
So yes, you could say I'm doing "a wholesale cleaning". Let me just tell you this: there doesn't have to be an article for that entry, however, if it isn't mentioned anywhere on Wikipedia it doesn't belong here. Ted Watson ( talk) 21:25, 30 October 2008 (UTC) I am an editor who has dedicated myself to cleaning and updating all Wikipedia pages, especially dabs, like this one. Or do a wholesale cleaning of other disambig. So that is not a good reason for deleting this. pages in Wiki that have entries which bear no Wikilinks themselves. You will indeed find quite a good number of disambig. I'll admit that those entries here that are not Wikilinked themselves have a secondary term within the entry Wikilinked, but as justification for the item's inclusion they seem to be stretches to me. pages in Wikipedia have entries with no Wiki-article whatsoever linked in, including this one. However, the fact of the matter is that many such disambig. I myself know nothing about this song or Joe Brooks (assuming he is not the same-named creator of "You Light Up My Life" in the 1970s). edits) 21:21, 18 September 2008 (UTC) The Joe Brooks song.

Could somebody who does fix this up? Please? - Ted Watson ( talk) 18:52, 18 September 2008 (UTC) Since it is not also known as "Superman" it should stay there in accordance with WP:D#Partial title matches. However, I have no further idea what the hell this is ( e.g., who is the artist? The Wikilinked-in article on Merlin doesn't help me, either). It appears to me that this belongs in the "Music" section, and even the "Albums" sub-section.

So for this reason, I have tagged the page for cleanup. They should be shorter, as I said in my edit summary. Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.107.177.61 ( talk) 03:15, Aug(UTC) Descriptions are a little long Is there a chapter that discusses the specfic history of the Superman in his current continuity? The history as told by the current run of comic books, I'm refering too. Jason Kirk 13:04, 28 June 2007 (UTC) Comic Book History I made the literature/philosophy the first entry as that is the oldest usage of the word. The persistent Roller Coaster has been added to the Popular Culture list, but I added back the cycling position by concatenating the different stunt variants. I've tried to split the entries down into categories.

Rhindle The Red 14:36, 29 November 2006 (UTC)

For everything else, we can direct people to the "popular culture" article. I think it needs to be pared down just to what people are likely to be looking for when they type in "Superman". Much of what is covered here is also covered (better) at Superman in popular culture. Sun" is the most poetic.I think this page has got too much in it for a disambiguation page. "Feel the Sunshine" is the most romantic tune here, "Five Days of Summer" is easily the prettiest-sounding and the lush "Hello Mr. Throughout Constellation Me, the summery songs shine brightest. "Superman" is another standout with its endearingly earnest lyrics floating over folky chords and a simplified break-beat played on a drum kit. "World At Our Feet" opens with the warbling warmth of an old Hammond organ joining an acoustic guitar and handclaps before Brooks comes in crooning with a rhythmic cadence that accompanies the drums to make for a breezy number you can dance to‚ especially toward the end where everything comes together soulfully to reveal that Brooks may have been listening to old Motown records while writing this one. tours, the British bard's second album dodges a sophomore slump with well-crafted songs, contagious melodies, and a handsome voice that sounds like it came from Jason Mraz's gene pool. Joe Brooks has come a long way since he was a 16-year-old posting his tunes on MySpace.
