Star classification is a type of rating scale utilizing a star glyph or similar typographical symbol. It is used by reviewers for ranking things such as films, TV shows, restaurants, and hotels. +more
Historical usage
Repeated symbols used for a ranking date to Mariana Starke's 1820 guidebook, which used exclamation points to indicate works of art of special value:
Murray's Handbooks for Travellers and then the Baedeker Guides (starting in 1844) borrowed this system, using stars instead of exclamation points, first for points of interest and later for hotels.
The Michelin restaurant guide introduced a star as a restaurant rating in 1926, which was expanded to a system of one to three stars in 1931.
Media
Books
In 1915, Edward O'Brien began editing The Best American Short Stories. This annual compiled O'Brien's personal selection of the previous year's best short stories. +more
Oliver Herford's essay Say it with Asterisks, quips "Never, I think, where a mob of overworked employees so pitifully huddled together in an ill-ventilated factory as are the Asterisks in this Sweatshop of Twaddle. " Literary editor Katrina Kenison dismisses O'Brien's grading systems as "excessive at best, fussy and arbitrary at worst. +more
Book reviewers generally do not use a star-rating system though there are exceptions. The West Coast Review of Books rates books on a scale of one ("poor") to five ("superior") stars. +more
Films
In the 31 July 1928 issue of the New York Daily News, the newspaper's film critic Irene Thirer began grading movies on a scale of zero to three stars. Three stars meant 'excellent,' two 'good,' and one star meant 'mediocre. +more
According to film scholar Gerald Peary, few newspapers adopted this practice until the French film magazine Cahiers du cinéma "started polling critics in the 1950s and boiling their judgment down to a star rating, with a bullet reserved for movies that the magazine didn't like. " The highest rating any film earned was five stars. +more
Critics do not agree on what the cutoff is for a recommendation, even when they use the same scale. Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert "both consider[ed] a three-star rating to be the cutoff for a "thumbs up" on their scales of zero to four stars. +more
There is no agreement on what the lowest rating should be. Some critics make "one star" or a "half-star" their lowest rating. +more
Examples of rating scales: *0-4: Roger Ebert, Gene Siskel, David Kehr and Peter Travers *0. 5-4: +more
Critics have different ways of denoting the lowest rating when this is a "zero". Some such as Peter Travers display empty stars. +more
Critics also do not agree on what the lower ratings signify, let alone the lowest rating. While Maltin's and Scheuer's guides respectively explain that lowest rated films are "BOMB(s)" and "abysmal", British film critic Leslie Halliwell instead writes that no star "indicates a totally routine production or worse; such films may be watchable but are at least equally missable. +more
Not all film critics have approved of star ratings. Film scholar Robin Wood wondered if Sight and Sound readers accepted "such blackening of their characters. +more
Comedy and theatre
Star ratings are also given out at stand-up comedy performances and theatre productions. Star ratings are given at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the largest arts festival in the world. +more
The use of star ratings is controversial because the public may ignore the reviews and concentrate more the star ratings alone.
Video games
Star ratings are not often used to rate the quality of a video game but are rather used within certain games for varying purposes. One notable use of the star system is to grade a player's performance in completing a level with up to three stars, used in many modern multi-level games like Angry Birds. +more
Restaurant ratings
Restaurant guides and reviewers often use stars in restaurant ratings. The Michelin system reserves star for exceptional restaurants, and gives up to three; the vast majority of recommended restaurants have no star at all. +more
The Michelin system remains the best known star system. A single star denotes "a very good restaurant in its category", two stars "excellent cooking, worth a detour", and three stars, "exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey".
Michelin stars are awarded only for the quality of food and wine; the luxury level of the restaurant is rated separately, using a scale of one ("quite comfortable") to five ("luxury in the traditional style") crossed fork and spoon symbols.
Hotel ratings
Hotel luxury is often denoted by stars.
Other classifiers, such as the AAA Five Diamond Award, use diamonds instead of stars to express hotel rating levels.
Hotels are assessed in traditional systems and rest heavily on the facilities provided. Some consider this disadvantageous to smaller hotels whose quality of accommodation could fall into one class but the lack of an item such as an elevator would prevent it from reaching a higher categorization.
In recent years hotel rating systems have also been criticized by some who argue that the rating criteria for such systems are overly complex and difficult for laymen to understand. It has been suggested that the lack of a unified global system for rating hotels may also undermine the usability of such schemes.
Financial product ratings
In the UK, providers and comparison websites often use stars to indicate how feature-rich financial products are.
Defaqto is an organization that independently assesses every financial product in the UK. Each of these products is awarded a rating from 1 to 5 stars, allowing consumers to see where it sits in the market. +more
Military ranks
The most senior military ranks in all services are classified by a star system in many countries, ranging from one-star rank which typically corresponds to brigadier, brigadier general, Commodore or air commodore, to the most senior five-star ranks which include Admiral of the Fleet, Grand Admiral, Field Marshal, General of the Army and Marshal of the Air Force which typically only exist during large-scale conflicts.
In the army of the Republic of Ireland, the most junior ranks are classified by stars. A three-star private/gunner/trooper is one who is considered a fully trained soldier. +more
Seven-star rank
The North Korean rank of Taewonsu has been compared to a seven-star rank. In France, the (now honorary) military ranks of Admiral of France and Marshal of France, both Great Officers of the Crown of France, have seven-star rank insignias.
Other
American college football
Recruits entering American college football are commonly ranked on a five-star scale, with five representing what scouts think will be the best college players.
Transport safety
International organisations use a star rating to rank the safety of transportation. EuroRAP have developed a Road Protection Score which is a scale for Star Rating roads for how well they protect the user from death or disabling injury when a crash occurs. +more
Euro NCAP awards 'star ratings' based on the performance of vehicles in crash tests, including front, side and pole impacts, and impacts with pedestrians.
The United States National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) also uses a star ranking to rank the safety of vehicles in crash tests, including front, side, pole impacts, and rollovers, with 5 stars being the most secure.
Voting and preferences
Some Web content voting systems use five-star grades. This allows users to distinguish content more precisely than with binary "like buttons".
Many recommender systems, such as MovieLens or Amazon. +more
Unicode
The Unicode Standard encodes several characters used for star ratings:
Character | Code point | Name |
---|---|---|
★ | U+2605 | BLACK STAR |
☆ | U+2606 | WHITE STAR |
⯪ | U+2BEA | STAR WITH LEFT HALF BLACK |
⯫ | U+2BEB | STAR WITH RIGHT HALF BLACK |
⯨ | U+2BE8 | LEFT HALF BLACK STAR |
⯩ | U+2BE9 | RIGHT HALF BLACK STAR |
The STAR WITH LEFT HALF BLACK and LEFT HALF BLACK STAR are intended for use in left-to-right contexts where the half star is positioned to the right of one or more whole stars, whereas the STAR WITH RIGHT HALF BLACK and RIGHT HALF BLACK STAR are intended for use in right-to-left contexts (such as Arabic or Hebrew) where the half star is positioned to the left of one or more whole stars.
Notes
[[Category:Star ranking systems| ]] [[Category:Star symbols]] [[Category:Reputation management]] [[Category:Military ranks]] [[Category:Rating systems]]
Star ranking systems
Reputation management
Military ranks
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