You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
I knew somebody once named Katherayne, pronounced like it sounds.
Funny that you put Katherine and Gabriel together, my best friend and their boyfriend are almost exactly those two names (except that it's just Kate, not Katherine, and typically everyone calls him Gabe).
You are the end result of a “would you push the button” prompt where the prompt was “you have unlimited godlike powers but you appear to all and sundry to be an impetuous child” – Zero, 2022
Not arguing sexist, at least. But my first thought of most of them was white soccer moms. Probably because I know three middle-class white families back home that chose names very nearly that bad and it's not difficult to imagine them having gone the extra mile of "why would you do that to your kid".
I admit I prefer the names that don't stand out that much. Probably because my full name sounds like an 1800's crotchety old man and I had to use a nickname for my entire childhood. It works now that I'm an adult, but it did not help early on.
If I had a kid, I'd probably suggest Katherine or Matthew. Or Schtolteheim Reinbach III.
they cleverly deploy the adjective 'white' in association with the listed names, so that accusations of racism may be deflected
I definitely agree with the sexist part but the last comment seems kinda presumptuous to me. From my impression of Magary's work, he seems to enjoy mocking "preppy white morons".
the most common name I see criticized in those kinds of articles is "McKenzie" which is so weird to me because that's just a completely normal girl's name where I'm from.
surnames-as-first names are considered weird by a lot of people for some reason.
Anyway, those articles are stupid in general. Just don't name your child Naruto.
the most common name I see criticized in those kinds of articles is "McKenzie" which is so weird to me because that's just a completely normal girl's name where I'm from.
surnames-as-first names are considered weird by a lot of people for some reason.
Anyway, those articles are stupid in general. Just don't name your child Naruto.
i had never met anyone with the name McKenzie before, and technically still haven't, and it still sounds like a surname to me
but the other day i met a young man named MacKenzie, one of my coworkers commented that he had 'an amazing name'
the most common name I see criticized in those kinds of articles is "McKenzie" which is so weird to me because that's just a completely normal girl's name where I'm from.
surnames-as-first names are considered weird by a lot of people for some reason.
Anyway, those articles are stupid in general. Just don't name your child Naruto.
i had never met anyone with the name McKenzie before, and technically still haven't, and it still sounds like a surname to me
but the other day i met a young man named MacKenzie, one of my coworkers commented that he had 'an amazing name'
I feel like when I've seen it as a first name it's always been spelled "Mackenzie" with an A and lowercase K.
Honestly maybe this is cultural difference but i associate middle class with fairly conservative naming choices
traditional male first names, flower names for girls, naming people after their grandfathers or grandmothers or aunts or uncles
that kind of thing
no surnames or place names, nothing foreign that isn't widespread in English, very few gender-neutral options
That seems like it was true about 20 years ago, and I fall directly into the third category. But lately there have been a lot of terrible soccer mom names. This might be Western Oregon and hippie proximity talking though.
Then again, last time I went to Nebraska there were a lot more terrible names than I remembered there too. And while they're less uniformly white, they're also a lot more uniformly xenophobic and less likely to pick names they think sound black (even if they'd go to great pains to avoid directly saying it). Basically, it's probably going to be either a stock Bible name, a weird new-agey one, or a very stereotypical redneck one, with very little middle ground.
Comments
(The other Jane)
Penelope, Vivienne, Jacqueline, Jennifer, Genevieve, Gwen, Olivia, Sophia
Oliver, Claude, Calvin, Ormund, Spencer, Tarmicle Roving III
Anyways: Charlotte, Rachel, Lily, Jane, Mabel
yes, these are good too
kind of sexist as well
they cleverly deploy the adjective 'white' in association with the listed names, so that accusations of racism may be deflected
my mum doesn't like it at all
but perhaps they gave her an existing name, idk
but the other day i met a young man named MacKenzie, one of my coworkers commented that he had 'an amazing name'
traditional male first names, flower names for girls, naming people after their grandfathers or grandmothers or aunts or uncles
that kind of thing
no surnames or place names, nothing foreign that isn't widespread in English, very few gender-neutral options
I approve of Napstablook.