User talk:Ohelpee
November 2008
Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia!
I hope not to seem unfriendly or make you feel unwelcome, but I noticed your username, and I am concerned that it might not meet Wikipedia's username policy for the following reason: It is promotional in nature. After you look over that policy, could we discuss that concern here?
I'd appreciate learning your own views, for instance your reasons for wanting this particular name, and what alternative username you might accept that avoids raising this concern.
You have several options freely available to you:
- If you can relieve my concern through discussing it here, I can stop worrying about it.
- If the two of us can't agree here, we can ask for help through Wikipedia's dispute resolution process, such as requesting comments from other Wikipedians. Wikipedia administrators usually abide by agreements reached through this process.
- You can keep your contributions history under a new username. Visit Wikipedia:Changing username and follow the guidelines there.
Thank you. Patar knight - chat/contributions 19:00, 23 November 2008 (UTC)
I have placed a request for a user name change to ohelpee
Your article and your account
Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia.
I marked your page for deletion because, as far as I can tell, there will be no way to ever support it with the reliable, neutral, third-party sources that all Wikipedia articles must have. See Wikipedia:Verifiability. Also, you wrote about yourself (yourselves?), and that conflict of interest led to you writing what looks much more like an advertisement than an article.
Thanks for taking the initiative to change your username. It's worrying that you referred to yourself as "we" on Talk:OH Lakewood Productions. You can't edit Wikipedia with an account that speaks for the entire group. You need to have one person taking responsibility for the edits.
If you want to understand better what Wikipedia is for, you could start with the five pillars. There's a wide range of topics you could write about -- it's just that "yourself" isn't one of them.