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[Citation Needed]: The Best of Wikipedia's Worst Writing
 
 

[Citation Needed]: The Best of Wikipedia's Worst Writing [Kindle Edition]

Josh Fruhlinger , Conor Lastowka
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 14, 2011
Do you need help telling the difference between a Renaissance Pope and an oracular octopus? Do you need details on what inappropriate body parts the attendees at Wing Bowl expose to one another? Do you need an accounting of which movies in the Air Bud series contain the fewest fart jokes? Fortunately, all these facts are lovingly recorded on Wikipedia, thus fulfilling the dreams of generations of scholars who worked towards a compendium of the world’s most vital information.

But how can you find these details, hidden as they are among boring facts about science and history and stuff? Fear not: For nearly two years, the blog [Citation Needed] has sifted through The Best of Wikipedia's Worst Writing. A thousand entries later, Conor Lastowka and Josh Fruhlinger have handpicked over 200 of their favorite examples of putrid prose and collected them here. Each entry features hilarious commentary from the authors, but they're confident you'll already be laughing by the time you get to it.

Praise for [Citation Needed]:

"Wikipedia has long been my favored source of dubious scholarship, unverified assertions, press-release hagiography, and confusing recaps of comic books in long run-on sentences. It is not merely that this material is USEFUL to a writer of fake trivia. There is also a strange pleasure that comes in witnessing very bad writing and wondering at the human mind that conceives it, and why that mind is so preoccupied with the drama behind the scenes of House Party 4. I am just glad that I now have the best of the worst, all hilariously annotated by Fruhlinger and Lastowka, and all bound in one non-internet volume such that I can enjoy these bits of grim, awkward human poetry without feeling tempted to get into a huge online fight over the weight of Mr. Belvedere." -John Hodgman

"You will not be surprised to discover many of Wikipedia’s worst writing comes from entries with nerdy subjects, include Care Bears (and their suspect genders), Adult Diaper fetishes, bizarre assumptions about He-Man characters, and more. I’m convinced Topless Robot readers will love the hell out of it...Frulinger and Lastowka are not nearly as mean-spirited as I am and about five million times funnier. The book is available here at Amazon for $11. If you have a Kindle, the ebook is only $1, which is the most absurd entertainment value I’ve seen in quite some time." -Rob Bricken, ToplessRobot.com

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Josh Fruhlinger is the creator of the Comics Curmudgeon, a surprisingly successful blog that makes fun of Mary Worth and Apartment 3-G and proves that pretty much anyone can become mildly famous on the Internet for any reason whatsoever, as long as they update every day. He’s also written for the satirical political blog Wonkette, recorded a RiffTrax, and finished in third place on his only Jeopardy! appearance (the correct answer was “Golda Meir”). He lives in Baltimore with his wife Amber and his cat Hoagie.


Conor Lastowka has written for RiffTrax.com for the majority of its existence. He founded the fake holiday National High Five Day, plays bass in his fake band Re-Ree and hosts the all too real [Citation Needed] Podcast. He lives in San Diego with his wife Lauren and his cat Slidell.


Product Details

  • File Size: 278 KB
  • Print Length: 222 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1466346981
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B005W55IVE
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #32,772 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
28 of 33 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Most of Wikipedia is done by amateurs, but is actually pretty good. Like some 17-year-old girl from Texas singing Etta James on the Motown episode of American Idol.

This book, however, is more like the first few weeks of that show. When an obese 39-year-old from Arkansas pretends to be 25 to get on the show, croaks through Whitney Houston's "I Will Always Love You," refuses to leave the stage, tells Simon Cowell to go back to Great Britainland, then gives it one more shot with "Amazing Grace" before giving Randy Jackson a Bojangles receipt with her phone number written on the back and leaving.

Actually, this book is like if you asked that woman to provide 250-300 words on the religious history of Great Britainland.

People never cease to amaze you, in the heights and depths of what they are willing to do for free and with no formal training whatsoever.

And thank God somebody focused on the depths, because they are 1,000 million times more awesome. [Citation Needed]
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Wonderful November 28, 2011
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
For some whatever reason that I don't quite understand, and being a person who doesn't generally more than chuckle in reaction to things, I have laughed loudly and heartily at almost every page of this. Most of the Wikipedia articles excerpted here are just so precious in their depictions of nerdy passion over their respective subject matter, and as a reader you feel that there's so much subtext to each one of them, that it's just such a damn pleasure to get to the one or two sentence jokey accompanying comment that follows. A good coffee table book, if anything.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This book is subtlely amusing and the author is quite the creative genius as he has compiled factually accurate Wikipedia entries for the purpose of doing research for a school project. Only if the project was due at a community college and the students looked like they just came out of a Deadmau5 show. Neverthless, the book produces a satire of Wikipedia by pointing out the informative nature of entries from Wikipedia contributors is only second to Youtube commenters.

It is definitely worth the bathroom read itself and serves as either a transition or complement to "What's Your Poo Telling You?" (also available on Amazon, [...])

The book is also great as a gift for your loved ones!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good Quick Read
This book has short pages, usually a link, the offending passage, and a short remark. Sometimes, the passages are still there, and it's fun to giggle about. Read more
Published 3 days ago by habeous
I tried to like it, I really did...
but I just can't go higher than 3 stars, and that's a generous rounding up from 2 1/2 stars. Some of the entries were funny but most were just weird, and the "humorous" commentary... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Casandra Perry
The Citizen Kane of Wickopedia compilations
I am a long-time reader and follower of co-author Josh Freoulaujpaoiug (too hard to look up and spell, I'm eating dinner as I type), and can attest to the quality of his writing... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Rusty
very funny
I find most books along these lines, the silly criminals/silly news headlines/etc. books, to be a lot less funny than the authors seem to imagine they are, and the authors'... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Michael Pereckas
Laugh out loud fun!
This book was an easy read and made me laugh out loud. It was an interesting insight into other people interests.
Published 2 months ago by D. Hazelwood
Did not live up to my expectations
I love looking on Wikipedia and finding all the crazy things that people have edited into the articles. That being said I was extremely excited when I came across this book. Read more
Published 3 months ago by dpappas
Funny but Short
Funny and short about sums it up. Some of the jokes I found to be a bit repetitive and for such a short book that is just laziness. Read more
Published 3 months ago by G. Kimball
Oh well, you can't please everyone
Despite the huzzahs for this book, I found it deadly dull and about as funny as a wet diaper. In their attempt to criticize Wikipedia contributors, they produced comments that were... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Joseph L. Carlson
A wonderful holiday gift
I gave this to my husband for Christmas. Unfortunately, he's barely had a chance to read it because the rest of our family keeps stealing it to read. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Katherine Rogers
This Book Required for Salvation, The Bible [Citation needed]
Ok, maybe not. but,this is a hilarious compendium of mistakes, poor grammar, and shenanigans that proves true the long discussed Spaceballs Theorem "Evil will always triumph over... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Grey Maggiano
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More About the Author

Conor Lastowka has written for RiffTrax.com for the majority of its existence. He founded the fake holiday National High Five Day, plays bass in his fake band Re-Ree, and hosts the all too real [Citation Needed] Podcast. He lives in San Diego with his wife Lauren and his cat Slidell.

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