Hello all !
I'm not part of this team, but here's a suggestion.
Private User has been so good to schedule Pierre de Coubertin as the Profile of the Day on July 27, the day of the opening ceremony.
I don't know about Amanda's schedule for those weeks, but I just feel that we should have "Olympic profiles" for every day during the Olympics.
I bet this was on your mind? :-)
I think one way to do this, is by looking at the major sports events on every day (after all, some events dominate over the others, every day). For each of those events/days, we could drill down to the historical winners of those events (weirdly, Mark Spitz comes to my mind :-) ).
But, ideally, we should be able to have a nice tree for those profiles, of course. Perhaps we also have to look at ancient times, and some of the memorable sports figures of the early days of the Olympics like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynisca the first woman to win an Olympic event. Or, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milo_of_Croton, the most famous wrestler of those days. Perhaps too far back in history for relevance in the tree. So, let's try to find those incredible winners of the Olympics, modern times? Like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_Owens.
Just a thought :-)
(Too many typos!!)
Lovely thoughts George, but we need more people to climb on board! I just haven't got as much time right now - the project seems to have been set up and not many have climbed onboard or done much on it! :)
I could do some but what you are suggesting would be as time consuming as the Titanic was! Anyone else want to lend a hand? - Terry Jackson (Switzer) ? Private User Malka Mysels ?
Maybe we need a plan and should delegate/volunteer? I managed to get quite a bit of Sebastian Newbold Coe done and he is on the big tree - I will look at the schedule and see what stands out as the most important events each day.
Erica Howton I have made a start on Famous Olympians - see http://www.geni.com/projects/Famous-Olympians/11994.
I think that Famous and Historic are synonymous - one list would embrace all?
Will expand the list tomorrow but must get to bed!
George - some progress is being made on the Famous Olympians and I think hopefully that is where we can draw "profile of the Day Candidates from. Maybe the find people who connect to the major events of the day? I will work some more on that over the weekend - Erica is on board there. Sadly not many people willing to work on this as yet!
Do you know if there is a way around making links work that have special characters in them - I am having to leave links out where these don't work!
June, I guess you're talking about parenthesis in Wikipedia pages? I have no alternative, it just doesn't work for us.
Thanks, Carla!
I think an Olympic project is a huge task. Too many living people that are hard to research ;-)
The Olympics last only 17 days. I'm sure we can find 17 very relevant profiles and document them. If we do them quickly, they'll get into the search engines, and Geni will get lots of hits. Then when Geni highlights them on the selected days, we'll get even more interest :-)
A few billion people watching the games, a few hundred million people searching the Internet for information. This could be a winner ;-)
George also thinking of the sporting event which is the 2014 World Cup, where Brazil will host, we are already working on the project http://www.geni.com/projects/Seleções-Brasileiras-de-Futebol-Brazil... -Selections/11860. Get the list of players was not difficult. Part of their biographies are on Wikipedia. The big challenge is the tree of all. Those who achieved fame is easier. The other ...
Here's a first try. I've been trying to look for the most significant events for each day, looking also at the disciplines that have particular historical relevance (wrestling, discus etc).
Week one is dominated by swimming, week two by athletics.
Some of these athletes may be hard to build, genealogy-wise. But, we can try. Or, at least build great profiles and immediate families. Keep in mind that many great African athletes will always be hard to build on Geni!
So, here a first list. Perhaps we can find/need alternatives?
July 27 : Pierre de Coubertin
July 28 : 400 meters freestyle - Johnny Weissmuller
July 29 : Women's cycling road race - Jeannie Longo
July 30 : Swimming Men's 200 freestyle - Mark Spitz
July 31 : Fencing Men's Individual Foil - Edoardo Mangiarotti
August 1 : Gymnastics Men's Individual All-Around - Alexander Dityatin
August 2 : Gymnastics Women's Individual All-Around - Nadia Comăneci
August 3 : 100 Men's Butterfly - Michael Phelps
August 4 ù Men's Long Jump - Jesse Owens
August 5 : Women's Marathon - Paula Radcliffe
August 6 : Men's 120kg Greco Roman wrestling - Aleksandr Karelin
August 7 : Men's Discuss Throw - Jürgen Schult
August 8 : Women's Long Jump - Jackie Joyner-Kersee
August 9 : Men's 200 meter - Carl Lewis
August 10 : Men's Pole Vault - Sergei Bubka
August 11 : Boxing Men's heavyweight - Félix Savón
August 12: Men's Marathon - Abebe Bikila
Needed to clarify:
1. the dates reflect the gold medal match for the event
2. Each of the names have been significant winners for that event (sometimes because they also got more medals in other disciplines)
I thought Johnny Weissmuller was a nice one to add :-)
Plus, I think we have 12 countries here, too.
no, I think WIM RUSKA deserves a favourite place in the row of profiles to be profilated extern....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wim_Ruska
George - rename which project?
I also think that that list is a little "track and field" heavy? Athletics and swimming are enormous fields and should therefore have perhaps more representation
In that list we have Swimming 3; cycling1; fencing1; gymnastics 2; field and track 7; boxing 1; wrestling 1
Could we look at other disciplines - and take advantage of profiles that are already on Geni and could be developed?
Tennis - Charlotte Cooper Charlotte Reinagle Cooper (22 September 1870 – 10 October 1966) She won the tennis singles at the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris, France where women were allowed to participate for the first time. (Medals were not awarded until the 1904 Summer Olympics).
It's a real challenge, June :-) So many disciplines.
Wrestling isn't an earth-shattering sport, I suspect, but it is an original Olympic one. The marathon is THE Olympic sport, of course.
I felt Jesse Owens was significant, for many other reasons than sport as well.
Discus throwing is, again, not earth-shattering, but an original one. If we find an alternative for that day (August 7), why not.
I mean, let's expand the list with alternatives, and then decide?
Rowing Matthew Pinsent was the subject of WDYTYA and should be looked at because they found a line through to Edward 1 -
Private
private profile managed by Timothy Michael Gell - I have contacted him.
Thanks George - I think that if we put forward people, expand the list and then we can decide nearer the time - a lot will depend on how well a tree/profile can be developed! maybe we will have to not stick to the daily schedule as rigidly if there are over-laps of significant people on a particular day.
Yes, rowing is obviously a good one. I had never heard of Matthew Pinsent (now I looked ;-) ) - but you have to be a rowing nation to know, of course ;-)
True enough, if necessary, we have to be flexible regarding the schedule. As long as the particular sport is prominent that day, it would be good.
17 is really a very small number, so we'll have to make a call.
Let's drill down on that list pretty soon, though, like that we can do whatever we can on getting those 17 trees done.