Talk:Rolando Gomez

External links being removed and readded, ....
Here are some external links, for the convenience of those trying to improve the article. Some of them clearly belong in the main article.

On fairness of mentioning they have the same publisher
John: The entire article is unverifiable, none reliably sourced, etc... I agree that it might reflect "primary research" -- definitely not synth though -- to point out that both she and the subject are in business with the same entity but, well, by that standard it's ALL original research (all the sources are either to Gomez or to people Gomez is in business with) and the article should be stubbified forthwith. Since Perkins is being used in an effort to establish notability (which is a violation of policy) at the very least we should point out the business relationship. This is from WP:BIO:

"A person is presumed to be notable if he or she has been the subject of published secondary source material which is reliable, intellectually independent, and independent of the subject. If the depth of coverage is not substantial, then multiple independent sources may be needed to prove notability; trivial coverage of a subject by secondary sources may not be sufficient to establish notability. Primary sources may be used to support content in an article, but they do not contribute toward proving the notability of a subject."Bali ultimate (talk) 21:07, 10 December 2008 (UTC)


 * I disagree with much of the above - see the AfD. The statement about Perkins is clearly OR by synth. It is a wild stretch and a very weak and unusual argument to suggest Perkins having the same publisher as Gomez  implies that he is in business with her, or to impugn the credibility of such a source with no basis that I can see.  There is no violation of policy by using Perkins to establish notability, as no lack of independence or business relationship has been shown, and I and many others believe that the book is a clear proof of notability. I strongly suggest you rewrite the last sentence in section 1.1 above, because of BLP concerns. Just because someone may self-promote, even on wikipedia, and use bad AfD arguments and sources does not imply non-notability.John Z (talk) 21:33, 10 December 2008 (UTC)


 * They are both in business with Amherst. That's neither original research or synth. I'll put it and cite that. As for AfD, that establishes nothing other than whether or not an article will be deleted (a succesful afd does not become an argument to support sourcing in violation of policy, for instance.) Again the bold bit above seems more than relevant. Let me take another whack and see what you think.Bali ultimate (talk) 21:41, 10 December 2008 (UTC)


 * This is better, but it is still a fact about Perkins, and without a reliable source connecting this fact to Gomez, has nothing to do with him. Suggesting it does is WP:OR. see "if the sources cited are not directly related to the article subject" etc. The bold bit as applied to this article is a very, very weak and novel argument.  Independence as used here is relevant only to notability and deletion, not reliability. The idea that if source A has  the same publisher as source B, written by an article subject X, then A is in any way unacceptable for X is amazing. A published autobiography falls into this category, A=B even, but is accepted by policy as a reliable source, see Blp. The reliability is granted by the publisher, which has not had any serious arguments made against it. The very strangeness of the argument makes the OR and apparent impugnment of Perkins as a source relatively innocuous, and I won't change it for now.  Regards,John Z (talk) 23:56, 10 December 2008 (UTC)


 * I really don't understand your concern here. Why does the bare mention that "Perkins, who shares his publisher, interviewed him in one of her books" trouble you (i linked to Amherst website to show that it was the publisher)? Ms. Perkins wrote a book published by Amherst in which she interviews Mr. Gomez, whose works are also published by Amherst. There are citations, of the same quality, for the facts of who their shared publisher is. That's all that's in there now. And I'm happy with that bit as it is. I really can't bend on this brief mention of a fact, particularly given the fact that we still can't find a single independent or otherwise reliable source (i quoted the relevant WP:BIO bit upthread) for this article. I'll make you this deal, though: We remove the Amherst mention (on what i believe is a misunderstanding of WP:OR, but whatever) and in exchange also firmly enforce WP:RS. I note WP:RS says this: "Self-published sources may be used only in limited circumstances, with caution. Keep in mind that if the information is worth reporting, an independent source is likely to have done so." This policy rightly disqualifies Garage Glamour and Gomez' website. There are other sections that would disqualify Lexapro, as he has a business relationship with him, as a source of reliable, independent information for him beyond the fact that he's a "Lexapro pro photographer."

I'm making a huge compromise on both policy and reason by not stripping this down to the barest of three line stubs as it is. If reliable, secondary, and independent sources emerge, my opinion would change. I've looked very hard. Where are they?
 * John Z, First, thanks for your support in helping with this article. To answer a few questions on the talk page, please see this link,  Of note, the "Robinson, Carol (March 31, 2006). "Hometown folks fret over Attalla teen’s centerfold", The Birmingham News, pp. 1. Retrieved on 15 December 2008." is the article that quotes Playboy Playmate Holley Dorrough in stating Rolando Gomez discovered her as a playmate.  "Jaime, Kristian (January 13, 2008). "Going digital with Rolando Gomez". La Prensa 20 (25): 8B. Retrieved on 15 December 2008." is an article on Gomez's career and accomplishments as a photographer.  On Lexar Elite Photographers, Lexar chooses each year 30 photographers that they feel deserve that honor.  This is a "non-compensated" honor, there is no requirement for the photographer to promote their products or company.  The link to D-Pixx, it was not a cover photo only, it was a 9-page article on Gomez's photography and success plus a 4-page (13-pages total), separate article on his workshops in the Virgin Islands. Again, no compensation or promotion required.  The "Rangefinder" (Sept. 06') was a cover story, not just a cover shot. The photo was not shot for Rangefinder, it was used by them to illustrate their featured photographer of the month (Gomez) plus the topic, "Mysteries of Lighting Revealed."  The links to Photo District News (PDN) were press releases on his 7-city, 3-country tour in Europe completed in Sept. 2007, off their website.  PDN is the "Wall Street Journal" of photography each month. The article "War Stories"  published in Studio Photography was written by the magazine editor at the time, Alice Miller, currently the vice president and board member of the International Photographic Council.  On Gomez's selection as one of the "Top Five" military photographers world-wide from the Dept. of Defense (DOD), it was for the 55th Signal, Combat Camera annual workshop where the top 25 photographers, from all branches are chosen first, then sent there where they spend a week with noted civilian photographers which that year included James Nachtwey, Mary Lou Foy, Bernie Boston, Magnum Photographer Eli Reed and others.  At the end of the week those noted civilian photographers choose the "Top Five."  This is not to be confused with the "Military Photographer of the Year" (Bali ultimate cites in the talk page) competition were portfolios are submitted, via mail and judged (only), a total separate program. In fact, one of the photographers that worked for Gomez at the Air Force News Agency (AFNEWS), Gary Coppage, won that accolade during Gomez's tenure at AFNEWS.  Several articles site Gomez's DOD Top Five accomplishment and are sourced including the one written by Miller.  Finally, this press release, PhotoImaging & Design Expo 2005 Brings in the Top Guns " lists Gomez in the 3rd paragraph with other Wiki notable photographers.  Just FYI, thanks for your fairness. --72.191.15.133 (talk) 11:15, 17 December 2008 (UTC)

GarageGlamour.com
That site is a self-published source, and not notable. I have removed it. If there are secondary sources that refer to it, please provide sources.

Please stop
Jossi, this page was restored after DRV. Instead of deleting content to eliminate source without debate, please concentrate on making it better. I have reverted your edits, and are in the process of sourcing a better version. Thanks!--Cerejota (talk) 05:15, 18 December 2008 (UTC)


 * DVR, or not, there is no reason not to delete the fluff and provide sources, which is what I am doing. Work with me, please. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 05:19, 18 December 2008 (UTC)


 * I will work with you, but you removed sources without explanation. You are behaving erratically and seem to need to cool down. I know, I have been there. Thanks!--Cerejota (talk) 05:20, 18 December 2008 (UTC)


 * I did not removed any sources. The glamour website is not a source for that statement,; Gomez website is. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 05:24, 18 December 2008 (UTC)

Notability
If this person is notable, there should be third-party sources that describe him and his work. Without such sources, I am afraid it will go back to another round at AfD. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 05:26, 18 December 2008 (UTC)

Some here:
 * Perkins, Michelle. Professional Portrait Posing: Techniques and Images from Master Photographers. Amherst Media, 2007. ISBN 1584282118. Page 51
 * Perkins, Michelle. Professional Portrait Posing: Techniques and Images from Master Photographers. Amherst Media, 2007. ISBN 1584282118. Page 51
 * Perkins, Michelle. Professional Portrait Posing: Techniques and Images from Master Photographers. Amherst Media, 2007. ISBN 1584282118. Page 51
 * Perkins, Michelle. Professional Portrait Posing: Techniques and Images from Master Photographers. Amherst Media, 2007. ISBN 1584282118. Page 51


 * Rolando/Rolando's pal from the artists collective has apparently been interested in me reengaging with this article. If he wants to throw sources on this talk page, can he explain what they're supposedly reliable sources for? I.e. "this link from a reliable third party source can be used to support this specific assertion____." The last source i looked at of his was a soft-porn, two-page pictorial from a german magazine that he shot. The only thing it was good for was evidence that he'd had a gig with this magazine. It did nothing to support any greater level of detail than exists in the article now.Bali ultimate (talk) 18:31, 18 December 2008 (UTC)

Military overview
Much of Gomez's bio concerns military service, below is an overview from his bio. As sourcing (and edit warring) allow it should be added in.

Military Education The U.S. Army Advanced Photojournalism Course from the University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. In addition he attended the Army’s Intermediate Photojournalism Course at Ft. Benjamin Harrison; Multimedia Managers Course at Defense Information School, Ft. Meade; Dept. of Defense World-Wide Combat Camera Workshop, Ft. Meade; Primary Leadership Development Course with the 3rd Armored Division, Butzbach Germany and the Basic Noncommissioned Officers Course at Lowry Air Force Base, Denver Colorado.

Military Awards Gomez’s military awards include the Department of Defense’s Meritorious Service Medal, the U.S. Army Meritorious Service Medal, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Achievement Medal (1 Oak Leaf Cluster), the Army Good Conduct Medal (2 awards), National Defense Medal, Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal (Haiti Invasion), Southwest Asia Medal, NCO Professional Development Ribbon, the Army Service Ribbon and the Army Overseas Ribbon (2 awards). U.S. Army qualification badges include the rifle, pistol, bayonet and grenade. Gomez also earned the German Armed Forces Badge for Weapons Proficiency, the German Schutzenschnur (shooting expert) medal in bronze from the German Army in Koblenz, Germany.

Military Service 8th Infantry Division, 3rd Battalion, Headquarters, Headquarters Company, Mainz, Germany 5th Corps Headquarters, Special Troops Battalion, Frankfurt Germany United States Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), Panama City, Panama Air Force News Agency, San Antonio, Texas (both active-duty, U.S. Army soldier and Air Force civilian employee, GS-12)

I'm also posting this here so the milhist project knows why they are added as a project on this bio. -- Banj e b oi  11:18, 18 December 2008 (UTC)

Chief of Multimedia Production for Air Force News

 * Link to outside source on Rolando Gomez and AFNEWS, It's the eight article down titled, "United States Air Force reaches online audience with recruiting campaign." FYI. --72.191.15.133 (talk) 12:06, 18 December 2008 (UTC)
 * That article only supports that he was once chief of multimedia production for Air Force News. So a statement that "Gomez was once chief of multimedia production at airforce news" can be added in, i guess (not clear why any of this is notable, but whatever). Here's that article in toto if any one wants to double check my assessment:

"Though the U.S. Air Force has been streaming its TV and radio shows and special products on its public Web site (click TV on the Home page) for quite some time, improvements in broadband technology have helped it reach new audiences for its content. "Bigger pipe, better gateways, and more flow mean more customers have access to AFLINK [Air Force Link]," stated Rolando Gomez, Chief of Multimedia Production for Air Force News. He reported that average streaming downloads per month have jumped from about 180,000 to almost 700,000 in the past year. More importantly, the Air Force can track who is downloading the content: civilians or military personnel. "We know folks will click on a story and watch it if they are truly interested, such as when we run recruiting specials," explained Gomez. "This is a demographic advantage versus airing a commercial through traditional routes and hoping you hit the right audience."Bali ultimate (talk) 18:38, 18 December 2008 (UTC)

D-Pixx
Here's another link, soon, I'll have all 13 pages of the article that D-Pixx magazine, a European "Photography" magazine featured Gomez the year before. The original article Gomez was interviewed for, it was not a "gig" or paid assignment. All the images for the 13-pages in D-Pixx where previously shot and given to the magazine to accompany the story. This was not a commissioned assignment, it was a "feature" article on Gomez. This link is an article that came out later that referenced the cover story article. Thanks! --72.191.15.133 (talk) 11:26, 19 December 2008 (UTC)