Wikipedia:Source assessment/Tuttle Twins
Appearance
The Tuttle Twins is a children's book series by Libertas Institute president Connor Boyack. Angel Studios produces an animated adaptation of the same name. The page Tuttle Twins, which redirected to Libertas Institute (Utah), was recently edited to make it into an article outright.
| Source | Independent? | Reliable? | Significant coverage? | Count source toward GNG? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
"Libertarian Cartoons Promise to Turn Your Kids Into Little Ayn Rands". Bloomberg.com. 2022-07-27. Retrieved 2023-01-26.
|
✔ Yes | |||
– ActivelyDisinterested |
✔ Yes | |||
– WP:RSP |
✘ No | |||
– WP:RSP |
~ About a book | ? Unknown | ||
– WP:RSP |
~ About a book | ? Unknown | ||
| ✘ No | ||||
| ~ | ? Unknown | |||
| ~ "There is consensus that The Washington Times is a marginally reliable source for politics and science. [...] A majority of editors regard The Washington Times as generally reliable for topics other than politics and science." – WP:RSP | ~ Partial | |||
– ActivelyDisinterested |
~ "LFP might be marginally reliable" – ActivelyDisinterested | ✘ No | ||
Rowe, Mike (May 7, 2024). "Tuttle Twins 'The College Conundrum'". Mike Rowe. Retrieved June 23, 2024.
|
~ About one episode ("The College Conundrum") | ✘ No | ||
| ~ About one episode | ✘ No | |||
@TuttleTwinsTv (1 February 2022). "The Inflation Monster" with @ZubyMusic" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 8 May 2023. Retrieved 8 May 2023 – via Twitter.
|
✘ No | |||
| This table may not be a final or consensus view; it may summarize developing consensus, or reflect assessments of a single editor. Created using {{source assess table}}. | ||||