User:Allyjackson15
1. I chose the stub “Look What God Gave Her.” I chose this because it is one of my favorite songs and I am a big Thomas Rhett fan.
2. I found this stub from the list of stubs in the link provided. It was under the “2010s country song” stub list. At the bottom of the article it says that it is stub that needs expanding.
3. Compared to other articles about songs by Thomas Rhett, this article is missing a good amount of information. There is no sections for “Awards and Nominations” and “Reception”. The “music video” part is also under-developed. The article also has not been updated since January, therefore the “weekly and year-end” charts need to be updated and a “decade-end charts” and “all-time charts” have to be added.
4. The references are links to the Billboard charts, and they work.
5. The introduction is there, as well as the commercial performance section. The “Awards and nominations”, “All-Time Charts” and “decade-end charts” are missing. There are sections for music video and commercial performance.
American Speech–Language–Hearing Association
This user is a student editor in Southern_Illinois_University_Edwardsville/ENG_102_Summer_2020_(Summer_2020). |
Assignment 19
The guide for "Science Communication" is appropriate for the stub article "American Speech-Language-Hearing Association". Compared to a similar article of a professional association, my article needs more information all around. There has to be more in the introduction paragraph and a separate section for the mission of the association. The history and ASHA conference section are also underdeveloped and a publications section could be added. I am not sure what to call it, but the side box on the right needs more information such as the abbreviation, type, and motto of the organization.
https://rarediseases.org/organizations/american-speech-language-hearing-association/
https://www.asha.org/about/history/ I cannot really find information about the history of ASHA unless it is from the organization's website or a third party that uses it as a reference.
Assignment 20
“American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.” NORD (National Organization for Rare Disorders), 21 Apr. 2020, rarediseases.org/organizations/american-speech-language-hearing-association/.
“American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA).” National Institute of Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 20 June 2020, www.nidcd.nih.gov/directory/american-speech-language-hearing-association-asha.
“American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.” NORD (National Organization for Rare Disorders), 21 Apr. 2020, rarediseases.org/organizations/american-speech-language-hearing-association/.
ASHA Convention: Future and Past Locations, convention.asha.org/About-the-Convention/Locations/.
Assignment 21
Nelson, Jeff. “Thomas Rhett Talks How His Daughters Ended Up in His 'Look What God Gave Her' Video at 2019 ACMs.” PEOPLE.com, 7 Apr. 2019, people.com/parents/acms-2019-thomas-rhett-daughters-look-what-god-gave-her-video/.
Watts, Cindy. “ACM Awards: Thomas Rhett Shares Story of 'Look What God Gave Her'.” The Tennessean, The Tennessean, 30 May 2019, www.tennessean.com/story/entertainment/music/2019/04/06/look-what-god-gave-her-thomas-rhett-acm-awards-performance/3387376002/.
“Thomas Rhett.” Billboard, https://www.billboard.com/music/thomas-rhett/chart-history/CDT/song/1124817.
Assignment 22
- I chose these articles about Thomas Rhett because they all incorporate an interview with him and hearing first hand what he wrote the song about. They are mainly to help the music video section.
- There is already a music video section; I just have to edit it and out more information in it.
Music video
[edit]The music video was released on April 6 2019 and directed by T.K. McKamy.[1][2] Thomas Rhett's inspiration for the song was his wife, Laura Atkins, who joins him in the video. His two daughters, Willa Gray and Ada James, also make an "unplanned cameo".[3] In an interview Rhett said he wants the video to "highlight amazing women in Nashville for all of the amazing things they've done around the world".[4] Among those featured are women from Nashville's Thistle Farms as well as the founder of Love + One.[4]
- ^ Thomas Rhett: Look What God Gave Her, retrieved 2020-06-26
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbXahmBSLTk
- ^ "Thomas Rhett Talks How His Daughters Ended Up in His 'Look What God Gave Her' Video at 2019 ACMs". PEOPLE.com. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
- ^ a b Watts, Cindy. "ACM Awards: Thomas Rhett shares story of 'Look What God Gave Her'". The Tennessean. Retrieved 2020-06-26.