User:CUA 27/sandbox

Rugby sevens
 * 1) Gameplay, Positions, Laws

Rugby (15s)
 * 1)  U.S. national team  [60k v, 72kB] (June, Nov)
 * 2) Attend, Hist split
 * 3)  Major League Rugby (Apr-Jun)
 * 4)  DC MLR team
 * 5) Washington Irish R.F.C.
 * 6)  Rugby in the United States  [9k v, 67kB]
 * 7)  Rugby union in Ireland (Top) [31k & 21r]
 * 8)  College rugby

MLS/Soccer
 * 1)   Major League Soccer (Mar-Nov) [230k v, 172kB]
 * 2) MLS on television
 * 3) Performance in CCL
 * 4) MLS Expansion
 * 5)  Soccer in the United States [467/d, 110 kB]
 * 6)  D.C. United (Mar-Oct) [640/d, 77 kB]
 * 7) Loudoun United FC (2019, Div II)

DC MLR team

 * 1) Rugby — processes for player identification & recruitment (moneyball); coaching & gameplay.
 * 2) Stadium — impacts the fan base, experience, and engagement; revenues; expenses.
 * 3) ↑Budget — rule of ~42%. Player expenses cannot exceed this threshold.
 * 4) Employment — salaries, insurance, workers comp, etc.
 * 5) Revenue sources — matchday, corporate sponsors, broadcast.
 * 6) Matchday revenues — tickets, parking, concessions, merchandise.
 * 7) Fan development & engagement.
 * 8) Rugby community events.
 * 9) Online — web and social media.
 * 10) Sharing best practices — other MLR teams; other DC area semipro/minor teams.

National team articles: Recent call ups
The recent call ups section of a number of national team articles seem rather unwieldy. See, for example, United_States_men%27s_national_soccer_team. On an average desktop monitor, there list of players stretches for multiple screens. There are roughly fifty players listed, and so much information is given for each one that many entries spill over onto two lines of text. This list of ~50 recent call ups is on top of the already 23 players listed in the current squad.

I propose the following revisions:
 * 1) We only list the last ~20 players called up. If a coach has called up 50 players in the past 12 months, we list only the most recent 20. That will help reduce the clutter.
 * 2) We list only the ages, and not the full birth dates. This change removes quite a bit of clutter without removing any critical information. (We'll need to fix the header and center the numbers, but that's a straightforward technical fix).
 * 3) The last call up lists the last date of the call up, but not the opponent or the flag. Otherwise, there's quite a bit of clutter, but the chart is a rather large mess of flags.
 * 4) We list only players that have at least one cap. A player that has never played for the national team doesn't get listed here.
 * 5) We get rid of the notes that say INJ, RET, etc. Too many details, too much clutter.

The two versions — the proposed version and then the current version — shown below illustrate the differences between the two versions. Please register your support or opposition to the changes in the sections immediately below.

Support

 * 1) Support — The new version is stripped of clutter and is much tidier. The reader can see the most recent players at a glance.
 * 2) Support —

Oppose

 * 1) Oppose —

Recent call-ups (proposed version)
The following shows the 20 players most recently called up to the United States squad.

Recent call-ups (current version)
The following players have been called up to the United States squad within the last twelve months.

Notes:
 * PRE = Preliminary squad
 * CMR = Decided to represent Cameroon at international level

New/Split
New
 * [USA Rugby Hall of Fame inductees]:
 * [Victor Hilarov] — First President of USA Rugby in 1975.
 * [Former US national team head coaches]:
 * [Ray Cornbill]
 * [Key US players]:
 * Brian Hightower

Split
 * History of the United States national rugby union team (72kb)
 * [History of rugby union in the United States]
 * [Wales national rugby union team players] (106kb)

Geo / U.S. Cities / Article Size

 * To Do: WP:USCITIES & length

US CITIES – long Vital articles/Geography#Americas
 * 1) New York City (280kB)
 * 2) San Francisco (205→187) — demog; culture, transport, hist
 * 3) Chicago (184kB)
 * 4) Detroit (200→175) — history, econ, demog
 * 5) Phoenix (167kB)
 * 6) Minneapolis (166kB)
 * 7) Dallas (166kB)
 * 8) Pittsburgh (165kB)
 * 9) Charleston, SC (156 kB)
 * 10) Akron, Ohio (140kB)
 * 11) Omaha, Nebraska (140kB)
 * 12) El Paso (135kB)

US CITIES – short:
 * 1) Los Angeles (130kB)
 * 2) Houston (127kB)
 * 3) Washington, D.C. (124kB)
 * 4) Cincinnati (98kB)
 * 5) San Antonio (88kB)

Misc
To Do:


 * WP:FOOTY:
 * Natl Teams: Recent call ups
 * Players Assessment: Criteria unclear


 * WP:V vs WP:CN
 * Harmonize guidance; add tag should be default first step

Done:
 * MOS:BODY & MOS:PARAGRAPHS
 * Sections/paragraphs


 * WP:FOOTY:
 * Natl Teams: Table colors

Common edit summaries

 * Lead:
 * MOS:BOLDTITLE — "Links should not be placed in the boldface reiteration of the title in the opening sentence of a lead"
 * WP:REDUNDANCY — Keep redundancy to a minimum in the first sentence. Use the first sentence of the article to provide relevant information that is not already given by the title of the article. The title of the article need not appear verbatim in the lead.
 * MOS:BLPLEAD — "Birth and death places . . . should not be mentioned in the opening brackets of the lead sentence alongside the birth and death dates."
 * WP:LEADCLUTTER — The lead "may become cluttered with parenthetical details (sometimes to the point of absurdity). If this happens, the lead may need to be reduced." Much of the parenthetical material can be moved to footnotes, to infoboxes, or the body of the article.


 * Infobox:
 * MOS:INFOBOXFLAG — Flags in infoboxes "are unnecessarily distracting and give undue prominence to one field among many."
 * WP:INFOBOXPURPOSE — "Do not include links to sections within the article; the table of contents provides that function."


 * Sections/Organization:
 * MOS:BODY — Very short or very long sections and subsections in an article look cluttered and inhibit the flow of the prose.


 * Icons/Flags:
 * WP:NOICONS — "Do not use icons in general article prose" (e.g., no flags in text)
 * MOS:SPORTFLAG — Flags should be used only to show which team they represent, not where they are from.

Tools

 * Layouts — Tables:
 * To center table text for all columns, type: style="text-align: center;"
 * To center table text for a single column, type: ! style="text-align:left" |
 * To make the table float on the right side of the page, type: style="float:right;"
 * and converts a long list of bullets into 2 columns.


 * References — using the same reference multiple times = WP:REFNAME
 * First time:
 * Later times:


 * Misc:
 * Paris To avoid wiki-fying a message (nowiki).
 * To put Hidden text into an editing window, type:
 * Indicate strikethrough or completed to-to by using the strike-through markup .
 * Dated terms (such as now, soon, currently, and recently) should be replaced with "as of [date]" or "since [date]." Per WP:DATED
 * Moving/Re-naming a page: Help:How to move a page

CollapsingHiding text:

Surprise!

"I put in a technical request for the move to Demographics of San Francisco: see Requested moves/Technical requests. It should be uncontroversial, but there might be a little dirt as an administrator moves things around and re-establishes edit history, etc. In the future, you can probably make many moves yourself (unless there are articles or redirects with substantial history in the way), since you should be autoconfirmed with the number of page edits and duration of your account. More info is at Help:How to move a page.

Inserting symbols, colors, etc

 * Symbols
 * Yes check.svg Done.
 * Red x.svg Not done.


 * Color text
 * Not There were many attacks. 23 men were killed,
 * But There were many attacks. Twenty-three men were killed.


 * Highlight text like this

Footy
Injury icons should not be used in rosters. They are excessively detailed and violates WP:RECENTISM and MOS:TEXTASIMAGES.
 * Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Football/Archive_41 (2010)
 * Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Football/Archive_43. (2010)

Less colours in tables for national team articles:
 * Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Football/Archive_106

Tagging articles

 * Template messages/Cleanup (loads of tags for articles, sections, and inline)
 * Responsible tagging
 * Tagging pages for problems (essay gives guidance re tags that are helpful vs unhelpful)


 * Article:
 * Too long:
 * Recentism:
 * Overuse of color:
 * Needs independent cites:
 * Section:
 * Add  to apply the template to just one section.
 * Expand section:
 * Needs cites:
 * Split lengthy section:
 * Inline:
 * Sometimes adding the  suffix to a tag converts a general tag into an inline tag. For example, Weasel-inline creates.
 * When?:
 * Timeframe:
 * Dubious - discuss:
 * Peacock term:

AfD

 * 1) Pillar: Encyclopedia
 * 2) Policy: WP:NOT
 * 3) Guideline:
 * 4) Essay:
 * 5) Policy: WP:VERIFY
 * 6) Policy: WP:NOR
 * 7) Pillar: NPOV
 * 8) Policy: WP:NPOV


 * Content Guideline: WP:Notability
 * WP:ARTN — Focus on the notability of the subject, not the quality of the article’s writing and sources.
 * Multiple sources
 * WP:SIGCOV — Significant coverage, but "it does not need to be the main topic of the source material."
 * WP:NEXIST — "The absence of sources or citations in an article (as distinct from the non-existence of sources) does not indicate that a subject is not notable. Notability requires only the existence of suitable independent, reliable sources, not their immediate presence or citation in an article."

Soccer

 * 1)  Soccer in the United States  [19k views]
 * 2)  United States national soccer team  [150k views]

To Do:
 * Footy Nats – Infobox biggest wins/losses:
 * 6 (Hung = 4+2)
 * 4 (Bol = 2+2)
 * 3 (Port, Ukr)
 * 2 (Arg, Spa, Swe)

Socc in USA

 * See also United States and Canada task force#Assessment


 * Top


 * 1)  Soccer in the United States
 * 2)  U.S. national men's soccer team
 * 3)  Major League Soccer
 * 4)  U.S. national women's team
 * 5)  U.S. Soccer
 * 6)  U.S. soccer league system
 * 7)  College soccer
 * 8)  1994 FIFA World Cup


 * High


 * 1)  MLS Cup
 * 2)  CONCACAF Gold Cup
 * 3)  Soccer-specific stadium
 * 4)  History of soccer in the U.S.
 * 5)  History of Major League Soccer
 * 6)  1999 FIFA Women's World Cup
 * 7)  Soccer at the 1984 Olympics


 * High – Bio


 * 1)  Alan Rothenberg
 * 2)  Phil Anschutz
 * 3)  Lamar Hunt
 * 4)  Don Garber
 * 5)  Phil Woosnam
 * 6)  Thomas Cahill

MLS =

 * Avg: 2015 = 48%. 2016 = 48% (5> 35-60 > 3). 2019 = 55%.
 * 2016 predict: Improvement in Revenues ≥21% (Forbes rpt) and and TV ##s (E1) and Stability ≥25%.
 * Teams: HL only 21 teams as recently as 1990.
 * Stable =
 * Contract 40% (* 0.75 = Last cont: MLS (2011 = 13 yrs; {2002 = 22 yrs}) vs (NHL 1978, MLB near x2 2001-02),
 * New/Expand 40% (* 0.65 = No of years median club 15 MLS vs 20-25 years goal),
 * Relocate 20% (* 1.00)
 * Perf — MLS 80% of Mex; Mex 60% of EU/SA
 * CCL milestones: (1) 2022: 1st win, (2) 2nd win | (3) Back-to-back, (4) All MLS final.

Milestones:
 * 1) 1994: WC
 * 2) 1999: Crew stadium.
 * 3) 2002: World Cup success.
 * 4) 2004: Two expansion teams approved for 2005.
 * 5) 2006: TV $ contracts of $8+10m/yr.
 * 6) 2007: DP / Beckham. Toronto expand: stadium & sellouts.
 * 7) 2009: Seattle 30k+ attend.
 * 8) 2011: Attendance over 17k surpasses NBA & NHL.
 * 9) 2014: TV $ contracts of $75+15m/yr.
 * 10) 2017: 22 teams. (2 in SE).

Upcoming:
 * 1) 2022: TV contracts $___.
 * 2) 2026: WC

MLS drafts
1996 Allocation: 1.J.Harkes (M) - 2.M.Etcheverry (F/M x4) - 3.J.Agoos (D) 1996 Inaugural: 1.R.Diaz Arce (F) - 3.P.Vermes (D) - 4.J.Kreis (F) (g8) - 4.R.Williams (M) - 5.F.Hejduk (D)(200/85) - 7.Z.Thornton (280/8)(G3-6) - 7.R.Corrales (D)(300/6) - 8.Savarese/Duhaney 1996 College: 1. E.Pope (D) — 2.S.Ralston (M, a2)(375/36) / J.Marsch (320/2)(M) — 3.A.Razov (F, g7)(260/25) / E.Lewis (M)(115/82) 1996 Supplem: 1.C.Armas (M x5) 1996 Undraft: P.Onstad (220)(G2-x) — M.Hahneman (G) — C.Llamosa (D)(140/29) — S.Garlick (G)(230)

1997 College: 1. S.Jolley / R.Paule — 3.K.Hartman (410/5)(G2-4) 1997 Supplem: 1.Llamosa (D)(140/29) - 2.Zavagnin (M)(240/21) 1997 Undraft: D.DeRosario (300+ x6) — J.Busch (300/1) (G4-x) — P.Staltieri

1998 College: 1. Cunn (F)(360) / Mastro (M) (330/65) — 2/3. M.Reis (290/2)(G) — 3.J.Franchino (M)(220) 1998 Supplem: X 1998 Undraft: J.Cannon (340/2)(G1-3) — J.Conrad (300/27 x4)(D) — B.Prideaux (D)(250)

1999 College: 1.J.Heaps —

2000: 1.B.Convey (M) — 2.P.Vagenas (230) — 3.N.Rimando (500/22) (G1-6) — 4.J.Wolyniec (F) (180)

2001: 1.B.Mullen — 2.B.Ching (250/45) (F) — 3.E.Buddle (200+/11) (F)

2002: 1.T.Twellman (170/30) / B.Davis (390/17 a3) — 2.S.Joseph (280 x4) (M) — 3.A.Moreno — 4.D.Arnaud 2002 Alloc: 1. Rimando/Ralston 2002 Disp: 1/2.K.Beckerman 2002 Undr: J.DeMerit (D)

2003: 1.R.Clark — 3.L.Pause (280/6) — 5.J.Jewsbury (350) (M) 2003 Undr: T.Perkins (G) — C.Simms (M, 200)

2004: 1.C.Dempsey (70/140) — 2.C.Wingert (340/1) (D) — 4.M.Bradley (30/150) (M) — 6.Gordon (F, 320/2) / Dorman (110/3) (M) / Parke (260,1) (D) —

2005: 1.M.Parkhurst — 3.C.Rolfe/G.Segares 2005 Undr: C.Wondo (370/35) (F) — B.Boswell (360) — J.Larentowicz (430/4)

2006: 1.Kljest/McCarty/Kamara — 2.J.Altidore (F) — 3.J.Bornstein (D) Undr: J.Harvey (D)(340)

2007: 2.B.Evans — 3.O.Cummings —

2008: — 3.G.Cameron (D/M) Undr: T.Melia (G)

2009: — 1.M.Besler (D) — 2.G.Zusi (M) Undr: E.Bush (G)

2010: 1/2.T.Ream (D) — 4.S.Johnson (G)

Rugg USA
Additional sports played in the U.S.


 * 1) Influenced by: Rugby at the Olympics (2009→2016), Coll Rugby on TV (2010→pres), and HS growth.

Rugg on TV
15s = Rugby World Cup, Varsity Cup 7's = USA Sevens, CRC 7s

Possibles:
 * Int'l = Pacific Nations Cup — Six Nations
 * Coll = Varsity Cup (SF, QF) — D1A Championship

2016 Olympics
Team:
 * FW: Bender, Pinkelman, Barrett
 * BK: Hughes, Niua, Ebner, Baker
 * Subs: Test, Durutalo, Wyles, Iosefo, Unufe, Isles

NBA
1981 | L.Nance (1/20) | 6’10” PF: 17P, 8R; 3x 1st-2d Def tm

1981 | E.Johnson (2/29) | 6’7” SF: 16 PPG

1981 | Dny.Ainge (2/31) | 6’5” SG: 12 PPG, 4 APG

1981 | F.Brickowski (3/57) | 6’9” PF: 10P, 5R

1981 | P.Gudmondsen (3/61) | 7’2” C: 5P, 4R

1982 | P.Pressey (1/20) | 6’5” SF: 11P, 5A; 3x 1st-2d Def tm

1982 | R.Higgins (2/31) | 6’7” SF: 9P, 4R

1982 | M.Eaton (4/72) | 7’4” CR: #4 Blks; 5x Def 1st–2nd tm; 8R, 6P, 3B

1983 | C.Drexler (1/14) | 5x 1st-3rd tm NBA; 20P, 6A

1983 | Mrk.West (2/30) | 6’10” C: 6P, 5R

1983 | D.Rivers (2/31) | 6’4” PG: 11P, 6A

1983 | Crg.Ehlo (3/48) | 6’6” SG: 9P, 4R

1983 | S.Threatt (6/139) | 6’2” PG: 10P, 4A

1984 | M.Jordan (1/3) | 5x MVP; 10x score ld; 30P, 6R, 5A

1984 | J.Stockton (1/14) | #1 assists; 11x 1st-3rd tm NBA; 13 PPG, 11 APG; 5x Def 2nd tm

1984 | J.Kersey (2/46) | 6’7” SF: 10 PPG, 6 RPG

1984 | J.Peterson | (3/51) | 6’10” F/C: 7P, 5R

1985 | K.Malone (1/13) | 6’9” PF: #3 Pts; 11x 1st tm; 25P, 10R

1985 | J.Dumars (1/18) | SG/PG: 3x 2nd-3rd tm NBA; 5x Def 1st-2nd tm; 16P, 5A

1985 | HR.Williams (2/45) | 6’11” PF: 11 PPG, 7 RPG

1985 | M.Adams (3/66) | 5’10” PG: 15 PPG, 6 APG

1985 | M.Elle (7/__) | 6’5” SF/SG: 9P, 3A

1986 | Mrk.Price (2/26) | 6’0” PG: 4x 1st-3d tm NBA; 15P, 7A

1986 | D.Rodman (2/27) | 2x 3rd tm; 7x Def 1st tm; 7P, 13R

1986 | N.McMillan (2/30) | 6’5” PG: 6P, 6A; 2x Def 2nd team

1986 | J.Hornacek (2/46) | 6’4” SG: 15 PPG, 5 APG

1986 | D.Petrovic (3/60) | 6’5” SG: 15P, 2A

1987 | Reg.Miller (1/11) | 6’7” SG: 3x 3rd team NBA; 18P

1987 | M.Jackson (1/18) | 6’3” PG: 10P, 8A, #3 career assists

1988 | A.Mason (3/53) | 6’8” F: 11 PPG, 8 RPG

1988 | Jn.Starks (Und) | 6’5” SG: 13 PPG, 4 APG

1988 | A.Johnson (Und) | 5’11” PG: 8P, 6A

1989 | T.Hardaway (1/14) | 6’0” PG: 5x 1st-3rd tm; 18P, 8A

1989 | S.Kemp (1/17) | 6’10” PF: 15P, 8R; 3x 2nd team

1989 | C.Robinson (2/36) | 6’10” PF: 15P, 5R

1990 | Ato. Davis (2/45) | 6’9” PF: 10 PPG, 8 RPG

1990 | C.Ceballos (2/48) | 6’7” SF: 14P, 5R

1990 | S.Williams (Undr) | 6’10” CR: 5P, 5R

1991 | Rick Fox (1/24) | SF: 10P, 4R

1992 | L.Spreewell (1/24) | 6’5” SG: 18P, 4A

1993 | N. VanExel | PG:

1993 | B. Bowen (Undr) | 6’7” SF: 8x Def team; 6P, 3R

1996 | K.Bryant (1/13) | 6’6” SG: 11x 1st tm; 9x Df 1st tm; 25P, 5R, 5A

1996 | B.Wallace (Undr) | C/F: 4x DPOY; 6P, 10R

College sports

 * College sports in the U.S. (65 kB)
 * NCAA (92 kB)
 * College football (146 kB)
 * History of college football
 * NCAA Division I (101 kB)
 * NCAA DI FBS (153 kB)

New articles
Rugby
 * 1) History of rugby union in the United States
 * 2) PRO Rugby (Nov '15)
 * 3) San Diego PRO Rugby team
 * 4) Denver PRO Rugby team
 * 5) PRO Rugby stadiums
 * 6) Colombia national rugby sevens team
 * 7) 2019 RWC Americas qualification
 * 8) Template:Women's rugby union
 * 9) 1982 Netherlands v France women's rugby match
 * 10) 2004 USA Sevens
 * 11) 2016 USA Sevens
 * 12) 2014–15 U.S. national rugby sevens team season
 * 13) 2015–16 U.S. national rugby sevens team season
 * 14) 2016–17 U.S. national rugby sevens team season

Other sports
 * 1) Professional sports leagues in the United States (Feb '16)
 * 2) Baseball in the United States (Dec '15)
 * 3) Hexagonal (CONCACAF) (Sep '16)
 * 4) USA Team Handball (Nov '16)
 * 5) FGCU Soccer Complex (Dec '15)

Rugby bios
Rugby players (15s)
 * 1) Mike Purcell — 1987 RWC; USAR HOF; Coach.
 * 2) Ray Nelson — U.S. leading scorer at 1987 RWC.
 * 3) AJ MacGinty — U.S. national team fly-half since 2015.
 * 4) David Tameilau — U.S. national team #8 since 2016.
 * 5) Mike Te'o — U.S. national team player since 2016.
 * 6) Bryce Campbell – U.S. national team center since 2016.
 * 7) Zach Fenoglio — U.S. national team hooker.
 * 8) JP Eloff — US. and Ohio flyhalf since 2016.
 * 9) Will Magie — PRO Rugby fly-half since 2016.
 * 10) Dino Waldren — U.S. national team prop since 2016.
 * 11) Chad London — U.S. national team center since 2014.
 * 12) Shaun Davies — PRO Rugby scrum-half since 2016.
 * 13) Angus MacLellan — PRO and U.S. prop since 2016.
 * 14) Sebastian Kalm — PRO Rugby loose forward since 2016.
 * 15) Kingsley McGowan — U.S. national team wing since 2016.
 * 16) Patrick Latu — San Francisco team captain since 2016.
 * 17) Cecil Garber — S. Diego flanker since 2016 & team's #1 tackler.

Rugby players (7s)
 * 1) Stephen Tomasin — U.S. national team sevens since 2016.
 * 2) Kevon Williams — U.S. national team sevens since 2016.
 * 3) Martin Iosefo — U.S. national team sevens since 2014.
 * 4) Garrett Bender — U.S. national team sevens 2012–2016.
 * 5) Matai Leuta — U.S. national team sevens since 2015.

Rugby coaches & administrators
 * 1) Dennis Storer — U.S. Head Coach during 1980s; USAR HOF.
 * 2) Deborah Griffin — organized the inaugural 1991 Women's RWC.
 * 3) Ray Egan — San Diego PRO Rugby head coach in 2016.
 * 4) Sean O'Leary — Denver PRO Rugby head coach in 2016.
 * 5) Paul Barford — Ohio PRO Rugby head coach in 2016.
 * 6) Nate Osborne — NOLA Gold MLR head coach since 2017/18.

Ireland rugby bios
 * 1) Hugo Keenan — Fly-half (2017-2019) for national sevens team.
 * 2) Harry McNulty — Forward (2016-pres) for national sevens team.
 * 3) Jordan Conroy — Wing (2017-pres) national sevens team.
 * 4) Terry Kennedy — Centre (2017-pres) for national sevens team.
 * 5) Mark Roche — Scrum-half (2015-pres) for national sevens team.
 * 6) Anthony Eddy — Head coach (2014-pres) for national sevens team.
 * 7) Jimmy O'Brien — Centre (2018) for national sevens team.
 * 8) Nick Timoney — Forward (2017) for national sevens team.
 * 9) Foster Horan — Forward (2018-pres) for national sevens team.
 * 10) Ian Fitzpatrick — Forward (2017-) for national sevens team.
 * 11) Greg O'Shea — Fly-half (20017-pres) for national sevens team.
 * 12) John O'Donnell — Forward (2017–pres) for national sevens team.

Article Splits
Sport
 * 1) History of the Ireland national rugby team (Sep 2015)
 * 2) Sport in Galway (Nov 2015)
 * 3) Sports in Turin (June 2016)
 * 4) Sports in Minneapolis–Saint Paul (Dec 2015)
 * 5) Sports in Birmingham, Alabama (Jan 2016)
 * 6) South Africa national rugby team players (Sep 2015)
 * 7) Munster Rugby players (Nov 2015)
 * 8) NHL on television (Oct 2015)

Geog
 * 1) Economy of San Diego (June 2015)
 * 2) Demographics of San Diego County (Jan '16)
 * 3) Politics of San Diego County (Jan '16)
 * 4) Politics of Los Angeles County (June 2015)
 * 5) Demographics of Los Angeles County (June 2015)
 * 6) Economy of Phoenix (July 2015)
 * 7) Crime in Phoenix (July 2015)

Wiki
"Wikipedia is the best thing ever. Anyone in the world can write anything they want, so you know you are getting the best possible information." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFBDn5PiL00

Disamb: Primary topic
Tools that may help to support the determination of a primary topic in a discussion include:
 * Incoming wikilinks from Special:WhatLinksHere
 * Wikipedia article traffic statistics
 * Usage in English reliable sources demonstrated with Google web, news, scholar, or book searches (NOTE: adding  to the Google search string eliminates personal search bias)

Finalists

 * ATL || GA || 5.5m || 89 – 71 || 73/73 – 54/52 || 52 – 34 || ATL (DL) || || 41–51. Soul? Sprawl? || 62% sun. 45 frz n/yr
 * TPA || FL || 2.9m || 90 – 76 || 84/81 – 66/64 || 70 – 52 || TPA (SW) || || 63–26. RSW = 2h || 2 frz n/yr
 * TPA || FL || 2.9m || 90 – 76 || 84/81 – 66/64 || 70 – 52 || TPA (SW) || || 63–26. RSW = 2h || 2 frz n/yr

Notes:
 * Pop: (STL = 2.8m)
 * Sun: (PHX = 87%, LV = 86%)

Eastern: All

 * RIC || VA || 1.2m || 90 – 69 || 71/70 – 48/46 || 47 – 28 ||  || Dumpy? ||


 * RAL || NC || 1.2m || 90 – 70 ||  || 51 – 31 (D) ||  ||  ||


 * GRN || SC || 0.9m || 90 – 69 ||  ||  52 – 32 ||  ||  ||


 * COL || SC || 0.8m || 93 – 72 ||  ||  56 – 34 (M) ||  ||  || 90m


 * CHL || SC || 0.7m || 88 – 77 ||  75/72 – 63/59 || 57 – 43 ||  ||  || 6m

nada
1. E/P: 4.5+ | 2. Tal: 4.7 |

East → West

 * 9.15 – 11.45a
 * Cumberland = am tour
 * 2.00 – 4.30p
 * Wheeling = eve/din/niht

US pols
Five periods of “democratic fragility” in American history. The periods are: The same four threats:
 * 1) 1790s — Discord over the Alien and Sedition Acts,
 * 2) 1850s — “Bleeding Kansas” era,
 * 3) 1890s — Black disenfranchisement,
 * 4) 1930s — Great Depression enhancement of executive, and
 * 5) 1970s — Watergate era partisan warfare.
 * political polarization,
 * conflict over who belongs in the political community,
 * high and growing economic inequality, and
 * excessive executive power.