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Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2015-02-25/Featured content

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Featured content

The Moon, Mars, Venus, and Saturn, in no particular order. Also, Kaiser Kong.

Mars and Venus by Sandro Botticelli.
This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted from 8 to 14 February, 2015. Text may be adapted from the respective articles and lists; see their page histories for attribution.

Featured articles

Eleven featured articles were promoted this week.

Brachychiton rupestris, the Queensland bottle tree.
The Trinity nuclear test, 16 milliseconds after explosion. 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."
The Japanese version of the Sega Saturn, because I'm tired of showing pictures of black boxes when we feature images of video game consoles. This one has a bit of colour.
  • Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (nominated by Freikorp) A relatively early 3D-animated film which attempted to make the leap to photorealism, Square Pictures rendered the Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within using some of the most advanced processing capabilities available for film animation at the time. A render farm consisting of 960 workstations was tasked with rendering each of the film's 141,964 frames, and a staff of 200 and about four years labored towards its completion. Square intended to make the character of Aki Ross into the world's first photorealistic computer-animated actress, with plans for appearances in multiple films in different roles. However, all this technical achievement also made it a very expensive film, so Square Pictures was unable to make back the money put into it, leading to its demise. The plot follows scientists Aki Ross and Doctor Sid in their efforts to free a post-apocalyptic Earth from a mysterious and deadly alien race known as the Phantoms, who have driven the remnants of humanity into "barrier cities".
  • Brachychiton rupestris (nominated by Melburnian and Cas Liber) A drought-deciduous succulent tree, Brachychiton rupestris adapts readily to cultivation and is tolerant of a range of various soils and temperatures. It is a key component and emergent tree in the endangered central semi-evergreen vine thickets—also known as bottletree scrub—of Queensland Brigalow Belt. Cream flowers appear from September to November, and are followed by the woody boat-shaped follicles, which are ripe from November to May.
  • Interstate 8 (nominated by Rschen7754) A road from San Diego, California to Casa Grande, Arizona, Interstate 8, like much of the American interstate system, expands on previous roads. Mobster Jimmy Fratianno was involved in the construction of the El Centro section, and was convicted of fraud, public utility and labour violations, withholding wages from the truckers he employed, and damaging roads with overloaded trucks. The Arizona State government, meanwhile, in an unrelated incident, was found guilty by a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee of financial mismanagement in their hiring of contractors, failing to protect the public interest while doing so, and leading to numerous errors in construction. In other words, a surprising article, full of juicy scandals.
  • Girl Pat (1935 trawler) (nominated by Brianboulton) The Girl Pat was a small fishing trawler based at the Lincolnshire port of Grimsby, whose unauthorised transatlantic voyage in 1936 caused a media sensation. The escapade ended in Georgetown, British Guiana, with the arrest of the trawler's captain, George "Dod" Orsborne, and his brother. The pair were later imprisoned for the theft of the vessel. Built in 1935, Girl Pat was the property of the Marstrand Fishing Company of Grimsby. On 1 April 1936, Orsborne, with a crew of four and his brother James as a supernumerary, took the vessel out on what the owners authorised as a routine North Sea fishing trip of two to three weeks' duration. Using a cheap school atlas to navigate, the trawler went on a long cruise, to Spain, the Savage Islands, Dakar in Senegal, and islands off French Guiana in South America. The wayward sailors were finally captured in Georgetown, British Guiana, and the world's press, unsurprisingly, thought they were amazing and took their side. They were convicted, but after eighteen months for George, and twelve months for his brother, they were out, still acclaimed as public heroes.
  • Fork-marked lemur (nominated by Maky) Like all lemurs, the fork-marked lemur is native to Madagascar, where they are found only in the west, north, and east sides of the island. But not the south; the south is right out. Fork-marked lemurs are among the least studied of all lemurs and are some of the largest members of the family Cheirogaleidae, weighing around 350 grams (0.77 lb) or more.
  • Trinity (nuclear test) (nominated by Hawkeye7) The Trinity nuclear test was conducted by the United States Army on July 16, 1945, on the White Sands Proving Ground of the Alamogordo Bombing and Gunnery Range. The test used an implosion-design plutonium device, informally nicknamed "The Gadget", of the same design as the Fat Man bomb later detonated over Nagasaki, Japan, on August 9, 1945. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory, named it "Trinity" after the work of John Donne. After the successful test, he recalled some other lines of verse, from the Bhagavad Gita: Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.
  • Sega Saturn (nominated by TheTimesAreAChanging) Showcased at the Tokyo Toy Show in June 1994, according to Sega project manager Hideki Okamura, the Saturn Sega project started over two years beforehand. The name "Saturn" was initially the system's codename during development in Japan, but was eventually chosen as the official product name. Initially successful in Japan, it failed to sell in large numbers in the United States after its surprise May 1995 launch, four months before its scheduled release date. After the debut of the Nintendo 64 in late 1996, the Saturn rapidly lost market share in the US, where it was discontinued in 1998, but it lasted somewhat longer in Japan and Europe. It is considered a commercial failure, albeit one with some highly-regarded games.
  • Rodrigues starling (nominated by FunkMonk) is an extinct species of starling that was endemic to the Mascarene island of Rodrigues. Known only from partially-fossilized remains and the reports of a single sailor, Julien Tafforet, who was marooned on the island, the Rodrigues starling was 25–30 cm (10–12 inches) long, and had a stout beak. It was described as having a white body, partially black wings and tail, and a yellow bill and legs, and ate eggs and dead tortoises. Predation by rats introduced to the area was probably responsible for the bird's extinction some time in the 18th century.
  • Money in the Bank (2011) (nominated by starship.paint) The seventh of thirteen professional wrestling pay-per-view events held by WWE in 2011, Money in the Bank featured six matches, including two ladder matches, in which wrestlers attempted to use ladders to claim briefcases full of money dangling above the ring. Alberto Del Rio won the match for wrestlers from the Raw brand to earn a WWE Championship match at a time of his choosing within the next year, while Daniel Bryan won the match for wrestlers from the SmackDown brand for the same opportunity for the World Heavyweight Championship.
  • Casino Royale (novel) (nominated by SchroCat) Casino Royale is a 1953 spy thriller by Ian Fleming, inspired by his work in the Naval Intelligence Division during World War II. It was the first of 12 novels featuring the suave and deadly MI6 agent James Bond, code-named 007, a character who would go on to worldwide fame in print and on screen. Initially popular in the UK, it took longer to catch on in the US. There, the hardback sold poorly; the paperback was retitled You Asked for It and 007 was renamed "Jimmy Bond". It also took longer to be properly adapted for the screen. A 1954 TV adaptation made Bond American and included a baccarat tutorial for viewers. A 1967 parody, described as "incoherent", featured David Niven as Bond and Woody Allen as his nephew Jimmy Bond. The wildly successful Bond film series with Sean Connery and others started instead in 1962 with a later novel, Dr. No, not getting around to Casino Royale until the 21st film, a successful and acclaimed 2006 reboot of the series starring Daniel Craig.
  • Laurence Olivier (nominated by SchroCat and Tim riley) In 1924, Gerard Olivier, a habitually frugal man, told his son that not only must he gain admission to the Central School of Speech Training and Dramatic Art, but he must also gain a scholarship with a bursary to cover his tuition fees and living expenses. Olivier's sister had been a student there and was a favorite of Elsie Fogerty, the founder and principal of the school. Olivier later speculated that it was on the strength of this that Fogerty agreed to award him the bursary. Following Olivier's success in Shakespearean stage productions, he made his first foray into Shakespeare on film in 1936, as Orlando in As You Like It, directed by Paul Czinner, "a charming if lightweight production", according to Michael Brooke of the British Film Institute's (BFI's) Screenonline. He is noted for numerous films, including three adaptations of Shakespeare which he also directed: Henry V (1944), Hamlet (1948), and Richard III (1955), adaptations of novels, such as Wuthering Heights (1939), Rebecca (1940), Marathon Man (1976), and other films including The Boys from Brazil (1978), involving a plot to clone Hitler, and - in a rather clever twist - to also give him the important life events that shaped Hitler's character. Fun fact: I'd love to include pictures of him in this Signpost, but am not convinced of the copyright status of any of the half-decent images.

Featured pictures

Twenty-two featured pictures were promoted this week.

The official portrait by Pete Souza, official White House photographer: The Obama family in the Oval Office.
The Surrender of Breda by Diego Velazquez.
Three Arch Bay in Laguna: Take the flight and get the shot with WPPilot.
Eastern span replacement of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge, new and old spans.
From the California Coast to the Intercoastal of South Florida this week, WPPilot shares another aerial perspective. "The Fort Pierce Inlet State Park"
Charlottenburg Palace in Berlin, Germany.