Talk:Lonely Planet

From Citizendium
Revision as of 09:07, 14 April 2008 by imported>Larry Sanger (Please expand main article text to at least 2x the size of the section about the controversy...)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
To learn how to update the categories for this article, see here. To update categories, edit the metadata template.
 Definition a company best-known for publishing travel guidebooks [d] [e]
Checklist and Archives
 Workgroup categories Journalism, Hobbies and Topic Informant [Editors asked to check categories]
 Talk Archive none  English language variant British English

Text removed temporarily from article

Lonely Planet hit controversy in April 2008, when a former writer for the series claimed that he had never travelled to areas he had written about. Passages on Colombia were actually written in the USA, using personal informants, and sections on other South American and Caribbean countries were plagiarised. Thomas Kohnstamm also said he had contravened company policy by accepting free services, and had included a favourable review of a restaurant which was actually a cryptic reference to an after-hours experience with a member of its waiting staff. Kohnstamm blamed poor pay for his activities, and other writers also stated that Lonely Planet's pay scheme was inadequate. The company itself insisted that its books were accurate and its payments among the best in the industry; no inaccuracies had been found despite Kohnstamm's claims.[1][2]

Footnotes

  1. Daily Telegraph: 'Lonely Planet's bad trip'. 13th April 2008.
  2. BBC News: 'Lonely Planet rebuts 'fake' claim'. 14th April 2008.

Why the text was removed

I removed the above text only because it simply looks terrible for us to have an article where a recent scandal receives more attention than the topic itself. This smacks of Wikipedia's focus on controversy, which we would prefer to avoid. Therefore, as Editor-in-Chief, I'm asking us to expand the main article so that it is at least twice as long as the section about the controversy. Then we can re-add in the above text. I'm sorry to have to do this, because I never like to remove text from an article, but it is important that we be sensitive to providing solid, basic information before scandal. --Larry Sanger 10:07, 14 April 2008 (CDT)