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Latest Dugoutwikipediareport Stories

The Dugout's Wikipedia Report: the Los Angeles Dodgers

The Wikipedia Report unearths ballplayers' poorly constructed Wiki pages for craps and giggles.

Before you read this Dugout, you are encouraged to catch up on the historically significant Kyle Farnsworth-centric Dugout which B posted early this morning.

On to the Dodgers installment of the Wikipedia Report. Vanilla Ice, the notion of Superstitious Christianity, and the destruction of starships can be read about after the jump.

Dugout's Wikipedia Report: Atlanta Braves

The Wikipedia Report unearths ballplayers' poorly constructed Wiki pages for craps and giggles.

This morning, it's the Braves' turn. Discussions of immortality, toxic Southern cuisine, and the persistent grip of Communism can be found after the jump.

The Dugout's Wikipedia Report: the Toronto Blue Jays

The Wikipedia Report unearths ballplayers' poorly constructed Wiki pages for craps and giggles.

Sorry, Red Sox and Tigers fans. I skipped your teams because their Wikipedia entries are largely well-written and free of vandalism. We're moving on to the Blue Jays. Serial murderers on Craigslist, an astral dream-scape, boogers, and farts can be found after the jump.

Dugout's Wikipedia Report: Minnesota Twins

The Wikipedia Report unearths ballplayers' poorly constructed Wiki pages for craps and giggles.

Today's team: the Minnesota Twins. Swords, sombreros, and Greater Atlanta in flames, after the jump.

The Dugout's Wikipedia Report: the Chicago White Sox

Tonight's Dugout features the second installment of the Wikipedia Report, wherein the Chicago White Sox unearth their poorly-edited Wiki entries for craps and giggles.

Monstrous spider-bicycles, jokes at the expenses of community colleges, and HTML embargoes against Cuba can be found after the jump.

The Dugout's Wikipedia Report: the Kansas City Royals

Today: the debut of a new Dugout feature which may or may not end up visiting every clubhouse in baseball. I would wager that I read about a half hour's worth of Wikipedia every day, but if you dig deep enough, you can find molten rivers of hilarious, transparent, terrible writing. As such, these Dugouts will feature ballplayers unearthing their own Wikipedia entries.

This one concerns the Kansas City Royals, flaming tennis balls, and an ominous secret society of watercolor painters. Read it after the jump.

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