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Though the channel hosting BFDI has over 2.5 million subscribers and over 1.8 billion views, [10] [a] these numbers do not justify the creation of a BFDI article on Wikipedia. Usually, when something is popular, many reliable sources report on the subject, making it notable.
take Tadc for example, the reason it had large media was because it had topped the charts of youtube and made millions of hits, which is different to bfdi, for example the reason bfdi 1 was so popular (at 60M) was because it was the first video made for bfdi, and many people watched it, not many liked it, it was seen as “childish and immature ...
According to The Wall Street Journal, the writer of that BFDI mouth article, Philipp Kachalin, has written for memepedia.ru, which doesn't inspire confidence as a reputable source (looks like a blog and I couldn't find Memepedia's editorial staff page), so it's questionable to claim that Kachalin is a subject-matter expert.
A2: Wikipedians are not "biased" against BFDI. The creation of a Battle for Dream Island article is simply not allowed because the topic lacks notability and overly enthusiastic fans have repeatedly recreated it despite consensus favoring its deletion.
It is popular online, but only online, which is why media outlets haven't covered it. It would be like making an Eddsworld page before Edd Gould died, since all of the sources used on the page came from outlets talking about his death. BFDI is only popular on the internet, and no news outlets have covered it due to that.
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Typically, dementia is associated with classic symptoms like confusion and memory loss. But new research finds that there could be a less obvious risk factor out there: your cholesterol levels ...
Bitcoin users will remember Doge, a misspelled use of the word “dog,” as the internet meme depicting the Japanese Shiba Inu dog breed with its multicolored text and questionable grammar.