The result was delete. The analysis principally by Nsk92 and Guest999, which demonstrates that there are no sources establishing the general topic of "biscuits and sex" as such and that the article accordingly violates WP:SYNTH, has not been adequately refuted by those advocating to keep the article. Sandstein 10:48, 3 January 2009 (UTC) reply
The connection between biscuits and sex, if there is one, is synthesis of published material that appears to be original research. It seems to be a loose collection of info with no other connection than that it somewhat involves biscuits and sex. McVities providing biscuits for Ann Summers parties? Erotic art made with biscuits? Nineteenth century women referred to as biscuits? I have no idea why this article exists. Graymornings (talk) 00:22, 29 December 2008 (UTC) reply
And, kiddo, there's a saying about trying to teach people how to suck eggs. I know how Wikipedia works. I've worked on articles that took nearly five years to write. But they all had sources from which they could be built, and that showed that such a topic even existed outside of Wikipedia in the first place. You have no sources. You've presented none. And people who've looked, such as me, haven't found any. (My credentials on finding sources for the seemingly unlikeliest of topics should be well known.) So, again: Where's your source? Uncle G ( talk) 00:21, 2 January 2009 (UTC) reply
There's a connection between nutrition and sex drive (particularly observed in cattle in the literature, it seems), which the Madonna tidbit clearly fits into. But it isn't restricted to specifically biscuits (or indeed humans).
Similarly, there's ample discussion of food metaphors for sex and sexual attractiveness, into which discussion of slang names for young women can be placed. (Indeed, they are so placed in actual sources that are more than dictionaries of slang.) But, again, the metaphors aren't exclusively biscuits. ("Coffee grinder" is one, for example.)
Everything here is a fact taken from a larger overall different subject and discussed here under an umbrella that doesn't seem to exist outside of Wikipedia, rather than in the context of the proper subject that it belongs in, and that it can be found in in sources. Uncle G ( talk) 04:26, 29 December 2008 (UTC) reply
The result was delete. The analysis principally by Nsk92 and Guest999, which demonstrates that there are no sources establishing the general topic of "biscuits and sex" as such and that the article accordingly violates WP:SYNTH, has not been adequately refuted by those advocating to keep the article. Sandstein 10:48, 3 January 2009 (UTC) reply
The connection between biscuits and sex, if there is one, is synthesis of published material that appears to be original research. It seems to be a loose collection of info with no other connection than that it somewhat involves biscuits and sex. McVities providing biscuits for Ann Summers parties? Erotic art made with biscuits? Nineteenth century women referred to as biscuits? I have no idea why this article exists. Graymornings (talk) 00:22, 29 December 2008 (UTC) reply
And, kiddo, there's a saying about trying to teach people how to suck eggs. I know how Wikipedia works. I've worked on articles that took nearly five years to write. But they all had sources from which they could be built, and that showed that such a topic even existed outside of Wikipedia in the first place. You have no sources. You've presented none. And people who've looked, such as me, haven't found any. (My credentials on finding sources for the seemingly unlikeliest of topics should be well known.) So, again: Where's your source? Uncle G ( talk) 00:21, 2 January 2009 (UTC) reply
There's a connection between nutrition and sex drive (particularly observed in cattle in the literature, it seems), which the Madonna tidbit clearly fits into. But it isn't restricted to specifically biscuits (or indeed humans).
Similarly, there's ample discussion of food metaphors for sex and sexual attractiveness, into which discussion of slang names for young women can be placed. (Indeed, they are so placed in actual sources that are more than dictionaries of slang.) But, again, the metaphors aren't exclusively biscuits. ("Coffee grinder" is one, for example.)
Everything here is a fact taken from a larger overall different subject and discussed here under an umbrella that doesn't seem to exist outside of Wikipedia, rather than in the context of the proper subject that it belongs in, and that it can be found in in sources. Uncle G ( talk) 04:26, 29 December 2008 (UTC) reply