Talk:Six Flags Hurricane Harbor Chicago/GA1

GA Review
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Reviewer: Mike Christie (talk · contribs) 14:54, 24 April 2023 (UTC)

I'll review this. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 14:54, 24 April 2023 (UTC)

Images are appropriately licensed. Earwig finds no issues.
 * What makes ultimatewaterpark.com a reliable source?
 * "interest in building a water park close to Six Flags Great America was proposed; residents of Gurnee opposed these plans": interest wasn't proposed; the water park was proposed. I would also rephrase to avoid "proposed" and "opposed" so close to each other.
 * "A later water-park plan succeeded in 2004, when Gurnee officials confirmed a water park would be built. In its first year of operation": I would give more details here, and we at least need to say what year the first year was.
 * "The most recent addition, Tsunami Surge, is the world's tallest water coaster, which received accolades from the World Waterpark Association and Amusement Today's Golden Ticket Awards." Needs an "as of" for "most recent", and this is ungrammatical.
 * "more than half of Gurnee residents opposed the project following the referendum": presumably they didn't oppose it following the referendum; they opposed it in the referendum. Or rephrase to give the referendum results explicitly.
 * "Almost a month following the opening of Hurricane Harbor, a man had a heart attack in Hurricane Bay and died on June 22, 2005". We haven't yet said that Hurricane Bay is one of the attractions, and we haven't said given the park's name yet, so the reader doesn't know what Hurricane Harbor refers to either.  And reading further on it appears that the park wasn't named "Six Flags Hurricane Harbor Chicago" till 2020.  Was it just called "Hurricane Harbor" up to that point?
 * "A few weeks later, a girl was slightly injured and required stitches after she fell off of her tube": is this worth mentioning? Seems like a very minor incident; I imagine minor injuries aren't all that rare at amusement parks.
 * "Previously, the park had charged visitors an additional fee to enter the water park": earlier we said that admittance was on the same ticket; isn't this a contradiction?

Spotchecks: That's either three or four of the spotchecks coming up with problems (one minor), depending on whether the last one is really an issue. I'm going to fail the article because of the spotchecks; I recommend going through each citation and making sure it accurately supports the text it cites before renominating. I would also recommend a copyedit. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 01:08, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
 * FNs 25 & 26 cite "On May 26, 2011, a new roller coaster was planned for the adjacent Six Flags Great America amusement park; it was announced at a zoning board of appeals meeting for the site of Space Shuttle America. The planned roller coaster was Chang, which would have been acquired from the former Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom and was to be located near the park's entrance but the new ride was later canceled." I don't see any reference to "Space Shuttle America" in either source, nor is the other park named as Kentucky Kingdom. And the date in May is of the meeting, it's not the date of the plan.
 * FN 5 cites "Gurnee residents opposed the plans, and a group called the Citizens United for a Residential Village of Gurnee campaigned for a referendum about the project's approval to be included in an election ballot on April 13, 1999." Mostly verified, but I think it would be better to say "Some Gurnee residents opposed the plans ..." since we don't know how representative the referendum results were or whether this group was representative of the rest of Gurnee.
 * FNs 39 & 37 cite "A new entry gate for the water park was built in the parking lot, and a pathway between both parks was no longer accessible to the public." These are the same article, so there's no need to cite both, though that's not an issue for the spotcheck.  There's nothing in the source about a pathway or about building a new gate in the parking lot.
 * FN 21 cites "Almost a month following the opening of Hurricane Harbor, a man had a heart attack in Hurricane Bay and died on June 22, 2005." The source doesn't say this happened in Hurricane Bay; I can't be sure I'm seeing the whole source, to be fair, as it seems to be partly paywalled.