User:GreenMeansGo/Script-like-thing2

PLAIN WHITE BACKGROUND (EVERY SCENE), CASUALLY DRESSED MALE AND FEMALE SIDE-BY-SIDE FACING CAMERA, WIKIPEDIA LOGO IN CORNER.

FEMALE: Hi. Welcome to Wikipedia!

MALE: And welcome to our video tutorial on notability!

FEMALE: [ALONE]: When someone on Wikipedia refers to N [CORNER BOLD BLUE FONT "WP:N"] or G N G [CORNER BOLD BLUE FONT "WP:GNG"], what they're talking about is [BOTTOM BLACK FONT "Wikipedia:Notability", "General notability guideline"] Wikipedia's policies on Notability, and the General Notability Guideline.

MALE [ALONE]: Notability on Wikipedia has a very specific meaning and it's the way we tell whether a subject deserves its own article or not. If something is notable then it should generally have an article; if it's not notable, or not notable yet, then it shouldn't.

FEMALE: [ALONE]: Like almost everything on Wikipedia, it all comes down to the sources. But because there are many many more things that exist than there are sources writing about them, the vast majority of subjects won't be appropriate for a Wikipedia article, even though many of them might in the future.

MALE [ALONE]:Notability has three core parts: [FEMALE ALONE, HOLDING UP FINGERS, COUNTING TO THREE AS MALE VOICE OVER CONTINUES, TEXT FOR EACH PART APPEARS AT TOP OF SCREEN AS COUNTING CONTINUES] [1] significant coverage in [2] reliable sources that are [3] independent of the subject.

FEMALE [ALONE] Significant coverage means that the subject is covered in detail, and more than just passing mentions.

MALE ALONE READING SMART PHONE D'you know Einstein once said something about llamas?

FEMALE [ALONE] And sources specifically about the subject are really good...

MALE ALONE WITH OPEN CARDBOARD BOX HURRIDLY TAKING OUT PACKING MATERIAL My book on llamas is here!

FEMALE [ALONE] But it doesn't have to be 100% about the subject to be considered significant coverage.

MALE ALONE WITH NEWSPAPER Well there's a whole paragraph about llamas in today's paper.

MALE [ALONE]: Defining reliable sources has its very own guideline, and you can learn more about it by watching this video [VIDEO LINK IN CORNER], but generally these should be published secondary sources with a history of accuracy and fact-checking, usually things like newspapers, magazines, books, and scholarly publications.

FEMALE [ALONE]: