - we might be noticing an agenda here. 62.189.71.66 11:58, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

Speaking only for myself, I'm merely trying to navigate through choppy waters. So if you're trying to include me in this, don't. --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 12:17, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

don't be worried.....

what we're trying to achieve here is a fair, balanced article about JK - there are no mean spirits (honest!) - if you've got suggestions for the article, just drop them in here - or edit the article directly... you'll find that if you're willing to engage here, you'll go a long way! - cheers, Purples 13:23, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

Wishful Thinking: These were a Scandinavian 'Pop' outfit that were pushed pretty hard by manager and Decca guru, Jonathan King, but never managed the chart. from [here http://www.45-rpm.org.uk/artists-w.htm] - just one mention I found in 10 seconds Googling for Jonathan King and Decca - Decca Guru indeed! I expect if I (or any other "fair, balanced" editor) wanted to check they would find many more such allusions. Though I do agree looking for negative sex mentions would probably discover most. People do love a good sex scandal. 62.189.71.66 13:53, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

RAN Decca Records

Took me forever (this is the video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OoFdSwPRkFg) but I finally ran down the film you obviously watched Purples and it looks perfectly valid to me - he simply says "ran" twice without any boasting and goes on to tell detailed and informed stories - why on earth would he be lying? He clearly RAN Decca Records!!! Do you have an agenda Purples? If not, this is clear and RAN would be replaced by any independent editor. Oopsie poopsie 16:04, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

A totally objective quote from 45-rpm... "His shrewdness and good commercial judgement had been noticed by the founder of Decca Records, Edward Lewis, and he was appointed Lewis' personal assistant. Within a few years Jonathan King was running the company. Although not all King's decisions were good ones, he probably got most things right and later launched his own record company 'UK Records'." http://www.45-rpm.org.uk/dirj/jonathank.htm Oopsie poopsie 17:47, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

"King first came to prominence with hit song Everyone's Gone to the Moon, which he wrote as a 21-year-old undergraduate. By 22, he was MD of Decca records. He then made his fortune and secured the lifelong hatred of true music fans by naming and promoting pop group Genesis." http://www.theregister.co.uk/2000/11/24/poptastic_jonathan_king_charged_over/ Not hard if you understand Google. Oopsie poopsie 17:54, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

This is getting boring... from the BBC... "Six years later, while studying English at Cambridge, he had his first hit with Everyone's Gone To The Moon. The following year, he became manager of Decca Records, aged 22, and went on to set up his own label, UK Records, by 1970." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/1038651.stm - shall we just say he ran Decca Records and stop buggering about (a very Purples word)? Oopsie poopsie 18:08, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

And again "He did have an advisor to help him run the pop label for a time in producer Jonathan King, but King -- who was still a young man, and whose interests in music were more direct, and had also been a successful recording artist himself -- was unwilling to take on the responsibility of running an entire record label within the framework of a corporation." http://www.mp3.com/artist/sir-edward-lewis/summary/ What was that word again? RUN? RUN? RUN? Oopsie poopsie 18:13, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

I could go on forever but this is from another Web Encyclopedia... Purples seems just to search for negative sex references... Purples must be a very sad individual (and not a very honourable editor)... "He became assistant to Sir Edward Lewis at Decca Records, where he was embroiled in the controversy over the original sleeve of the Rolling Stones’ Beggars Banquet LP, and discovered Genesis"... http://www.musicweb-international.com/encyclopaedia/k/K125.HTM Oopsie poopsie 18:18, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

This is good stuff - says to me that clearly, in his first spell at Decca, King was an 'advisor' / 'assistant' ( / 'chief talent scout') - I'd prefer wording to that effect.

Secondly - could you please please please oopsie try and 'comment on the content, not the contributor' - your contributions have many useful aspects, but the stuff about having an agenda, being a sad individual (and the pretty odious bit about Jews and Homos) have no place here. Please retract such comments - Purples 22:52, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

More suggetions

I think the following content: "King continues to deny all wrongdoing, stating that no such sexual contact took place, and also that no-one engaged in any activity that they did not enjoy. King has also drawn comparisons between his prosecution and the charges Oscar Wilde faced.[14] A Jon Ronson documentary on Channel 4 explored these issues, asking the question 'Is Jonathan King a dangerous predator, or a victim of the shifting sands of morality?'[15][16]" needs to be removed because it is not encyclopedic content and too much detail. Who is saying what about this topic does not need to be recorded here. The second paragraph of the conviction section is slightly better but I would prefer it be removed also. FloNight 18:33, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

I'm going ot take Digby's advice (form his edit summary) and let the article settle for a while - but reading the above, I see Flo's points and would support the removal of the third para. of 'that' section. - I also think that in the lead re: JKs crimes we should use the wording from the source, otherwise we're synthesising information (ie. it's original research) - thoughts? - Purples 22:47, 10 August 2007 (UTC)

Removed second para. in agreement with Flo above..... Purples 01:02, 13 August 2007 (UTC)

some musings on weight.....

hi folks - after letting the article settle for a while, and removing some of the conviction section info. per discussion above, I've got some questions and thoughts about weighting and the article as a whole;

I'm not sure how we manage weighting to balance notable information, and trivia. For example the article currently has the same level of detail on King's involvement with Genesis (very notable IMO) as it does with his involvement with Orson (which seems tenuous and much less important to me) - another example would be that there's almost as much info. on his recent "Earth to King" release, as there is on his Decca hits - this seems odd....

I don't want to cull interesting info. like the Earth to King stuff, but feel that the article currently is a kinda strange blend of a quick summing up of King's notable achievements, then a side turn towards trivia...

thoughts anyone? - Purples 01:13, 13 August 2007 (UTC)

I've made a few changes which I feel better balance the article, with appropriate weight being placed on King's notable achievements... thanks all! - Purples 06:47, 14 August 2007 (UTC)

having watched the Earth To King blogs.....

Various questions from above are answered due to the fact that he carries cuttings from newspapers in between his exhaustive (and exhausting) tales - for example the Record Producer boast is clearly archived. Suggest anyone wanting to verify some claims get this and watch it though I warn it may kill you through boredom! The Band Aid/Live Aid letter example (episode 60) is worth including - it was clearly a major news story at the time. I tend to agree with Purples (!!) that some stories warrant less coverage and think the only reason for carrying some (Shipman, Orson) is because they are recent. They will fade as years go by and be eliminated in due course. Oopsie poopsie 08:42, 14 August 2007 (UTC)

I thought your edit to the Trivia section was good also, Ooopsie! I think we're getting on! - I'll check out the Band Aid stuff, and have a nice morning... Purples 08:44, 14 August 2007 (UTC)

Song for Europe

The article states "In 1995, he spearheaded A Song For Europe, the BBC quest for a Eurovision Song Contest winner. The 1996 entrant by Gina G "Just A Little Bit" went to No.1 and the 1997 entrant Katrina and the Waves' "Love Shine a Light" won the contest."

Which begs the questions: What does 'spearheaded' mean? Was he producer? If so, was it in 1995, 1996, and 1997, and if it was just 1995, what's the relevance of the 1996 and 1997 successes?

If it is only the 1995 show he produced, then we should mention Love CIty Groove finishing 10th and reaching number 7 in the charts, but not Gina or Katrina. DavidFarmbrough 09:57, 14 August 2007 (UTC)

let it all hang out.....

i've removed the trivia thing about Let it All Hang out because the claim that JK bought the rights in the 70s needs sourcing, and also perhaps is of questionable encyclopedic interest. Also, the video that was linked to was not the music used in the advert, which is too confusing / possibly deceptive i think - Purples 22:54, 18 August 2007 (UTC)

changes.....

After watching the excellent Joe Meek tribute I came here and corrected his place of birth (he was born in London; went to school in Godalming) - reinstated the Producer credit (after watching episode 38 of his autobiography with cuttings from Music Week dated 1972 and 1973) - ditto his Decca connection. Leon 09:39, 12 September 2007 (UTC)

I'm afraid that i have to disagree about the Decca sentence, per the discussion above. To paraphrase - I don't feel it's appropriate to say King 'ran Decca' when (certainly in his first stint, and possibly the second also) his role was unpaid and semi-formal (please check out the section above for more.....) - Purples 11:45, 12 September 2007 (UTC)

Harry Potter CD

I don't see why wikipedia should promote his cd with a link to it on Amazon!!! Teapotgeorge 21:39, 13 October 2007 (UTC)

di Stefano

I've examined all the info on this - King's legal team did not include di Stefano until late on as a part of his appeal and then only for a short time. His main team included Ronald Thwaites QC who represented the police in the de Menezes enquiry. But I don't think listing the dozens of his legal contacts is relevant in the article as it is not with other cases. Mention one and you really have to mention all.User:OopsiePoopsie 07.00, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

Fair enough. It's quite possible that the most media savvy person isn't necessarily the most important. ·:· Will Beback ·:· 07:13, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

Note of Changes

I've reworded and reworked the following;

  • European Court hearing - have moved down to section on current activity, as undue weight in lead
  • I've returned 'the first studio version' to 'a version' pending a (WP:OR compliant) source
  • I've reworded 'ran' Decca to 'involved in running' per longstanding discussions above
  • I tightened the prose in the lead.

Comments are most welcome - and for openness and transparency, all editors should be aware that I used to edit (above) as Purples. Thanks! - Privatemusings 04:42, 16 November 2007 (UTC)


Infobox

Someone has put a reference to King's conviction under the "occupation" section of the infobox. That probably needs to be dealt with. Dan ad nauseam (talk) 20:22, 14 December 2007 (UTC)

Admission on under-age sex partners

Here's what the Sky News interview said:

King, who has legal bills of £750,000, freely admits he had sex with teenagers who were under the age of consent.
"Anyone who was around in the 1960s? All us pop stars were [hitting on] anything that moved.
"Loads of them were groupies who put on the face-paint and the bras and claimed to be 18 and we thought we'd be lucky if they were 16, but they probably weren't a day over 14.
"Everybody was doing it. That's the way it was back then.
"I was bi-sexual and had sex with both genders. I found it ludicrous that it was legal to have sex with a girl of 16 but not with a boy of the same age."

Interpolating this info with explanations about what the age of consent for males was at the time smacks of justification. He doesn't specifically say he had sex with under age males. So I've taken the reference back to the simplest facts in the article: (1) He admitted that in the 1960s he had sex with teenagers who were under the age of consent. (2) His sexual partners included both females and males. (3) He insists that he was not guilty of having sex with those men he was convicted over. Grimhim (talk) 11:40, 22 December 2007 (UTC)


I've examined this in full. The question mark is bizarre - does it imply he wasn't around in the 1960's? King's later comment makes it clear to me that he only broke the age of consent laws in regard to males so I feel the age of consent for males SHOULD be specified - which is why I've added it along with the quote when he refers to it. As far as I know he was only convicted of offences against males so surely this is worth including. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 41.251.26.233 (talk) 20:15, 22 December 2007 (UTC)

King does not directly admit to having sex with underage girls. He freely admits that, during the 1960s or later, he had sex with boys who were under the then age of consent (21), but over the current age of consent (16). You can't be convicted for breaking the law 40 years ago if what you did is no longer against the law, so admitting this shouldn't harm his case in the way that the Sky News report implies.
Incidentally, the "anyone who was around in the 1960s?" line - I interpret this as "is there anyone here who was around in the 1960s?" - i.e. a question directed at a group of people. 217.155.20.163 (talk) 21:10, 8 April 2008 (UTC)

Presence on the internet

Inappropriate and not accurate it appears - also previously covered. Preceding unsigned comment added by Vandalwatcher 41.251.26.233 (talk) 06:15, 4 April 2008 (UTC)

I don't know what you make of this (I just got linked to it) but thought I'd add it in for source / something - a recent video of him singing about boys: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qd_eCmZnBI (I tend to avoid editing pages themselves as I get told off :-() 144.32.155.188 (talk) 12:50, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

From the movie and therefore covered sufficiently in the main article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Vandalwatcher (talkcontribs) 05:26, 11 May 2008 (UTC)

Disgusting. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.5.87.61 (talk) 22:55, 17 June 2008 (UTC)

This mans presence on the internet should be in the main article. He is depraved. The courts decided that. Now he is a presence on the internet (through youtube). The problem is people don't know who he actually is. Do adult filters block his activities on youtube? I think not. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.4.115.71 (talk) 08:37, 25 June 2008 (UTC)

The internet allows everyone to comment even those who have been convicted of crimes whether rightly or wrongly and who have served their time. Some may think this bad but that is how it is. I personally admire the courage of the man. Most would be intimidated by anonymous posters like 92.4.115.71 who seem to have a personal vendetta without the balls to say who they are. Bullies are often cowards. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.209.131.192 (talk) 20:53, 25 June 2008 (UTC)

my proposed verion

here it is - having taken another look at all the above, I've made many changes / reverts per the arguments outlined above (happy to go through them individually, or talk about it in general....) - I've reverted this work for now to allow comment and review... Privatemusings (talk) 01:48, 25 August 2008 (UTC)

actually, this one's probably better.. more work per the above... Privatemusings (talk) 02:01, 25 August 2008 (UTC)


I must say this seems to be tinkering for the sake of tinkering and we should just leave it as it is - and tinkering with BLPs is not encouraged.

On another point, this talk board has lost all control. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Vandalwatcher (talkcontribs) 17:39, 27 August 2008 (UTC)

pls what is a BLP? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.133.61.20 (talk) 06:29, 25 November 2008 (UTC)

just noticed this pop up - a 'BLP' is a 'biography of a living person' in wikipedia parlance - we've got a whole policy on how to properly treat these articles, which you can read by clicking here ----> WP:BLP.
on a side note - I just reviewed my suggestion above about restoring a previous version, and think that the tinkering actually includes some important improvements, I'm minded to give it a go, but welcome all thoughts :-) cheers, Privatemusings (talk) 06:33, 25 November 2008 (UTC)
there you go! - I flipped the versions, and added the pic, and some current info - I think the article is in better shape this way, and I'm happy to chat about any aspect.... Privatemusings (talk) 03:07, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
I see it was undone - please bring discussion here, because per the above (both this section, and many sections of this, and previous, talk pages) I really feel that the slightly different version is superior. cheers, Privatemusings (talk) 05:13, 15 December 2008 (UTC)

Disagree Privatemusings - the current version is fuller and better and observes BLP guidelines. Still think this talk page is far too confused. Vandalwatcher (talk) 09:33, 15 December 2008 (UTC) Private Musings - suggest certain BLP might be better not touched by yourself - i.e. Jonathan King, Giovanni di Stefano... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 196.217.243.10 (talk) 10:45, 18 December 2008 (UTC) Looking back this article has gone through serious and messy tinkering before reaching this decent level. Please leave well alone unless solid contributions can be made. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 41.250.250.30 (talk) 15:05, 23 December 2008 (UTC)

hmmm.. well okey dokey - let's start small :-) Privatemusings (talk) 02:41, 8 January 2009 (UTC)

European Court bit

I removed the bit about the european court thing as unsourced. It seems a bit ambiguous to me too, and I think we're probably better off, on balance, without this bit. Privatemusings (talk) 02:43, 8 January 2009 (UTC)

There is clearly a ref in the main body lower down so why pretend it is unsourced Privatemusings? if you want to bend the facts at least read the refs first. What motives do you have? Are you trying to provoke retailation? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.192.151.226 (talk) 08:28, 8 January 2009 (UTC)

Stop tinkering PM - the Mail ref at 21 is quite clear. Vandalwatcher (talk) 07:38, 8 January 2009 (UTC)

sorry to have missed it chaps - and hopefully this sort of tinkering helps improve the article! - I've added the ref. to the statement - although I wonder if there's a source for the 2009 hearing? Privatemusings (talk) 10:40, 8 January 2009 (UTC)

Previous GA Review

I have removed the transcluded GA review as it is not correct for a nominator to review their own article. A reviewer will be long and will start a new review page. It may take amonth as there is some backlog. You can help by reviewing other articles. Thanks. Jezhotwells (talk) 23:22, 14 June 2009 (UTC)


Good Article Nomination (GAN)

This article has grown up. It needs a formal Good Article (GA) Review. Yet the following earnest reviews are not valid for GA because either
1) you must be logged in to WP and follow all of the GA process to award a GA- or
2) you can't be the GA nominator.
Otherwise these give some idea of GA review &/or the articles merits:


  • I made the Good Article Nomination not because I contributed to the article- I din't- but because I like it. Previously, the discussion page had been a lesson in homophobia and mobthink (it's chilling how thoroughly JK's 'character' has been at issue in Britain). Eventually though- due to circumstances beyond the control of moralists- it's also become an example of balance and neutrality. Today there's been no further edits or discussion (or hate) here for some months.
This is the best summary of JK I've read. I got what I needed from reading the article. It's clearly written with even a sense of style; it covers a long career neutrally, even when JK's press tends to the negative. The article is well-referenced with 'reputable sources'. Still, it could only help if a certain someone could speak to accuracy in the article. Yet until the subject (or his agents) will respond himself, I'll just accept that the 'reputable sources' are fair and accurate.
While I feel the article is duly broad for a GA, I also feel the article will gradually benefit by expansion along several lines. This article is abrupt for someone so productive, focusing on sometimes less-obvious music achievements where it does not say as much of his TV & impresario careers. Then it was suggested that "Market Research" played an uniquely important role in JK's sound. Also there's something needing to be said about how his allegedly principled sexuality became an issue in the press & his life. JK's position on the alleged hypocrisy of Xtian-based sex laws provoked legal and journalistic campaigns. These will surely be analyzed in large volume before his European case is over. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 00:15, 15 June 2009 (UTC)

GA Review

This review is transcluded from Talk:Jonathan King/GA2. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Review

Hey, I'll be reviewing this article. — R2 00:41, 15 June 2009 (UTC)


I thought it was fantastic, really informative and interesting and not biased or nasty at all. I had no idea the guy had done so much. I'm a Genesis fan so knew about King but until I was pointed at this on another forum simply wasnt aware of his other work. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.41.252.224 (talk) 17:17, 16 June 2009 (UTC)

  • One formal fix the article would definitely benefit from (quite apart from anything to do with the content) would be to sort out the references properly. That doesn't necessarily mean having to use {{cite news}}; but at a minimum at least the author, date, title of the piece, and news organisation should all be given. Jheald (talk) 20:41, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
Thanks for pointing out the small print to me. I'll become a contributer after all... Problem: Though I find numerous reliable examples of print citations, as an MOS matter I'm not finding a consistent, reliable guide for formatting all the various <ref>'s we use, esp. for including info from electronic/web media. I do find content suggestions for <ref>'s using web sources, ie., Citation_styles; but what I could use and have never seen is a collection of acceptable boilerplates or templates for a variety of <ref> situations. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 18:56, 18 June 2009 (UTC)

Unfortunately I have to quick fail the article because it does not meet the GA criteria.

  • It is too short. For someone who has been "notable" since the mid 60's to the present day, I would expect more detail. When expanding the article I would strongly advise that you do not give undue weight to the child relationship stuff, not that I necessarily see a problem right now.
  • Once you have built up the article body substantially, I would then turn to writing a lead that complies with WP:LEAD. It will need to be 3/4 bulky paragraphs, which overview the article body.
  • Entire paragraphs are unsourced.
  • There are some unreliable sources that need changing
    • IMDB
    • Snopes
    • Australian politics.com
    • biogs.com
    • amazon
    • madamearcati
    • Vile pervert.com (a third party source would be better)
    • masterton.co.uk
    • youtube
  • Formatting of references is a little odd, take a look at how they are structured at This Is It (Michael Jackson concerts)
  • References should come after commas and full stops only. There should be no spaces between the references.

Once this is all done feel free to contact me and I'll happily look at the article again, so you won't have to wait ages at WP:GAN. If you are not happy with the review I have presented you can seek reassessment or resubmit it at GAN. — R2 17:34, 19 June 2009 (UTC)

Thanks for the input.Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 20:15, 19 June 2009 (UTC)

I think more should be filed on his submission to the ECHR; whether granted or not, the fact that they are considering it gives great weight to his position. I shall try to discover further and file accordingly.

—Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.97.166.182 (talk) 13:48, 20 June 2009 (UTC)

I'm amazed this article was submitted for GA consideration - it's written like a puff-piece, and full of inaccuracies - in ten minutes I found numerous false statements and misleading content. Surely better cites could be found than the many that point right back at the guy's website/blog? Little grape (talk) 17:25, 24 June 2009 (UTC)

Where to start turning this article into something encyclopaedic?

It's unfortunate that no-one's had the time to check out some of the obvious puffery and manipulation on this page. Many of the cites are his own website/blog/forum, which understandably has his entirely one-sided view of his life. Fine, but let's not just repeat it here without some checking?

The first somewhat obvious issue is that of his conviction. His sentence was seven years. And he was convicted of a number of offences against what UK law defines as children (persons under the age of 16). Until he wins an appeal (he has already lost one) or is successful in the European Court (no cite within last two years), that conviction stands and should be reported fairly and accurately. It is thus disingenuous to state in the opening para that these are 'allegations', or that he was let off early because of good behaviour/prison overcrowding/whatever - that fact should be in the body in the correct section. It is also irrelevant in the opener that many other allegations were made, several other trials planned, and one acquittal was ordered by the Judge. Furthermore it's extremely tiresome that there are multiple self-serving quotations from the man defending himself splattered around, but none from any of the other people/agencies involved. Where's the balance?

As for the other stuff - it's simply not feasible that he was 'Producer of the Year' for three years running unless this was some sort of parochial award. If true, it should be easy to cite (NOT from his own website please!).

Then there's Bocu Music; 10,000 shares in issue, yet not a single one owned by King, therefore he would appear to have no interest at all in 'his' company - and in any case its turnover is fairly pitiful for a company that supposedly channels ABBA royalties. Researching this at Companies House online takes two minutes.

Chumbawamba make no mention of him anywhere I can find, and he doesn't appear to have represented them formally in any way.

He had nothing whatever to do with the writing of 'Who Let the Dogs Out'; it had been recorded by the original writer more than once, and released in several formats, before the Bahas recorded it - yes there's what appears to be a RIAA platinum disc in the background of a photo of King commemorating 2,000,000 sales of the track, but it's doubtful it was awarded by RIAA because it doesn't appear to have their holographic seal on it. And it's difficult to see what King had to do with it anyway - didn't write it, didn't produce it, didn't have any business association with the band, producer, or record company. So just where did the supposed RIAA platinum disc come from? For the avoidance of doubt, Jonathan King has NEVER been awarded an RIAA disc of ANY type! And it's a false claim that he was the first to record the track in a studio - just go to the wikip entry on the actual writer of the song for more.....

King was not directly responsible for breaking Orson. He certainly saw them on MySpace, wrote about them, as did others, but it was another tipper that was wholly responsible for breaking them by making them track of the day on THEIR website.

Then there's the lengthy promo piece on his self-funded film, which contains lines such as 'King's song cautions against our adopting any censure promoted by others, particularly from publishers who capitalize on fear.' Well, that's one person's POV, but another might be 'King's song seeks to minimise his conviction for molesting children, and features an accompanying video where he exposes his penis in public'. Both conclusions are POV, and neither opinion should be in the article.

There are many, many more examples, but you get the point.

Finally, just to underline just how screwed this article is, the UNSOURCED final line is currently 'Especially as, since leaving prison, he has found a cast iron alibi that he was in America when one of the convictions was alleged to have happened in London'. Just take a breath and imagine yourself reading a *proper* encyclopaedia with that written in it. Difficult, isn't it? Little grape (talk) 22:35, 24 June 2009 (UTC)

While trying to source the Independant cite re. Una Paloma (it doesn't exist as stated in article), found some wise words of caution from John Peel RIP we might take note of when simply pasting in here King's version of events: Jonathan is always entertaining to read and listen to, says John Peel, but I suspect his actual contribution to the music business has been greatly exaggerated, mostly by himself. Sure, he discovered Genesis, 10 cc, and the Bay City Rollers. If you have been around as long as Jonathan and myself, you are bound to make the odd discovery - though most of them would have made it without you. Little tends to be said about all the acts we discovered who sank without trace. Little grape (talk) 23:00, 24 June 2009 (UTC)
Peel, wise, what? Sorry, but perhaps he should work in America. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 22:59, 25 June 2009 (UTC)
Agreed with all points. Thank god editors like Little Grape are around to expose these perverts. Before fans like hilareo got to it this article said what filth he is. grape seems clever enough to do it more sutly.
Glad to hear you agreed with all the points made above. Which is surprising, as you appear to have taken the opposite view when editing the article. And it is not the job of wikip to expose anything, simply to present a balanced account. Please sign your comments with four tildes to avoid confusion when reading. Little grape (talk) 07:17, 25 June 2009 (UTC)
Rough trade around here, so exciting. I'm not sure anyone can be called a 'fan' of JK, if that term implies JK demonstrates notable musical talent. However I get such a butch sense of moral outrage in the latest unsigned comment. Such sutle philosophizing constitutes the sole basis of my interest in this article. Please enjoy your American "Barely Legal".
So, did I add any content to this article? 'Cuz I think not cuz'. What h-leo did contribute was to reformat the first 1/2 of these old JK references from another age of WP. Among the refs I've formatted are 2 links to images from JK's pages; like many of these hopeless refs these "verify" little, indeed some say nada about attribution. But neither the article I read nor JK's site claims JK *wrote* the Baha Men hit; only that JK covered it. As to the rest... <Little tends to be said about all the acts we discovered who sank without trace.> That little does sometimes includes a balance-sheet. JK's not interested in pop-"art", prog-fans.
What JK has clearly accomplished is to have recorded cover tunes & novelty songs, and hosted British TV shows, including music awards (he may have also written and/or produced same). I found little online evidence for much of this article, nothing about JK penetrating female humans or even undisputed claims such as his attending Uni have any clear basis. Still JK's little act does appear to have somehow constituted enough of a career that JK's mere taste in men interested the British Press for years as if he were an arena-player... I suspect this is b/c JK has at least one other notable accomplishment: a phenomenal PR machinery- one which likely taints all available sources for this article. OTOH there's NOTHING inappropriate about this article incorporating the subject's input, be that his quotes, or 'verification referring to"- or "Pointing back to his web-site". Even planted pieces of PR-"puffery" WP supports as 'questionable sources'', "particularly concerning themselves". Thus most important is balance... Editorial balance. Being excited by the subject is not a very good place to begin.
Lastly the "alibi" quote could be more clearly written to appear as a quote, but being post-web it's quite easily documented. There's more than one JK quote about "Right law, wrong men" (as if newspapers mean anything, they never have); & <{JK} was in America when one of the convictions was alleged to have happened in London> is easily found in the straight press. Such a line is most appropriate- quoting the subject about a notable evolving issue. JK's 'morals' appeal before the European Court of Human Rights is intrinsically notable b/c of the potential fallout for the scandal industry. The last matter did not end in 2007; the court's decision is "expected in 2009"- as the article clearly states.
So it seems homophobia may come and go, but a true heretic can always be made to burn. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 22:28, 25 June 2009 (UTC)

tightening up

well I've sort of dived in and tightened a whole bunch of stuff - I don't think the article is finished by any means, and am not really averse to any of the material I've taken out for now going back in if we can figure out some better wordings, sources, and balance - I've mentioned previously that I'd perhaps like to put something in about king's market research - or maybe there are other areas we haven't covered all that well just yet - I don't think we're at 'GA' just yet - but let's give it a go! cheers, Privatemusings (talk) 07:27, 26 June 2009 (UTC)

Nice try, and it certainly seems to be the right approach - but I see attempts have already been made to revert. I think a good start would be to remove everything that uses his own website as a source, or sources that use his site or older versions of this very article(!) as their source. Then we can all work together to build it up again with balanced, properly cited, content that can be relied upon. Little grape (talk) 09:03, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
I agree whole heartedly the article is a mess at the moment TeapotgeorgeTalk 09:09, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
thirded (but it's getting better, and will hopefully be good in reasonably short order) - because of that I took the tag george dropped in out - really because I feel we're sort of on it, and I find the tag a tad ugly.... no big deal if anyone wants to revert, but I think the article is better in its current state without the tag :-) Privatemusings (talk) 09:11, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
Ok, sounds like a plan. Shame the article seems to attract heavy and regular POV editing. The Baha Boys/King 'platinum disc' cite keeps going back in. The cited photo may be a 'vanity disc' (e.g. one that's been made up and framed for vanity reasons rather than actually awarded to the named artist). You can verify this by doing a search at the RIAA site at http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php?table=SEARCH_RESULTS It's true that a record comany can buy almost as many discs as it wants from RIAA in whatever names it decides (e.g. the receptionist at the hotel where the band stayed while they recorded one of the tracks), but again this can be verified if legit. It's also false to claim that King did the first studio recording of the song; check out the original artist's wikipage Anslem Douglas. This underlines why a good first step would be to remove *all* content that's been 'verified' via King's own site. Little grape (talk) 09:25, 26 June 2009 (UTC)

Agree to stop pointless edits - this link shows his version of the song was 2 years before the hit but who cares? http://djtaurunum.blogspot.com/ Probably best to allow others to get on with cleaning this up.Vandalwatcher (talk) 14:27, 26 June 2009 (UTC)

Blogs are not normally regarded as relaible sources. TeapotgeorgeTalk 14:43, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
There's probably no disute that 'his' version came out in 1998, but it was simply a copy of the original artist's song. The Baha Boys also recorded the their version of the original artist's song, so it's difficult to see exactly what King had to do with it. King's version produces no less than 35 Google results, most linking to his own pages/links, so his version doesn't appear to have had much traction? Little grape (talk) 21:01, 28 June 2009 (UTC)

Balance in writing about the convictions

It's disappointing that some editors are trying to remove balance from the convictions sections. It is apparently not disputed that King was only acquitted on one charge, and that was (probably) on the direction of the judge once he heard that the boy concerned in that particular assault *may* have been 16 rather than 15 at the time. As far as I can tell he wasn't acquitted over any of the other near-20 or so alleged assaults (I assume it's around 20 boys, as the Criminal Injuries Board or whatever they're called these days appears to have made awards to nearly 20 men who were boys at that time?). So I think it's more than balanced to include '....saw King acquitted on one charge when it became clear that one of the boys may have been over the age of sixteen, and the prosecution decided not to proceed with other charges and abandoned a third trial', rather than cut it off at '....saw King acquitted'. The other charges were 'left on file', which means the CPS are extremely unlikely to take them further, but he was *certainly* not acquitted on those other charges.

The other part that keeps getting altered is the para where a lengthy quote from King seeks to justify his actions thus: "I've always said I was guilty of breaking the age of consent laws because they weren't equalised". The age of consent between males was 21 then but it was 16 for heterosexual acts. And he said: "I wasn't guilty of having sex with the men I was convicted of (having sex with)." I think the problem with this is that it implies that the convictions wouldn't have occured if the age of consent was 16 for both sexes. This might be a valid oint of view except for the fact that *all* the convictions were for offences against children between the ages of 13-15. It is therefore, in my view, fairly imperative to add the phrase 'However, all the convictions were for offences against children under the age of sixteen' to make the point that his quote is moot. Frankly, I don't think his self-justification should be in there at all because it's misleading, but perhaps that and other issues could be addressed once others have commented? Little grape (talk) 21:01, 28 June 2009 (UTC)

Yes Agree - too much POV and detail; He was convicted, that's what matters until the European Court decides. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.253.188.105 (talk) 06:34, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

heh.. I'm not 100% certain that your edit was exactly what little grape had in mind - but we'll see, I guess :-) - I put back the bit of extra info. on the convictions as probably an appropriate amount of info. - seeing as we have a little collection of folk editing at the mo, any objections if I do a bit of archiving of the above? (we can always link to it, of course, but it might be easier to separate the current discussion from the last couple years worth?) Privatemusings (talk) 07:14, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Fair enough - if we do feel there's a place for POV and detail let's at least be accurate and read trial transcripts and give refs and links for them. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.253.188.105 (talk) 08:25, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

yeah - maybe worth thinking about that - see this for another quote - does this fit into this expanded section? Privatemusings (talk) 08:36, 30 June 2009 (UTC)
Yup, archiving sounds good.
A balanced report of the Judge's comments would indeed be useful.
I've now removed the unsourced 'ran Decca' claim.
Still plenty of things to look at that don't add up. He claims to have very little money, and does indeed appear to live fairly modestly having apparently disposed of many of his Rolls-Royces. This doesn't reconcile well with the claims made here e.g. 'sold 40m records, had his own record company with dozens of hits (sometimes three or four in the charts at the same time), his associated company collects ABBA royalties, his TV series topped the BBC ratings' etc etc. Either many of these claims are exaggerated or false, or there are other ventures into which he put his money which failed dismally yet are not covered here. The fact that this article only seems to cover his alleged successes and achievements underlines the suspicion that it is an ill-disguised PR puff piece with smidgeons of reality stuck in here and there. Little grape (talk) 08:39, 30 June 2009 (UTC)
Are you adding more supposition upon supposition? Better:Removing all but well-sourced material would drastically shorten the article & at the same time attract better reportage. I say we start tagging, give it some time- and then cut to the bone. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 21:28, 23 September 2009 (UTC)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Purples —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.253.188.105 (talk) 08:57, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Agreed this needs examining - either editors with an agenda anti-King like Purples or pro-King like all that justification about convictions. I don't think either have a place on Wikipedia. Clues - going on about "running Decca", using emotive negative words like "children" - easy to research - http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?LegType=All+Legislation&searchEnacted=0&extentMatchOnly=0&confersPower=0&blanketAmendment=0&sortAlpha=0&PageNumber=0&NavFrom=0&parentActiveTextDocId=1109288&activetextdocid=1109402 - and all that extraneous stuff about his appeal (not needed - either King himself or a pro-King editor)... I think we need an objective editor to clean out the crap and research of previous identities might give clues.84.253.188.105 (talk) 09:07, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

You appear to be using the same piece of legislation that King uses on his website to support the somewhat odd claim that a 'child' is defined as someone 13 years old or younger. That legislation is from 1933, when children were put to work at 14, and in any case certainly did not state that anyone 14 or over was an adult! Why are you simply repeating King's false statements? For the avoidance of doubt, the UK defines a 'child' as being a person under the age of 18. Attempting to excuse child molestation by relying upon a 1933 Act is possible on King's own site, as (like any of us would) he will attempt to minimise his crimes, but please let's not bring the same mendaciousness here?
If we are going to accurately report King's convictions and provide a balanced account, the *only* place to start is the convictions themselves. Here's his own lawyer's account, in a (failed) submission to the Appeal Court: “Kenneth George King, otherwise known as Jonathan King, is aged 57. On 27_th_ September 2001 at the Central Criminal Court he was convicted of six offences that appeared in an indictment. By count 1 he was convicted of indecent assault, the particulars alleging that he, on a day between 1st March 1983 and 2nd March 1984, had indecently assaulted DE, a male person aged 15. By count 2 he was convicted of buggery, the particulars alleging that he, being a man over the age of 21, on a day between 1st July 1983 and 31_st_ August 1983, committed buggery with CS, a male person under the age of 21, namely 14 years. By count 3 he was convicted of indecent assault, the particulars alleging that he, on a day between 1st August 1984 and 30_th_ September 1984, indecently assaulted JH, a male person aged 14. By count 4 he was convicted of attempted buggery, the particulars alleging that he, being a man over the age of 21, on a day between 6_th_ September 1985 and 9_th_ September 1985, attempted to commit buggery with JH, a male person aged 14. By count 5 he was convicted of a further indecent assault, the particulars alleging that he, between 21_st_ December 1986 and 31_st_ January 1987, indecently assaulted SG, a male person aged 15. Finally, by count 6 he was convicted of indecent assault, the particulars alleging that he, on a day between 3rd May 1989 and 4th May 1990, had indecently assaulted SH, a male person aged 15. On 21_st_ November 2001, he was sentenced by the trial judge, His Honour Judge Paget, as follows: on count 1, he was sentenced to two years' imprisonment; on count 2, seven years' imprisonment; on count 3, three years' imprisonment; on count 4, six years' imprisonment; on count 5, one year's imprisonment; and on count 6, six months' imprisonment. The judge directed that all those sentences were to be served concurrently, making a total sentence of seven years.”
We can look at the other allegations and charges laid regarding people over the age of 16, and King's comments in this regard, but may I suggest we simply stick for now to writing a paragraph or two just about the actual convictions? Then at least we have an agreed starting point going forward. It would also be useful to obtain a full transcript of the Judge's summing up, and his comments at sentencing - can anyone find these easily? (*not* ones sourced off King's site!) Little grape (talk) 09:31, 30 June 2009 (UTC)
Linking to a transcript- wonderful, but a source is the thing. I wonder that some of this 3rd-hand back-and-forth about definitions of sexual maturity isn't better reported in an article tackling definitions of exact Sex Crimes. The law has had it's say; WP is not a place to mete out justice. I wonder if the passions re JKing have not become personal or political obsession; I suspect the perspective is a tad more balanced outside of UK. Simply tag and shortly remove everything not supportable to make issue clear. This article rilly doesnt deserve much attention if it's full of PR bs. Hack away. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 21:28, 23 September 2009 (UTC)

Decca

Removed the 'King ran Decca' nonsense again. The cite given (comprising a non-news article which is in itself ridden with errors, all of which favour King - numberplate KING1 indeed!) says King 'joined doddering Decca Records (home of Hedgehoppers Anonymous) as chief talent scout and assistant to the label’s chairman'. King is not mentioned at all in the wikip article on Decca records or the articles of those associated with Decca around that time (please do not take this as a cue to splatter this nonsense around those articles too). Please ensure this is not put back into this article until and unless concensus is reached or a reputable cite can be found that states King was Managing Director (CEO) or had a formal Board position. Little grape (talk) 13:44, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Little Grape there is no reason why you should not continue the Purples agenda of putting this awful man down in any way you can but this is an encyclopedia of fact and it appears there is enough evidence that King ran Decca for the chairman whatever his title was. It's one line with reference.

As for the trial I've researched from the sites you name and indeed it does appear that the legal UK definition of a child is a person under 14 and persons of 14-18 are young persons. I don't want anything more to do with this. As an American I may have got it wrong and anyway it is better to leave it to the likes of you and Purples. 84.253.188.113 (talk) 14:46, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Again, the above contributor's IP address resolves to the same hotel in Tivoli Italy where King is currently staying. Perhaps it's a mere coincidence that 'an American' who regards King as an 'awful man' is staying in the exact same hotel as King, but it's doubtful! While the subjects of a biog may have something to contribute to their own wiki articles, this particular one has behaved with mendaciousness. However, perhaps he could make suggestions for inclusions, backed up with proper cites?
And, again, he didn't 'run' Decca - his involvement is described in the cited article as 'joined doddering Decca Records (home of Hedgehoppers Anonymous) as chief talent scout and assistant to the label’s chairman'. That's not running anything, that's a role in the A&R department, and a gofer for the boss. It's a bit like Gareth in The Office describing himself as 'Assistant Manager' instead of 'Assistant TO the Manager'. Lazy journalists might not bother to check his claim that he 'ran' Decca, but if it's true there'll be independent verification available we can find. Little grape (talk) 20:06, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Rule 879: 'The subject of an article shouldn't edit it himself'

I suspected that King himself was putting forward his agenda here, and many recent IP edits here have been made from the IP address range of a hotel in Italy. While one should always assume good faith, I posted a statement on King's own forum saying that I'd seen him today at the hotel. He replied, saying it was indeed him and that I should 'come and say hello'. While I apologise for the subterfuge, it is obvious that King is pushing his own POV here and should be barred from further contributions. Little grape (talk) 17:28, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Flagged at WP:COI/N Jheald (talk) 18:02, 30 June 2009 (UTC)
Mad but what can I say? Check my IP from Seattle. Most edits have been neutral and removed pro King POV. Then wonder why Little Grape is so obsessed. 84.253.188.113 (talk) 20:28, 30 June 2009 (UTC)


Here's your problem. It's something called WHOIS. It identifies the IP address 84.253.188.113 thus:

(Asked whois.ripe.net:43 about 84.253.188.113)

inetnum:        84.253.188.96 - 84.253.188.127 
netname:        QUADRIGA-ITALIA-SPA-GRAND-HOTEL-DUCA-DESTE-TIVOLI 
descr:          QUADRIGA-ITALIA-SPA-GRAND-HOTEL-DUCA-DESTE-TIVOLI Network 
country:        IT 
admin-c:         GC10277-RIPE 
tech-c:          SF442-RIPE 
status:         ASSIGNED PA 
mnt-by:          AS5396-MNT 
source:         RIPE  Filtered 
person:         GIANLUIGI CALDIROLA 
address:        QUADRIGA C/O C/O MELI ROMA AURELIA ANTICA - ROMA 
address:        Via Gadames 89 
address:        IT-00100 Milano MI 
phone:          39 02334201 
nic-hdl:         GC10277-RIPE 
source:         RIPE  Filtered 
person:       Silvano Fraticelli 
address:      MC-link Spa 
address:      Via C. Perrier  9a 
address:      I-00157 Roma Italy 
phone:        39 06 418921 
fax-no:       39 06 4515592 
e-mail:       fratics@mclink.it 
nic-hdl:       SF442-RIPE 
mnt-by:        AS5396-MNT 
source:       RIPE  Filtered 
route:        84.253.176.0/20 
descr:        MC-link Network 
origin:       AS5396 
mnt-by:        AS5396-MNT 
source:       RIPE  Filtered 
route:          84.253.128.0/18 
descr:          MC-link Network 
origin:         AS5396 
mnt-by:          AS5396-MNT 
source:         RIPE  Filtered 

It gets worse. A checkuser request might well find that the following users are socks of King:

And finally, and once again by an extraordinary coincidence, the following IP editors' locations and dates over the last month or so (back to the Cannes Film Festival) appear to match King's current European tour through Cannes, Morrocco, and then Italy:

84.253.188.110 QUADRIGA-ITALIA-SPA-GRAND-HOTEL-DUCA-DESTE-TIVOLI
84.253.188.105 QUADRIGA-ITALIA-SPA-GRAND-HOTEL-DUCA-DESTE-TIVOLI
84.253.188.113 QUADRIGA-ITALIA-SPA-GRAND-HOTEL-DUCA-DESTE-TIVOLI
89.97.166.182 FASTWEB-HOSPITALITY MILAN ITALY
84.253.188.106 QUADRIGA-ITALIA-SPA-GRAND-HOTEL-DUCA-DESTE-TIVOLI
62.251.195.18 MAROC TELECOM
81.192.114.30 MAROC TELECOM
81.192.151.226 IAM casablanca and south morocoo
90.4.251.63 Wanadoo France Nice Bloc 2
86.155.166.220 BT-CENTRAL-PLUS


Seattle? I don't think so. Little grape (talk) 21:07, 30 June 2009 (UTC)

Start up a sock case if you want. I don't know if this talk page is the appropriate place for this info though, per WP:OUTING. -- Atamachat 17:39, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
A request for a sock enquiry is now open at Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/jk1944.
On the subject of the interaction with WP:OUTING, there's a thread at WP:AN/I. Balance of opinion so far thinks that in this case Little grape's actions have been etirely appropriate. Jheald (talk) 20:03, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
I don't personally have a problem with it; if an editor is trying to get away with shenanigans I appreciate another editor finding it out. I mainly didn't want to see Little grape getting in trouble for trying to do the right thing. -- Atamachat 20:57, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
I agree and it didn't take that much sleuthing to do a WHOIS lookup via the IP user page. – ukexpat (talk) 21:25, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
Checkuser results confirm that Germing (talk · contribs), Joneseyboy2007 (talk · contribs), and Vandalwatcher (talk · contribs) are all related. The accounts Oopsie poopsie (talk · contribs) and jk1944 (talk · contribs) have not been used recently enough to definitively confirm that they are also related. Jheald (talk) 08:21, 2 July 2009 (UTC)
I have to say that was no surprise. And, my apologies, I should have credited Purples/PrivateMusings with spotting the relationship between several of those usernames a couple of years ago. It is disappointing that nothing was done then; we might by now have had an article to be proud of, rather than a hacked-about PR puff job with bits of truth sprinkled in here and there.
FYI I only did a cursory search of usernames/IP edits to make the point, and only went back a short period. However, I noticed that one IP edit from Paris just before the Cannes film festival (where a Brit enroute to Cannes might dally) praised the 'Good Article' nomination! Little grape (talk) 09:36, 2 July 2009 (UTC)
Wow... As it turns out, according to Checkuser about a half-dozen editors of King's article who have been defending him and/or changing the article to remove negative content are confirmed to be sockpuppets, likely of King himself. That's disturbing. -- Atamachat 17:08, 2 July 2009 (UTC)
It was quite cleverly done - but then he's a Cambridge English grad. At least we can now settle down to starting over, and writing a balanced article. My own view is that he was an extraordinary (in all senses) character in the 60's and 70's, occupying a unique niche in British pop history who then went on to develop and star in an outstandingly good TV series in the early 80's. But he didn't do anything notable for the next ten years - until his convictions. And he hasn't done anything notable since, either. Endless plugging of his latest home-movie, and puffery of non-notable stuff he's done since being released simply detracts from his considerable achievements (even if these *don't* include running Decca Records). Let's have a shot at writing something even he can be proud of? And in my view it's fine for him to come clean and assist in that process - as long as he commits to not editing the main article. Little grape (talk) 18:31, 2 July 2009 (UTC)
I for one will second all of the above. TeapotgeorgeTalk 18:36, 2 July 2009 (UTC)
Regarding Decca, even if he wasn't MD there, it does seem accepted that his A&R role there in 1966-70 was quite significant. Eg according to Bruce Eder, All Music Guide (excerpted at answers.com),
"A little bit later, he was hired by Sir Edward Lewis, the founder and chairman of England's Decca Records, as his assistant. The aging Lewis (who'd put the company together in 1929) knew that there were changes going on in popular music ... but not how to decide whom or what to record. King became his resident advisor in dealing with the new pop music." [7]
and in the Lewis article:
"[Lewis] did have an advisor to help him run the pop label for a time in producer Jonathan King, but King -- who was still a young man, and whose interests in music were more direct, and had also been a successful recording artist himself -- was unwilling to take on the responsibility of running an entire record label within the framework of a corporation." [8] (Incidentally, WP itself should probably have an article on Lewis).
Or we have Jon Ronson writing,
Within two years of leaving Cambridge, he was running Decca Records for Sir Edward Lewis, with his own West End offices and a Rolls-Royce parked outside. [9]
Okay, that description may be lifted fairly closely from King himself, and equally it's important to remember that Decca's outstanding reputation was for its classical music side, plus that by 1970, even with whatever JK's role might have been, "apart from the Moody Blues... the label had no internationally established rock acts";[10] but even so, his role at Decca is of at least some significance, and most of the newspaper profiles from the time of his conviction at least mention it. Jheald (talk) 19:28, 2 July 2009 (UTC)
This is so funny. Someone posts that Little Grape is a load of other people. Little Grape responds by saying King has written all the entry himself. Someone conveniently erases all talk from the period King was in prison and presumably without internet access. If Little Grape is UKExpat and Purples and all the others except King, only two people are writing this, which I suspect is two more than are reading it. And it all started with someone (King?) nominating it as a Good Article. Wikipedia at its finest. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Alpacatracker (talkcontribs) 16:45, 3 July 2009 (UTC)
Welcome along to the party Alpacatracker. Sorry to see your very first experience on WP has been so disappointing. I guess it's odd too that of all the myriad pages to contribute to in your very first post, you choose one that you think no-one's interested in - and you've popped along here just after we've culled a large number of King sock puppets. In fact you've turned up the very next day. Anyway, welcome to Wikipedia. Oh, and buona giornata. Little grape (talk) 17:15, 3 July 2009 (UTC)
Am I "Little grape" too? I'm confused. -- Atamachat 23:23, 7 July 2009 (UTC)
Apparently not.

Checkuser results confirm that Little grape (talk · contribs), Ukexpat (talk · contribs), Purples (talk · contribs) and Privatemusings (talk · contribs) are all related. So at least four of us are here. Special:Contributions/86.172.242.103 (talk) 12:00, 8 July 2009 (UTC)

That's funny, there doesn't seem to have been a sockpuppet 86.172.242.103|investigation for any of those names. Perhaps you would like to file for one, instead of throwing around unsubstantiated claims? Jheald (talk) 12:35, 8 July 2009 (UTC)
Same old claims and games. Except that the game's up! A quick WHOIS indicates the European holiday was cut somewhat shorter this year, and an even quicker call to 'that' hotel reveals that a certain IP user checked out 'before the beginning of the week' (my Italian failed at that point). I have to say I did wonder why it suddenly started raining in London yesterday.... Little grape (talk) 12:47, 8 July 2009 (UTC)

"I'm not King and wonder what axe UKexpat/Little Grape has to grind when this is clearly detailed later in the lead". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.137.206.51 (talk) 20:19, 22 July 2009 (UTC)

Of course you're not King. WHOIS reveals you just happen to be holidaying in Morocco at exactly the same time as him. These coincidences happen all the time - when King was holidaying in Italy, IP edits came from King's hotel there. When King was in Paris enroute for Cannes, IP edits from Paris were made in support of the GA nomination (yes, unbelievably this article was briefly a GA candidate...). Perhaps the explanation is that King is wholly innocent of such POV editing, and there's some weirdo following him around from foreign hotel to foreign hotel while all the time making IP edits on his behalf. Yup, that could happen. Little grape (talk) 22:48, 22 July 2009 (UTC)

JK just spotted in Venice at Harry's Bar! Ignore all posts from Italy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ellymental (talkcontribs) 09:34, 25 July 2009 (UTC)

Just did WHOIS on 86.172.242.103 - it says London, England... getting confused - could there be more than two contributors?

Ditto 86.137.206.51

Ditto 82.35.76.101


—Preceding unsigned comment added by Ellymental (talkcontribs) 09:46, 25 July 2009 (UTC)

So it appears both Little Grape and Ukexpat share this IP - 67.159.45.51

"It is not normally considered a breach of privacy policy to state that different named accounts are operated from the same IP or range if details of the range are not given, or if a generic description only is given (country, large ISP etc) that in no way is very likely to identify a specific person."

Little Grape says 86.137.206.51 is in Morocco - WHOIS says London; is Little Grape lying?

The agenda from this person seems to be removing positives (did he run Decca? Who cares? Did he record Who Let The Dogs Out before the hit? It seems yes) and adding negatives (as many mentions for his crimes as possible). Should something like a criminal conviction be listed in a career synopsis when it is later in the lead?

None of us like child molesters. But is Wikipedia meant to be a morality site? I am not interested in drawing a conclusion; I just suggest this warrants consideration.

"Hi folks, this was the userpage of 'Purples'. This username is banned because the chap behind the screen (who I like to call 'me') used other usernames" —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ellymental (talkcontribs) 18:26, 27 July 2009 (UTC)

Twice in lede?

At best it is gratuitous, at worst deliberate, to repeat Convicted Sex Offender twice in the lede. Unless there is an agenda in which case why not start a new Jonathan King Convicted Sex Offender blog and devote it to that? As a Genesis fan I think it more appropriate to mention them in the lede but then I'm more into music than sex.83.156.249.122 (talk) 14:52, 31 July 2009 (UTC)

Checked Jean Genet, Oscar Wilde, Caravaggio and others; none list "Convicted murderer" or "criminal" in career list. Pourquoi Cherie (talk) 16:38, 31 July 2009 (UTC)

Since Little Grape wants consensus, my opinion is that Convicted Sex Offender is not a career summary ingredient and should not be listed as such. He will doubtless claim I'm King. I'm not. Nor am I in Morocco or Italy or anywhere else Little Grape says; I'm in England. I'd like to know why Little Grape is so obsessed by King. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.35.76.101 (talk) 16:57, 31 July 2009 (UTC)

Oh I don't know - you and the *three* preceding contributors seem to have only edited King articles (except for silly stunts like adding commas to other articles to try and make it look like you have other interests), so the same question might more pointedly be asked of *you*? Little grape (talk) 17:15, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
Since when did this become a CV for King? The Article is about him in general, good or bad, it isn't just about his career highlights (I use the term "highlight" in its widest possible sense). --WebHamster 17:23, 31 July 2009 (UTC)

Trouble with Wikipedia

So I logged on by accident and saw Mr Montreux's comment and thought "I seem to remember that"... Hours later, after going through piles of VHS (anyone remember VHS) tapes. I found it. Surprisingly good. So I came back to say it did indeed exist and found the comment removed. I have no problem with people trying to inflate their importance - King, sock puppets and supporters are legitimate. Nor with Paedo haters - Grape, sock puppets and cleverly disguised snipers and "editors" - legitimate. But it is so sad when a harmless comment like I suspect Mr Montreux who will probably not come back anyway gets a distant memory removed in the Bitch Agenda of many Wikipedia current "administrators". I used to love Wikipedia for all those memory joggers. Silly, stupid, unconfirmed, unlinked, distant dreams that provoked similar from me. Now it is all dreadfully serious with the Kings and the Grapes battling it out and all the dry admins pretending to be fair. If Mr Montreux does read this by the way - you were right about the show but Opus 17 were Dutch not Swiss. I've not tried to revert the reversions - why on earth bother? Kelvin 83.144.5.5 (talk) 10:57, 9 August 2009 (UTC).

Hear Hear! for the liberation of sex. Funny how history is nothing but collective memory, until someone controls a printing press. Then it become a matter of opinion and power and puppets. When he founded it, Jimmy had hoped WP would allow people to see thru the politics and distribute real info. But it seems our masters are able to pay to have us buried faster than we can uncover the truth. So what we struggle for- is the Lowest Common Denominator. Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 21:56, 23 September 2009 (UTC)
I guess there's nothing much to do in Cannes these days but log into Wikipedia by accident. But what luck you had a huge pile of old VHS tapes with you and felt stirred enough by your first foray into WP to come and tell us your views. Funnily enough King was in Cannes a couple of months ago; I don't suppose you bumped into each other did you? Little grape (talk) 15:48, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
For the sake of a civil discourse please drop the sarcasm. Surely you don't mean it but you are coming off a tad careless about other Editors' feelings at this point.Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 21:56, 23 September 2009 (UTC)

Not interested in your smokescreen; just in whether you and the likes of you are ruining Wikipedia. Kelvin 83.144.5.5 (talk) 12:19, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

Get on with it

EVERY issue of puppetry, partisanship and homophobia is easily resolved: Simply hack away at this ridiculous article until only what is well & truly documented remains. It should then satisfy the most ardent crusader- B/c at that point the article will consist of nothing but "Everyone's gone to the moon"- and years of Fleet-Street rag reportage. And yes, when the serious editing begins, archive ALL of the above. Get on with it already- This article simply does not deserve all this attention! Hilarleo Hey,L.E.O. 21:40, 23 September 2009 (UTC)

COI tag

Is this still needed? It seems quite well balanced now, and it certainly doesn't white-wash his conviction. Fences&Windows 14:15, 11 October 2009 (UTC)

Sueing the Pet Shop Boys

"In 1987, King accused Pet Shop Boys of plagiarising the melody of Cat Stevens' 1970 song 'Wild World' for their UK #1 single 'It's a Sin'"

I never knew he did that.... Oddly enough, when I first heard "Its a Sin" on Top of the Pops in 1987 my mate said "Thats a rip off of that old Cat Stevens song".....So I think King was probably right! StanPomeray (talk) 11:31, 7 November 2009 (UTC)

Yes, perhaps it reads as if King had something to do with the Cat Stevens song - of course he had nothing to do with it at all. He made the false accusation in a newspaper column, refused to apologise or withdraw, got himself sued, and then when it was clear that the Court was going to find against him he turned tail and offered a cash settlement to the Pet Shop Boys. Good article by Janet Street Porter on this and other aspects of his behaviour and personality at http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/janet-street-porter/editoratlarge-he-lured-boys-hes-a-bully-now-he-bleats-530894.html
Street-Porter: 'Mr King will stop at nothing in order to put his views across. As a BBC executive I was asked by the channel controllers to cancel two series that he made for us. It was felt that they were past their sell-by date and we needed to move on. Through his columns in The Sun he embarked on a long period of trashing every programme my department made, printing false ratings, and endlessly inflating his own success. Finally, the BBC had to threaten to sue before the drivel stopped. In 1987 he claimed in The Sun the Pet Shop Boys had plagiarised Cat Stevens's "Wild World" in their hit "It's a Sin". He refused to admit he was wrong and after being sued, settled out of court. The damages were donated to charity.' Little grape (talk) 17:10, 7 November 2009 (UTC)

appeal before the european court of human rights

I think it's over egging the pudding a little to describe the status quo in this way. Perhaps it would be better not to mention the court at all? Privatemusings (talk) 21:21, 7 November 2009 (UTC)

Yes - last time I checked, the case was still listed at ECHR - but now it appears to have been removed. I guess either it was struck out or has an indefinite stay on it. Perhaps the reference should be removed unless and until something actually happens. Little grape (talk) 09:42, 8 November 2009 (UTC)
Hi LG, what makes you think it's been delisted? SlimVirgin talk|contribs 22:07, 8 November 2009 (UTC)
All pending and completed cases are listed on the ECHR website. Last time I checked, this case (King vs the United Kingdom) was listed for hearing in (as I recall) either Sept/Oct/Nov 2009. It's now missing off the list, and there's no judgement, so likely conclusions are that it was withdrawn by the complainant, struck out, or stayed. However, there may be some other explanation (perhaps it's an omission by the ECHR webmaster, or some indexing updating problem because it's changed status). It's odd that it's just vanished from the listings. Little grape (talk) 10:21, 9 November 2009 (UTC)

Hi PM, any appeal must be noted alongside the conviction, per BLP and NPOV, as must any assertion of innocence. We should either mention all of it or none of it in the lead, and clearly it can't be none of it. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 22:43, 9 November 2009 (UTC)

per my recent edit + summary, I thought I'd point out here that I've tweaked the lead a bit, and moved some stuff to the body, and reworded the text in relation to the court of human rights stuff per my best reading of available sources. Comments most welcome... Privatemusings (talk) 22:46, 9 November 2009 (UTC)

Also, the source you used doesn't say anything about inequality in laws regarding heterosexual and homosexual contact, nor anything about the "notwithstanding" issue, so that's OR. It did say that he felt he couldn't defend himself properly because of the passage of time, which you removed. :) SlimVirgin talk|contribs 22:47, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
heh.. that'll learn me (once again) to write first, and confirm sourcing later! - the assertion regarding inequality of consent legislation is definitely sourcable as the heart of King's assertion of innocence, so I'll find that properly, and we can see whether both basis of claims of innocence are useful to detail, or what... do you think there's a smoother way of crafting a good lead without a sort of linear description of all legal matters in the third para? (I just popped on gchat to see if you were there too btw...) Privatemusings (talk) 22:53, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
The direct quote, reported by James Silver for news corp.s here, is "I've always said I was guilty of breaking the age of consent laws because they weren't equalised ... But I wasn't guilty of having sex with the men I was convicted of [having sex with]." (and "I was bi-sexual and had sex with both genders. I found it ludicrous that it was legal to have sex with a girl of 16 but not with a boy of the same age.") - thoughts? Privatemusings (talk) 23:00, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
That's fine, and yes, I think it can be tightened so that it's appropriate for the lead. I'll have a go at doing it later if you haven't already. The thing to do when writing about this kind of thing is to stick very closely to what the highest-quality sources say, and attribute in-text where there's doubt e.g. The Daily Mail reports that his case is before the European Court etc. Pity we can't find another source for that. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 23:11, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
it'll have to be later for me too (in the day, or week - I dunno).... I'll get back to it, and the below, anon.... cheers, Privatemusings (talk) 23:16, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
I think the 'equalisation' argument re sex with minors is a bit of a red herring. King was only found guilty of sex offences against children *under* the age of sixteen, which is and was unlawful in the UK irrespective of their gender. While it's clear from his protestations in the Press that he would like the debate on his behaviour concentrated on the equalisation issue, the facts are that this was and is irrelevant to his conviction. Thus I think it makes sense in the lede and elsewhere to focus on what he was actually convicted for, rather than allow that issue to be clouded by discussion of sex with people of 16+.
I also think references to the ECHR appeal should be in for balance, as it is a matter of fact that he did file a claim there. The Daily Mail reference is two years old, but it appears to be accurate and hasn't been contradicted anywhere that I'm aware of. The issue of whether the claim has been thrown out awaits clarification; perhaps the ECHR website will publish something in due course that we can reference (they usually put up the text of judgements fairly quickly after a hearing). Little grape (talk) 08:42, 10 November 2009 (UTC)

40 million records?

way back when I was first editing this page (as User:Purples) - I had a very pleasant email chat with Jon Ronson concerning his article, and some other stuff King-related. Whilst being aware of how close to the 'original research' line I may be sailing, I think it's probably worth pointing out that the 40millions records sold statistic was in fact simply what King told Ronson. Quite how we handle such information, whilst ensuring we're accurate is a bit tricky - but I guess rather extraordinary claims should probably require cast iron sourcing? I'd be happier not to be so specific given the risk of exaggeration / inaccuracy - thoughts? Privatemusings (talk) 22:46, 9 November 2009 (UTC)

We could use in-text attribution. King told Jon Ronson in 2003 (or whenever) that he had sold (whatever). SlimVirgin talk|contribs 23:13, 9 November 2009 (UTC)
Yes, great solution - agree 100% on this style where the only source is King's own claim. See article version from around a year ago to see how alleged self-aggrandisation in various interviews have made it into the article as 'facts', when they were (to take a charitable view) PR spin with little basis in truth. Janet Street Porter tackles some of this at http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/janet-street-porter/editoratlarge-he-lured-boys-hes-a-bully-now-he-bleats-530894.html which alludes to the ludicrous statement in the article some time ago that he 'ran Decca Records' and gets royalties from Abba! Re. the 40m sales, he includes for example the hit 'Who Let the Dogs Out', which he had nothing whatever to do with, yet includes that in the '40m'. No doubt he's also including all Genesis sales to date, when the only one he had anything to do with was their first (somewhat dismal) album that sold around 37 copies. Googling '"jonathan king" 40 million' simply bring a long list of the same claims, with no reliable references apart from interviews and writings from King himself. Sometimes the 40m is claimed as being sales 'as a performer', and sometimes as 'hits he has been associated with' - which is a very different thing. It should be possible to check the veracity of at least some of these claims - King says that the single 'Johnny Reggae' by the Piglets sold five million copies, but it only ever got to number 3 in the UK charts at a time when a #3 single might have sold 200,000 copies if it was very lucky. Little grape (talk) 09:10, 10 November 2009 (UTC)
I can't see where the Street Porter article questions the 40 million unless I'm missing it. [11] SlimVirgin talk|contribs 14:02, 19 November 2009 (UTC)

I was referring above to the general point that he makes claims that have not been independently verified - she says 'He is full of self- aggrandising claims'. She also categorically states later in the article that he's printed false ratings, made unsubstantiated allegations (for which he was sued and had to settle), and was 'endlessly inflating his own success'. She hasn't tackled the specific 40m claim, but demonstrates a pattern of behaviour that would suggest that very careful checking of any self-referenced data might be in order.... Little grape (talk) 15:37, 19 November 2009 (UTC)

Ronson writes that "in fact," King had sales of 40 million, so that sentence will have to be rewritten. The way it's currently written, it's almost a BLP violation, because you're hinting that he's lying, but without attribution: even with attribution, we'd have to be careful about writing that way. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 14:11, 19 November 2009 (UTC)

I think Ronson has just been careless with his wording, particularly in light of his alleged comments to Privatemusings in email. Torrents of 'facts' from interviewees simply can't be verified within deadlines; I would say most claims are taken on trust and printed verbatim, and this allows the opportunity to recreate history if an interviewee is minded to. This is perhaps best illustrated by interviewees getting away with knocking a few years off their ages. But I agree the article shouldn't hint at anything that can't be substantiated - it should come out of the lede, or be completely removed until there's some reliable source for the 40m sales. Little grape (talk) 15:37, 19 November 2009 (UTC)

Hi, we can't use what Ronson said in an e-mail; we can only use what he wrote, which was:

But one cannot categorise his career as a downward spiral from Everyone's Gone To The Moon onwards. In fact, he has sold 40 million records. He's had a hand in almost every musical movement since the mid-1960s - psychedelic, novelty bubblegum pop, alternative pop, Eurovision, the Bay City Rollers, 10CC, the Rocky Horror Show, Genesis, Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine, the Brit awards, and so on.

We can't say or hint that Ronson got this information only from the interviewee, because Ronson didn't write it as though that happened. If you want to question it, you'll need to find another source who questions it explicitly, then you can write something like, "Ronson writes that he sold 40 million, although X writes that blah blah ..." SlimVirgin talk|contribs 15:57, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
I've looked around a bit, and I'm wondering whether 40 million really is such a stretch. One of the Bay City Roller's songs alone, Bye Bye Baby, sold one million (according to its WP article), and King was also involved with Genesis and 10CC. Would 40 million over 36 years given the number of groups he worked with be such a huge amount? I'm not saying it isn't—you could well be right—I'm just wondering out loud. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 16:09, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
And therein lies the problem - because King has talked about the Bay City Rollers, the assumption is that he played some part in their success and should be credited for their sales. To credit someone for a record sale they must surely be either the performer, or the songwriter, because these are generally the people who profit from ongoing sales (possibly a slice for the producer). The only other party is the record company, but unless you are the sole owner of that record company you can't really claim that every record sold should somehow be attributed to you - and even then it's a stretch. 'Bye Bye Baby' was not written by King, not performed by him, not produced by him, and nothing to do with the record company he worked for. Neither was the album it was on, or any other album the Rollers released. As for Genesis, he had nothing to do with their success, which only came AFTER they left Decca records. I think King was working for Decca at the time in A&R, recommended them to the record company, then worked on their first album. But it was a disaster, didn't come within even a sniff of charting, and they dumped King and Decca - and went on to huge success. King can therefore only claim any credit for that first album, which I think Decca puled after selling a handful of copies (King I think later tried to sell CD's of it, but in infinitesimal amounts). 10cc - same story; signed with King's label, had a couple of UK minor hits, but their huge hit 'I'm Not In Love' was with someone else - Mercury Records. Again, King had nothing to do with it.
So it's difficult to put together any reasonable number for 'King sales', except to say that as a performer it must be MUCH less than 1m total - he just wasn't that big, had a coule of novelty hits, and certainly his career was pretty much confined to the UK market - so it's very difficult to identify where he might get this odd claim from. I can only think that his logic is 'I discovered Genesis, so I'll credit myself with all sales they've made since that time', and then repeated the same formula for everyone else. Re longevity, bear in mind Bob Dylan has been around and selling albums since 1959 - yet has only managed 70m despite being well-known globally. King's 40m from mainly UK sales is a joke, and this 'fact' needs either exculpation or expunction.... Little grape (talk) 17:03, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
It reminds me of an interview I saw once with James Brown, who started reeling off a list of the people he said owed him money. I forget the names, but it was like, "Michael Jackson, you owe me $200 million," and on down the list of American performers he'd influenced. :)
There are two separate issues here: the truth and what's been published. We can't do the former, because we just don't know. We're therefore left with the latter, where we should choose the sources we feel are most reputable, and therefore most likely to be right. Unfortunately, Jon Ronson doesn't say, "King told me he'd sold 40 million." He writes it in a very factual way, as though he'd checked it for himself, so that's what we're stuck with. Because you're questioning it, we can add in-text attribution, but we can't ourselves write it as though we doubt it's true.
As for your other points, he might be getting royalties for some of the hits he had nothing to do with, on the grounds that he discovered the bands and maybe he had that kind of contract with them. That might be what he means by 40 million -- getting royalties from material that attracted sales of 40 million. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 17:30, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
This book [12] seems to have a detailed entry on King's career that we could use as a source. Google books lets different countries access in different ways. It's not letting me see any of the pages, but you might be able to see them. King is on page 544. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 17:42, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
Good and witty points SV - I too can't see much of that book entry apart from the prescient first line 'While little-known in the USA....', but yes your conclusions and suggestions make sense. Poor old James Brown doesn't even make the WP list of artists who've sold 50m+ albums (which seems very odd?). Perhaps I should nip over there and start work - do you happen to have a full list of the people who owed Brown money? I can then extrapolate that cash into album sales so I can add a couple of billion to his sales figures. Seems only fair.... Little grape (talk) 18:04, 19 November 2009 (UTC)
I find it very hard to believe that Johnathan King (as a peformer at least) has outsold Chris Rea, or comes anywhere near his sales. While he had a little more success on the singles chart, King never had a #1 single and never charted an album, Rea on the other had has enjoyed two #1 albums and a lot of other chart entries. 92.11.187.12 (talk) 08:06, 20 November 2009 (UTC)
How long is a piece of string? One hit single can do a few million as a single and ten times that on compilation albums of hits. Thriller sold millions as an album but each track sold many more on compilations. Unless we want to get into semantics or just be negative let's stick to reported facts rather than opinions. Mind you he is loathsome. 86.169.135.54 (talk) 09:00, 20 November 2009 (UTC)
I don't see too many JK songs on compilation albums, even as far back as the '80s. Needless to say the public were never clamoring for his music in their millions. If they were he'd have had a long run of chart-toppers (he never had one). Also sales on "compilations" should not be counted. Just because an artist has a track or two on one doesn't mean most people are buying it for that track. A true look at how popular someone is, is who bought THEIR records. Who sold more - Take That in the 1990s, or King in the '70s? He has sold nowhere near 40 million! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.8.244.36 (talk) 09:08, 20 November 2009 (UTC)

The more one delves, and applies even the most basic logic, the more ridiculous the 40m figure sounds. My view is that it should be wholly removed until it can be verified by someone other than King-sourced 'fact'. But until then, its inclusion in WP should be qualified very carefully - the Independent article at [13] indicates the possible problems associated with this person when it comes to self-aggrandisement (and provides some balance to the other refs); we should simply ensure such activity doesn't make it into the article. Little grape (talk) 12:37, 20 November 2009 (UTC)

I see what you're saying, but it's tricky. That Independent article you linked to is really quite over the top; see the comments made about Lyn Barber. We can only qualify the figure if a reliable source does, and explicitly so. Also remember that we're not talking about him as a performer, but as performer, producer, signer-upper. Perhaps we could try to get hold of the entry in the encyclopaedia I linked to above; it might say something about it. SlimVirgin talk|contribs 13:25, 20 November 2009 (UTC)

Still no luck finding anything that backs up the 40m claim, and the European Court case seems to have now wholly disappeared off the judicial radar. En passant I found some starting points [14], and the remarkable [15] (which seemed unable to predict those elusive total sales). The French WP entry repeats the fantasy that he was Managing Director of Decca Records [16]. Not a bad stab at a bio, giving US perspective, here: [17] Little grape (talk) 20:33, 22 November 2009 (UTC)

Constant stream of opinions and invective both pro and anti - stick to facts not bias. User:Henri (talk) 11:57, 23 November 2009 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.152.250.21 (talk)

Little Grape, I think this article [18] ought not to be used as a source per BLP. It's one person's opinion and somewhat extreme. The article also insults another living person unconnected to this. SlimVirgin 14:40, 23 November 2009 (UTC)
I think if we want to use the Street Porter article as a source, we'd have to added something about there being starkly contrasting views of King, then use Street Porter and Lynn Barber as sources, giving the good and the bad. But we can't use the Street Porter article as though it's a regular news source that isn't highly personal and contentious. SlimVirgin 14:49, 23 November 2009 (UTC)
Strikes me the anti-King lobby is more cunning than the pro-King lobby and let's face it, there are many more of them. But let's stick to facts here and not get tricked into fake figures or thinly disguised hate. 81.152.250.21 (talk) 15:09, 23 November 2009 (UTC)
I agree that we need to stick very closely to what the most reliable sources have said. SlimVirgin 15:17, 23 November 2009 (UTC)

Cambridge University MA

I changed this sentence "King was educated at Charterhouse School (with Max Hastings and Jonathan Dimbleby) and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated with an M.A. in English literature." to read B.A. rather than M.A. You don't graduate with a Cambridge M.A. You graduate with a B.A. You get asked, some terms after your graduation - I think it's ten (for example, if you graduated in 2005 you got it in spring 2009), if you want to be bumped up to an M.A - after paying a fee. That's all. It's not a proper academic qualification, it's really no better than a correspondence university degree ie you stump up and you get your certificate. 86.133.210.53 (talk) 11:53, 10 December 2009 (UTC)

Are you sure? I thought the MA came after putting in an extra year after the BA; I assumed King had done four years. A cite would be useful before taking away what might be a legit degree? Little grape (talk) 13:07, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
At most universities, that is the case. Cambridge does things differently. As per their website:
In most UK universities, the Master of Arts is a degree awarded by examination. At Cambridge, the MA is conferred by right on holders of the BA degree of the University and on certain other senior members and is not available as a postgraduate qualification.
ElijahOmega (talk) 13:23, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
(edit conflict) Yep, I'm sure. I went to Cambridge too and paid up for my MA. I'll find a cite. The Cambridge M.Phil. is a 'proper' degree. 86.133.210.53 (talk) 13:24, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
Fair enough - we must assume he bothered to pay to trade up to an MA, so perhaps we could re-credit it to him simply by re-wording the line in the article? I'll have a go.... Little grape (talk) 13:29, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
Done, albeit inelegantly; pls improve! Little grape (talk) 13:32, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
It's over a decade since I went through it, but the fee for converting a Cambridge BA into an MA is really not much - just a notional administration charge. We have a good link available to explain these degrees: Master of Arts (Oxbridge and Dublin). Sam Blacketer (talk) 13:34, 10 December 2009 (UTC)

What are we playing at? The man committed a crime - yes, cover it. He was responsible for some big hits. Cover it. I looked it up. Basic Google proves it - why pretend it never happened? I found it fascinating that these people sang this song. Quote - "In 1962 she sings 'My Baby', also in Paris. In 1967 Bacharach arranges 'Everyone's Gone to the Moon' for MARLENE. In London's 'Golders Green' she sings it live for the first time, and recordings are also made." - http://home.snafu.de/fright.night/marlene-dietrich-rare.html And Nina - http://www.last.fm/music/Nina+Simone/_/Everyone's+Gone+to+the+Moon - 30,248 plays on Last FM. Just because we find the man repulsive should not influence the facts. Yes, he wrote his own autobiography (isn't that obvious?). So we only use facts or newspaper cuttings or proven details from it - not opinions. But we don't reject real evidence. But Wikipedia must not start twisting entries to reflect our feelings. Words like Fail and directions which seem official but are not. Very dangerous slippery road. Even if understandable.86.189.6.65 (talk) 13:46, 10 December 2009 (UTC)

What are we playing at, and why so many IP editors from BT-PAWLAN?

Extraordinary how many single-digit IP editors from the small pool at BT-PAWLAN seem to have popped up lately. All with a keen interest in a small set of articles. Little grape (talk) 13:51, 10 December 2009 (UTC)

I am with BT broadband, a not-uncommon IP provider, which has dynamic IPs. They change regularly. You can turn off the back of your modem to get a new number, but you can't go back to a previous one. And my interest was piqued by the discussion of JK on Popbitch this morning, if that's what you were wondering. Came over here to read about him, saw the mistake about the MA, so corrected it. Assume good faith, please, Little Grape. 86.133.210.53 (talk) 13:56, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
I wasn't referring to you; BT-PAWLAN has the small IP range 86.189.0.0 - 86.189.31.255 Little grape (talk) 14:05, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
Apologies; my mistake. 86.133.210.53 (talk) 14:06, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
No problem, I should have been clearer Little grape (talk) 14:10, 10 December 2009 (UTC)

My reverts

Apologies if I'm wrong about the reverts Teapot George - you're clearly a King fan; I'm not but I have no problem with that but surely - including such "facts" as "the first record he bought was..." is obvious worship - really there is no place on Wikipedia for trivia like that. The link to Scotland On Sunday had nothing to do with King. And surely his published Autobiography which has received a lot of coverage (it's what brought me here) is legitimate information? 83.202.115.181 (talk) 14:25, 14 December 2009 (UTC)

Sorry I hadn't noticed that my revert had allowed his first first record purchased a place on the page! Cheers. TeapotgeorgeTalk 23:43, 14 December 2009 (UTC)

Having read his book; Added his running Decca evidenced by features from Music Business Weekly by Rodney Burbeck and interview with Sir Edward Lewis carried in autobiography - all from photographs of articles. Performers who covered Everyone's Gone To The Moon should surely be included as of interest - all can be found via Google or You Tube. Moved the section on his crimes into the lower appropriate chronological section.Aliceinsprings (talk) 09:08, 17 January 2010 (UTC)

His book is self-penned and self-published, and thus is not regarded as a reliable source - in the same way that a self-published blog or website is not a reliable source. It is a fantasy, for example, that he 'ran Decca records' - although this myth has passed into semi-fact simply because King keeps repeating it. The only way he could 'run' Decca would be if he was appointed Managing Director - but he wasn't even a Board member, let alone in charge! It appears he was, however, charged with 'advising the Chairman' - coincidentally Decca's role in popular music declined even further in the short period King had this role, and he presided over one disasterous release after another before his engagement was 'mutually terminated'. At best, he was a manager in the A&R department in the popular music division - a minor role in what was then a minor part of the Decca business. Little grape (talk) 16:33, 17 January 2010 (UTC)

Appeal

I wonder whether we should simply remove the reference in the lead to the European Court of Human Rights. It's not entirely clear from the sources what stage the application was at in 2008, and I can't find anything more recent. SlimVirgin TALK contribs 19:21, 25 February 2010 (UTC)

Actually, I'm going to make further inquiries first. Will report back if I hear anything. SlimVirgin TALK contribs 10:12, 26 February 2010 (UTC)
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  1. ^ Jonathan King is Jailed for sex offences [19]