July 28, 2005

Great. I'm a disease.

So I had the TV on just for background noise while I was working, and suddenly some TV doctor comes on and starts talking about how--if you feel tingling or heaviness in your legs--you may have peripheral artery disease, or P.A.D.

That got my attention. I looked up and watched in annoyance as the doctor proceeded to tell you everything you can and should do (including, of course, buying a particular product) in order to combat the terrible hazard that is P.A.D. And there's my initials all over the commercial. "Beware of P.A.D." "Know the early warning signs so you can avoid P.A.D." "P.A.D., the silent killer."

At least it's not something that requires a rectal exam to detect. "Make sure your doctor sticks his finger up your butt to see if there's any warning signs of P.A.D. in there."

PAD

Posted by Peter David at July 28, 2005 10:31 AM | TrackBack | Other blogs commenting
Comments
Posted by: Bill Mulligan at July 28, 2005 10:44 AM

Could have been worse; Penile Atrophy Disorder, Pustulous Anal Discharge...you got off easy.

Posted by: RAT at July 28, 2005 10:57 AM

Yeah, I saw that ad at work last night and I just though that it's a damn shame. Look at it this way, though. You can tell people that you always were a leg man....

Posted by: Fred Chamberlain at July 28, 2005 11:07 AM

PAD.... silent, but deadly? *ba ba bummm*

Posted by: Bob Jones at July 28, 2005 11:49 AM

Count your blessings:

Chris Aids
2XXX Martin Rd
Birmingham, AL 35235-2147

((That's from http://www.theultimates.com/white))

Posted by: David Van Domelen at July 28, 2005 11:54 AM

Well, that answers the question I had when seeing the ad: "I wonder if Peter's seen this?" http://www.PADfacts.com, heh.

Posted by: Mitch at July 28, 2005 11:58 AM

PAD:

Just so you have ammo to pick on another tri-initialed comrade:

Jaundiced Mandibular Syndrome

Of course, a man who spaced a teddy bear might actually be flattered by it.

Posted by: Elayne Riggs at July 28, 2005 12:06 PM

I hate to admit it, but every time I've seen that ad (which has been around for awhile) I confess I've thought of you. :)

Posted by: Dave S. at July 28, 2005 12:10 PM

I know someone who understands... Sadly, my sister's initials are PMS.

My mother's defense?

"They didn't call it THAT at the time you were born..."

Rassa-frassa doctors... :/

Posted by: Will at July 28, 2005 12:23 PM

It could be worse. My middle name is Mayer. I got it because when I was born, my great-grandmother was upset that noone was named after her sister, Helen. I guess she had forgotten that there was only one girl born in my generation. Anyway, my rabbi, to keep the peace, suggested that my middle name could be Helen's Hebrew name, but in masculine form. So basically, my middle name, as if it weren't bad enough that I get "you mean, like Oscar Mayer?" actually translates to "Helen."

Posted by: Sigma7 at July 28, 2005 12:25 PM

That's fantastic. You know when you've arrived in the world when you have symptoms.

Posted by: Jeffrey Frawley at July 28, 2005 12:43 PM

Is it a great deal of fun to provide the setup for opponents to ridicule you? I would probably be apprehensive, but our responses to a number of things differ remarkably.

Posted by: Jester at July 28, 2005 12:46 PM

PAD - As many have pointed out, it could be SO much worse . . .

My grandfather insisted on using his first and middle initials, "V.D.", on the return address for letters to my mother at college. My mother still talks about how embarassed she was. (Hey, this was the 1950's and I'm sure she didn't even know what VD was until she hit college!)

She tried to tell my grandfather not to use those letters, but since sex was not one of those topics discussed in her household, it must have been a very interesting conversation!!

Jester

Posted by: Michael Brunner at July 28, 2005 12:48 PM

Well, when you hear people say they're sick of PAD, you can pretend they're not talking about you.

Posted by: Howard at July 28, 2005 12:51 PM

Bob:

Speaking of strange addresses and names... Did you know that, according to Anywho.com, there really IS a Gary Seven living in Manhattan?

Posted by: Jerry at July 28, 2005 12:53 PM

Hey, it could be way worse then that for all of you. About three years ago I pulled a girl (about 18 years old or so) over for blowing a red light. Her given first name was Climittia.

A little later I ran into a Richmond officer I know and I was telling him about her. He knew the girl and her mother from calls involving the mother. He said that her mom was an idiot who always used big words that she knew nothing about in conversation. She gave her daughter that name because she thought that it had a nice, sing-song sound to it.

We both agreed that mom needed to be stoned to death.

Posted by: Jerry at July 28, 2005 01:13 PM

Jester,

Hey, I got a V.D. that's almost as bad as yours.

We had an officer working for us (nice New Yorker who hated what happened next and us for having so much fun with it for sooooo long) who had the initials V.D. Actually it was V.G.D. but we never used the G. Why mess up a perfectly good thing?

Vinnie was out for a while because of an operation and was listed on our shift schedule as being out on Short Term Disability. Or listed as S.T.D. for short. Do you know how nuts you can make a New York raised musclehead who can't kill you because he's recovering from an operation with that kind of thing? We do ;).

Posted by: Scavenger at July 28, 2005 01:19 PM

"P.A.D., the silent killer"
Actually, with the right ammount of publicity, that could help with the longevity of your books:-)

Posted by: Stacy Dooks at July 28, 2005 01:28 PM

Well. . .being called ' The Silent Killer ' is kinda cool. Makes you sound like a ninja or something. Ninjas are still cool, right? Or are pirates the new ninjas now? I can never keep track. . . :p

Stacy

Posted by: Jim Winter at July 28, 2005 01:37 PM

And for my next project, I'll chronicle the adventures of hitman Peter Alan Davis, the Silent Killer. Clients pay dearly to have their victims never hear him approach.

(Never could get the nerve to fully tuckerize someone. And even George Pelecanos does it.)

Posted by: Peter David at July 28, 2005 01:47 PM

"About three years ago I pulled a girl (about 18 years old or so) over for blowing a red light. Her given first name was Climittia."

Don't take this wrong, but I'm curious: Was she black? Reason I ask is because a comedian did a routine themed on the notion that black mothers could call their daughters just about any damned thing and somehow it "sounded" like a name. He proceeded to imitate an annoyed black mom trying to round up her kids with all these insane names, and I'm reasonably sure "Clymidea" was one of them.

PAD

Posted by: Den at July 28, 2005 01:54 PM

That seems to be a running gag with many comedians. I remember several years ago seeing a black female comedian talk about black women naming their children things like "Fahrvegneugen."

Posted by: Mike at July 28, 2005 02:09 PM

PAD: the New York Times Best-selling Killer.

"He ended my life with words!"

Posted by: Bill Mulligan at July 28, 2005 02:30 PM


"About three years ago I pulled a girl (about 18 years old or so) over for blowing a red light."

Straight line of the year. F'nar! F'nar! Must...resist...urge...to make...stupid joke...

I know someone's gonna cry racism at some point...but I've had more than a few students with great names and most of them have been Black girls. For boys it's more or less normal names--Jason, Tyrone, Jeremy---but the girls! Seems to have been a real fad about 15 years ago to just add "iqua" to the end of words and presto! Instant female name. Shaniqua, Tomiqua, Archeopterexapiqua, Domique a neek neek neekqua, you name it.

My Mom teaches economics at college and reminds me of one student named Female, pronounced Fee-Mahl-ay. Another friend of mine teaches at Emory and had a girl names Telekinesis, who had no idea that it was an actual word. She said her mom had heard it and thought it sounded cool, which, in point of fact, is true.

And there is the probably apocryphal story of a certain Mrs. King who named her baby Nosmo after claiming to have seen the name on a sign as she was wheeled in and took it as an omen.

Lest we look like we are picking on Black folk I'd like to point out that the really groan worthy stupid pun names have always come from white parents, who go to great lengths to point it out. "My son's name is Cole. Cole Slaw. Get it?" yeah lady, I get it, and I hope one day you get it too, when little Cole finally snaps and goes on a killing spree with his pals Dick Fitzwell, Brock Lee, Jenny Tull, and the Pitts twins, Harry and Cheri.

Posted by: Clay at July 28, 2005 02:34 PM

My girlfiend's mother has a few very unfortuate children in her third grade class. Here is the phonetic presentation of my personal favorite...

Shu-THEE-ud

Press your buzzer when you figure out the proper spelling.

Posted by: Jerry at July 28, 2005 02:35 PM

PAD,

Yes she was and yes I had heard the same stand ups doing that bit. I just never thought that they were serious until after that traffic stop.

Posted by: Queen Anthai at July 28, 2005 02:53 PM

My girlfiend's mother has a few very unfortuate children in her third grade class. Here is the phonetic presentation of my personal favorite...

Shu-THEE-ud

Press your buzzer when you figure out the proper spelling.

Oh my God, it isn't possibly "Sh*thead," is it? *wince*

Posted by: Patrick at July 28, 2005 03:17 PM

It could be worse.At least your not blamed for making every woman's life miserable for a week every month.
Patrick Micheal Straight.

Posted by: Rich Drees at July 28, 2005 03:49 PM

Congrats PAD, Now you can stand right alongside Lou Gherig and Bill Alzheimer in medical history!

Posted by: Trace at July 28, 2005 03:50 PM

True Life Story:
Not a joke
Not an urban legend

My brother-in-law's sister (or would it be my sister's sister-in-law? - anyway -) married a man last-named Lear (like King Lear or Norman Lear) when they had their daughter they named her Crystal Shanda Lear. She usually goes by Christy now (she's 22), but had no END of torture during grade school.

Dude, I would totally kill my parents.

Trace

btw: my last name is Belcher. ****grrrr*** Stupid irony******

Posted by: Roger at July 28, 2005 03:53 PM

I had a science teacher in high school named Don Juan Casanova. And no, his name didn't fit him at all.

Posted by: Jim Winter at July 28, 2005 04:01 PM

There's no excuse when a writer does it, though. Stuart Woods' character, Stone Barrington (He should be shot for that name alone.) has a fiancee named Arrington. So if they married...

I don't want to think about it. He gets paid more than I do for this stuff.

Posted by: Michael Brunner at July 28, 2005 04:08 PM

On my previous job, while fooling around with the name search for the company's database, I found a woman named Mary Ima Moron.

Honest!

Posted by: Mark L at July 28, 2005 04:19 PM

Well, my initials are MAL - which is latin for evil, bad, etc.

(such as malformed, malcontent, etc).

Posted by: Grace at July 28, 2005 04:23 PM

That almost fits the Hogg family in Texas.

Supposedly there was a man by the name of Edgar Hogg who had two daughters, Ima Hogg and Ura Hogg. I think the Ima Hogg was an actual person, but the Ura Hogg is a fictious add on.

Posted by: Robbnn at July 28, 2005 04:29 PM

I've got a friend, Mr. Smith (really!) who named his daughter Mary, with the middle name of Chris.

Mary Chris Smith. Say it fast.

Posted by: Adalisa (from Mexico) at July 28, 2005 04:30 PM

I used to hate my parents for my name, given that no one writes it correctly... but after reading all this? I figure I got really, really lucky and at least it is an actual name (My initials are still AZ, but that is kind of cool)

Posted by: Lee Goodman at July 28, 2005 04:31 PM

Re: Names--Fascinating book titled "Freakonomics" which, among other fascinating chapters, studies prevalence of certain names among high educated vs low educated people, rich vs poor people, etc. It's interesting to look up your kids name and see what it says about your position in our society.

Posted by: Stephen Soymonoff at July 28, 2005 05:08 PM

My ex-wife worked as a civilian for the Australian Defence Department, and has actually worked with the following people (No, I am not making these up - I've met them...)

Seaman Stainz
Gunner Rear
Private Parts

and my all-time personal favourite

Major Turnoff

Who wasn't going to improve as he rose in the ranks, becoming Captain Turnoff (and there's a superhero you really don't want to rescue you) and then General Turnoff.

A friend who was a police officer was also in a courtroom where there were, at the same time, a Corporal Sargeant and a Sargeant Corporal.

Posted by: jeff at July 28, 2005 05:15 PM

True story, former students, twins, at the school my Mother in Law works at, named...

Lemonjello
Orangejello

Pronounced Lee Mon Gelo and Or An Gelo. Felt so sorry for them and the hell they would be getting a few years down the road.

Posted by: John at July 28, 2005 05:16 PM

I contracted a disease called Guillain Barre Syndrome in highschool the same year we read the play, Pygmalian, by George Bernard Shaw. The two will be forever intertwined in my brain.

Posted by: David at July 28, 2005 05:35 PM

You think that's bad? My intials are d and t.

" I've got a bad case of the DTs."

Ah, high school memories.

Posted by: Robert Jung at July 28, 2005 06:30 PM

"I think the Ima Hogg was an actual person, but the Ura Hogg is a fictious add on."

Ima Hogg was real -- she's still reknown in Texas for her philantropic works, and I passed through a park in her name during a trip once.

--R.J.

Posted by: Tim Lynch at July 28, 2005 07:04 PM

Speaking as someone whose last name is synonymous with a hate crime ... about time. :-) I'll have to look for the ad whenever we get the television set up here.

(And BTW, Bill, "Shanequa" has been around a lot longer than fifteen years. I had a classmate in elementary school, nearly 30 years ago now, with that name -- I always thought it was a pretty neat name, though it didn't make the short list when picking out names for Katherine.)

TWL

Posted by: jroberthaga at July 28, 2005 07:57 PM

I've got EVERYBODY beat.
1. I was born in Nashville, Tenn., the heart of Dixieland.
2. My first name is James.
3. My second name is Robert.
4. My mother honestly claimed to not have realized that she named me Jim Bob.
5. One of my friends growing up was Richard Head.
6. He didn't get along with his dad either.

Posted by: Iggy at July 28, 2005 08:53 PM

Hi All,
Long time lurker, second time poster.
I work in a medical facility and see patient names (as well as different condition/disease names all day) and one of the most astounding names I have ever come across was "Everybodytalksabout."
There was an entire family.
Needless to say, eventually, there was a name change.
Iggy

Posted by: Michael Brunner at July 28, 2005 09:03 PM

It's spelled Luxuryyacht, but it's pronounced
"Throatwoober-Maaannnggrrrove"

Posted by: Alan at July 28, 2005 10:07 PM

I new a girl in high school. Her maiden name:

Claudine Mae Dye

Her married name:

Claudine Mae Dunn.

(unfortunately, she passed away several years ago from cancer - may she rest in peace).

Posted by: David Van Domelen at July 28, 2005 10:46 PM

FWIW, my initials are DVD. And I had it first, damn it. :) My dad was BVD, but generally wore Hanes. And he insisted his students call him Mr. V, not Mr. V.D. (he taught band, not health).

Posted by: Will McCaffrey at July 29, 2005 12:29 AM

Back in my days of working in a bank, I came across many amusing names, and yes, most of them were of the ethnic persuasion. However, there were two standouts: One was a woman called "Cleopatra Nurse". I was afraid to ask if that was a real name or a "Professional" one...

Second was a woman named "Delmarva Power". Her parents clearly must have spent some time down in the Maryland area at some point. (For those of you not in the area, Delmarva Power is the electrical company which services Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, hence the name)

And I think I should have gotten a raise for keeping a straight face the day I made a deposit for a woman with the unfortunate surname of "Glasscock".

Posted by: Conor E at July 29, 2005 12:35 AM

In high school, there was a quasi-legendary student, spoken of only in hushed whispers. While I never met him, I knew of his reputation. He was revered, not as a man, but as a god.

And his name was... Harold Butt.

That poor, poor bastard.

Posted by: Rob Martin at July 29, 2005 12:37 AM

I used to work with someone who was named Richard Head.

Some parents are just asking to be stabbed in their sleep.

When my wife and I were running through possible names for our daughter; I told my wife to close her eyes and imagine our daughter on the playground. If she was being beaten up, the name wouldn't work.

--Rob

Posted by: Clay at July 29, 2005 01:51 AM

Queen Anthai-

Tragically, yes.

Posted by: Noel Thingvall at July 29, 2005 02:03 AM

One of my grandma's brothers (out of a whopping 11) was named Dick with the unfortunate family name of Payne.

Seriously.

Dave S. wrote: "My mother's defense? 'They didn't call it THAT at the time you were born...'"

My grandma uses a similar arguement.

Posted by: Steve Chung at July 29, 2005 02:34 AM

Back when I was working for trade at Lee's Comics, I would go through the back issue bins, and put everything in order.

This practice became known to the staff as "Chunging" the books.

Between this and Darick Robertson begining the graffiti in Transmet #14, I've never felt so honored in my life. :)

Posted by: surabin at July 29, 2005 07:46 AM

I was born at home, and my father after making sure that me and mother were ok, let mum know that he was off to register me as Allan Stephen Saunders. He didnt make the front door.

Posted by: BBayliss at July 29, 2005 08:59 AM

My First name is Ben.
I grew up (for the most part) in Dover, Oh.

Oh, if I only had a dime for every time I heard BenDover. HAHA. Never heard that one before. c'mere! I'll show you bendover.


Wait, wait. My parents took to the habit (for whatever reason) of not calling me Ben, but by my initials: B.J. Yeah. Wooooo.

I made the mistake of allowing my father-in-law to find out that little tidbit.

I swear. One day when we're scrambling to make the tuition payment at Harvard for my daughter...he is sooooooooo gone. (j/k)

Posted by: Rich Drees at July 29, 2005 09:19 AM

"And I think I should have gotten a raise for keeping a straight face the day I made a deposit for a woman with the unfortunate surname of "Glasscock"."

Was she married to a guy named Harry?

(OK, cheap joke...)

I work in the student loan industry and every now and then someone will come across a rather interesting and colorful name. However, since the ones that spring to mind at the moment are still borrowers (and our workplace has gone overboard crazy nuts over privacy issues) I am afraid I will have to refrain from naming actual names. You'd also be surprised at how many superhero secret identities that are out there as real names...

Posted by: Tim Lynch at July 29, 2005 09:20 AM

When my wife and I were running through possible names for our daughter; I told my wife to close her eyes and imagine our daughter on the playground. If she was being beaten up, the name wouldn't work.

That's a good test, sure. I like another one as well, namely this: consider the name being used in these two sentences.

1) "And here to accept this year's Nobel Prize in medicine is ..."

or

2) "Okay, put your hands together and give a warm Lusty Beaver Club welcome to ..."

If it fits better in sentence 2, don't use it.

TWL

Posted by: Matt Dow at July 29, 2005 09:24 AM

A disease?

That's nothing. Back in the 80s and early 90s, the 1-800 number for the National Institute of Mental Health was 1-800-MAT-TDOW.

They changed it, I don't know why, I only pranked it occasionally.

Matt Dow

Posted by: Randy at July 29, 2005 10:27 AM

And, of course, if Ella Fitzgerald married Darth Vader, she would become . . . . . . . . (Insert Drum-Roll Here) . . . . . . . . .

ELLA VADER

Posted by: Adam-Troy Castro at July 29, 2005 11:00 AM

I have personal experience with the following:

Manuel Labor

Al Kida

Golden Dick (last name is Dick, first name Golden)

Posted by: Farris at July 29, 2005 11:01 AM

Try having your name used as a movie title sometime, and spelled wrong to boot. I don't know how much money that movie made, but obviously every person on earth saw it 10 times because 20 years later I still hear at least once a day "Oh, you mean like the movie..". At least I was in collage and not elementary school when it came out

Posted by: Bobb at July 29, 2005 11:02 AM

BB, I can relate. I'm a III (that's a third, as in Bobb the Third). My dad is official the Junior in the family, but does he get the BJ nickname? Nnnoooooo. I do. Which is fine, until I get to be about 8 years old, at which time, thanks to my brother, who's 5 years older than me, enlightens me that maybe BJ is not the best nickname a kid can have. Not only did it dash my then-aspirations to be just like BJ from BJ and the Bear, it was the only time in my life that I'd fly into a whirling dervish of "ataaaack!" when called by those initials.

So, from that point on, I was "Little Bobb."

O, that's so much better.

Moving ahead a few years, the best name I've come across was the lawyer for a respondent my then-agency was dealing with. His name was Dick Wood. I wish I were making that up. And he insisted on not going by Richard. Every time I had to call his office, I felt like Bart Simpson.

Posted by: BBayliss at July 29, 2005 11:11 AM

Bobb: Yeah, it was cool back in the 70's. Until, like you, my innocence was shot (pun intended?) down.

Here it is:
Hey there where ya goin',
Not exactly knowin'
Who says you have to call just one place home.
He's goin' everywhere,
B.J. McKay and his best friend Bear.

He just keeps on movin',
Ladies keep improvin'
Every day is better than the last.
New dreams and better scenes,
And best of all I don't pay property tax.

Rollin' down to Dallas,
Who's providin' my palace,
Off to New Orleans or who knows where.
Places new and ladies, too,
I'm B.J. McKay and this is my best friend Bear.

Posted by: John at July 29, 2005 11:42 AM

I knew an individual in school with the last name Duckworth. He claimed his first name was a family name that went back long before Disney, but truthfully, they should have ended the tradition.

Posted by: BBayliss at July 29, 2005 12:05 PM

a favorite out of the recent unemployment claims I've had:
Betty Beaver


contacts at the client locations I handle (hey! don't take that comment out of context:)
Chris Glascock
Melissa Boobyer

Posted by: Brian at July 29, 2005 12:19 PM

And if you look up urologists in Tampa you really will find a Dr. A Cockburn.

www.vasectomyreversals.com

Posted by: ArcLight at July 29, 2005 12:45 PM

Late to the party, but here's my own 'unfortunate name' story.

I was in the military. I took a call to set up an inprocessing appointment for a new arrival.

"His name is Sherman," the guy tells me. "Sherman Tank." I bust up and he calmly reiterates the name.

I say "okay" and we go on with the call.

Later on, same guy calls up. "Who is it now," I ask. "Tommy Gunn?"

"Man, he was sitting right here when I called," the guy tells me. "I was trying so hard not to laugh."

It was funnier if you were there.

Posted by: Charlie Griefer at July 29, 2005 12:46 PM

I think I can do you one better than being a disease...

About a year ago I figured I'd see if I could track down any family members using the Internet. My last name is "Griefer"...fairly uncommon...how hard could it be? So I proceeded to google.

I simply googled "griefer".

I got results that seemed to indicate that most of the world wanted me (and any family members who shared the surname) dead. And not just dead...they wanted us to suffer slow, painful, humiliating deaths. Results that said things like, "all griefers must die", "griefers are the scum that scum scrapes off the bottom of their shoes", etc.

Apparently, the term 'griefer' refers to, in the world of online gaming, a person who simply enters the game to do nothing other than kill people for no good reason. someone who isn't interested at all in the game itself, but just exists to disrupt (I guess the equivelant of blog/newsgroup trolls).

I'm not a gamer (I play the occassional solitaire or minesweeper), so this caught me totally off guard.

so, you may be a disease...but at least the geeks of the world don't want you dead :)

Posted by: ArcLight at July 29, 2005 12:59 PM

I should've included this in my previous post, but it's simply unfortunate, not funny.

There was a man who would come into the office and knew that no-one wanted to call his name so he paid attention and would simply get up when it was his turn.

The last name nobody wanted to say?

Pussey.

He eventually got it legally dropped and just used his first and middle names, but how he made it thru basic training I'll never know.

Posted by: John at July 29, 2005 01:40 PM

And while this link made the circuits quite awhile ago...the page is still up...a hospital's birth announcement for the lucky daughter of Patricia and Ronald Justice...Aryan.

Posted by: Tim Lynch at July 29, 2005 01:52 PM

Aryan Justice?

Yikes.

On the other hand, Lisa's cousin Bryan Hazard and his wife had their third child last year, and proceeded to name him Justice.

That would be Justice Hazard. Clearly someone with a career in either superheroics or supervillainy. To date, we're not sure which.

(We do, however, think that either Bryan or Micky should change their name to Destiny, so that the baby can be "Justice, Child of Destiny.")

TWL

Posted by: Robert Fuller at July 29, 2005 03:36 PM

That Chlamydia story sounds like an urban legend, because I swear I heard that same story before, except the girl's name was Syphilis.

If you ask me, those are both lovely names, or would be if they didn't mean somethine else. Just like Diarrhea. Think how pretty that would sound for a girl's name.

Posted by: Ravenwing263 at July 29, 2005 03:50 PM

This guy in my high school class had the last name of "Phoeuk."

Pronounced exactly like you're thinking.

Posted by: Luigi Novi at July 29, 2005 04:20 PM

How lucky I am depends on how you look at it. "Louis" or "Luigi" means "warrior" or "famous in battle," and "Novi" IIUC, is Latin for "new," so my name could be "New Warrior" (which would make it interesting if I were to break into comics on that title).

However, most people don't look at my name that way, and hence, all throughout high school, I got people saying to me, "Hey, WHERE'S MARIO???!!!"

I swear that video game ruined my life.

Posted by: Peter David at July 29, 2005 04:41 PM

"The last name nobody wanted to say?

Pussey."

My second favorite exchange in "Goldfinger"--

"I'm Pussy Galore."

"I must be dreaming."

(My favorite, of course, being what I'm sure is everyone's favorite from that film: "You expect me to talk?" "No, Mr. Bond! I expect you to die!")

PAD

Posted by: Tim Lynch at July 29, 2005 04:47 PM

That's "My name is Pussy Galore."

Sorry. Purist. :-) (And yes, it's one of the all-time best Bond dialogue moments.)

I always get a kick out of the way Connery pronounces the name as "Poo-sey" the rest of the film, too.

TWL

Posted by: Jerry at July 29, 2005 06:30 PM

"That Chlamydia story sounds like an urban legend, because I swear I heard that same story before, except the girl's name was Syphilis."


Nope. There are cops in the Richmond area who can tell you that a girl is driving around here with that name (spelled Climittia.)

Never pulled over a Syphilis though........

Posted by: AdamYJ at July 29, 2005 08:28 PM

"Ninjas are still cool, right? Or are pirates the new ninjas now? I can never keep track. . . :p"

Depends on if you're a fan of Shonen Jump manga. If you are, then they're both cool. Along with Shamans and . . . people who play cards very dramatically. If not, it's just a matter of personal taste.

"However, most people don't look at my name that way, and hence, all throughout high school, I got people saying to me, 'Hey, WHERE'S MARIO???!!!'"

I get something like that all the time at the place I work. It's assisted living and the name Adam automatically sends the residents back into memories of "Best Loved Bible Stories" or something. I swear, if I have to hear "Hey Adam, where's Eve?" one more time . . .

Anyway, I've run into one or two of these. While I worked at Taco Bell, there was an employee there named Mike Hunt. The female manager at my Taco Bell was rather dirty-minded, so she had fun with that.

The one I always remember best was one from literature, actually. You know how the meaning of words can change over time and all? Well, in high school, we had to read Oliver Twist. There was a character in there named Charlie Bates. However, Dickens seemed to feel a need to be very polite with his name and almost always referred to the character as Master Bates. Now imagine that name being read aloud in a ninth grade English class. Yeah.

Posted by: mike weber at July 29, 2005 08:38 PM

An acquaintance from the Old Days ('70s) allegedly named his first child "Arturius Imbre B******". Not that it makes a nasty abbreviation, but...

SF writer Alan E. Nourse, an MD (whose rights to the title "Blade Runner" had to be cleared when Ridley Scott decided that PKD's original title sounded too dumb for a movie and renamed it "Bladerunner) did his residency at a hospital where there was another resident named "Dockter". Nourse's name was pronounced "Nurse".

I understand the staff pages sounded a bit like something out of "Young Doctors in Love" -- "Dr Dockter, Doctor Nourse, please..."

Posted by: Matt M. Dow at July 29, 2005 08:40 PM

My brother went to school with a kid named Jet.
His mother claimed that if he had been born a girl, she was gonna name him Helicopter.

My mom went to school with kids named Fuchs.
Pronounced by the nuns as "FEW-cks"
But the one kid always corrected them and said it pronounced like ducks.

My Dad's name is David A. Dow. DAD.
My dad once dated a women with the initials MOM.
My brother is Ben A. Dow. BAD. My brother's wife was Beth A. Miller, but now she's Beth A. Dow. And their son is Brenton A. Dow. You should hear their answering machine.

When my mom was pregnant with my brother, my dad wanted him named Godfrey Oscar Dow. Same when she was pregnant with me. Needless to say she didn't go for it.

If I had been a girl, my dad wanted to name me Morgan LeFay Dow. I'm still not sure how I feel about that.

Matt M. Dow

Posted by: Matt Dow at July 29, 2005 08:43 PM

Oh, and I graduated with Mike Rank.
Matt

Posted by: Peter Badore at July 29, 2005 08:49 PM

Twenty-five years ago, I worked in a restaurant where the head chef was named Horr. One of the managers used to pick on him (they got along) because of this and he would respond, "I'm proud to be a Horr! I come from a long legacy of Horrs!"

One day he told a great story. His family had gone to get their pictures taken and they had to wait in a room with several others. Upon being summoned the photographer exclaimed, "All right, all you Horrs line up over here!" which brought the house down. Never forgot it.

Posted by: Peter David at July 29, 2005 09:41 PM

"If I had been a girl, my dad wanted to name me Morgan LeFay Dow. I'm still not sure how I feel about that."

So instead you're the Mighty M. Dow. Just think if your last name had been Dowd instead.

PAD

Posted by: Doug Atkinson at July 29, 2005 10:54 PM

My initials are the same as Disney's California Adventure. I didn't realize this (it's not the sort of thing that comes up a lot, after all) until I started reading jimhillmedia.com and started seeing a lot of articles with titles like "More problems with DCA"...

I have to check online obituaries as part of my job. Two names have particularly stuck with me:

Mary Virgin (fortunately a married name, so it's not her parents' fault)
Golden Creamer (ditto)

(As an aside, there's a moment in the anime "Aura Battler Dunbine" where the main character meets a woman named "Marvel Frozen" and says, "Oh, you must be an American." I laughed at the time, but it wouldn't shock me to discover a real person with that name by now...)

Posted by: thanoslegacy at July 30, 2005 12:41 AM

I used to work for a Richard Mann, who insisted on being called Dick. Go figure.

Posted by: Brian Geers at July 30, 2005 02:29 AM

I think my senior year English class was selected on the basis of having names the teacher could make stupid jokes with, like the obvious "Get it in gear, Mister Geers." Although, among those others in my class, was a girl with the unfortunate surname of "Bangs" (whom, for the sake of anonymity, I shall leave first-nameless), thus leading more than one member of the adolescent male population of the school to come up with suggestive adult movie titles in the vein of "Debbie Does Dallas". "xxxx Bangs Boston," "xxxx Bangs Boise," "xxxx Bangs Bangkok," etc.

Working in HR at the local community college leads me across the occasional entertaining last names when going through applications. We have a Weiner teaching history and we had Rambo teaching English.

Posted by: Joe Krolik at July 30, 2005 02:49 AM

The funniest name I ever encountered was back in university days. While looking up someone's phone number in the U directory, I came upon the name (unfortunately of oriental extraction):

Pisson Yick Moo Lee

I'm probably safe with JDK as initials.

Posted by: L. David Wheeler at July 30, 2005 03:18 AM

Friend of mine used to work at the same company as a man named Harry Members. What's more, my friend worked the reception desk and occasionally paged people over the intercom. Well, once Mr. Members was direly needed, but my friend decided he would be damned before he was going to go over the intercom looking for Harry Members, so he paged "Harold Members." Mr. Members was livid: "My name is HARRY! HARRY MEMBERS!"

It was funnier when he told me.

Posted by: Tim Lynch at July 30, 2005 08:49 AM

We have a Weiner teaching history

Well, that would pretty much stand to reason, wouldn't it -- after all, history is written by the Weiners.

TWL

Posted by: Craig J. Ries at July 30, 2005 11:53 AM

I work with county property records around the Denver Metro.

One day I came across a death certificate for a woman named "Golden Rule".

Was her married name, but still. :)

Posted by: David Bjorlin at July 30, 2005 03:24 PM

Clay wrote My girlfiend's mother has a few very unfortuate children in her third grade class. Here is the phonetic presentation of my personal favorite...

Shu-THEE-ud

Is your girlfriend from North Carolina by any chance? One of the judges here told me that same story, with his sister as the teacher in question. Similarly, the two jellos mentioned by Jeff were reputedly in court in Hoke County quite frequently. I see three possible explanations: 1) urban legends, and we've all been had (cf http://www.namenerds.com/uucn/); 2) there is a large North Carolina contingent on this blog; or most frighteningly: 3) in this great country of ours, there are mutliple people stupid enough to name their children Orangello, Lemonjello, and Shithead. I fear the latter because, although Judge Brown is a prankster, I don't think he was joking when he told me that story, and Orangello and Lemonjello were described to me by ADAs who claimed to have prosecuted them, who also seemed to be serious at the moment. According to this site (http://www.namenerds.com/uucn/advice/sightings.html) Lemonjello and his brother are still involved in the criminal system.

While we're on the subject of the court system, there is a judge out of Charlotte named Richard Boner. Yes, his surname is pronounced with a long O (although some of the bailiffs are uncomfortable with this, and try to get away with opening court for the Honorable Richard D. "Bonner" instead), and yes, he does use the same nickname as fellow Richards Nixon and Cheney. He's actually a really good judge, which shows that it's possible to rise above childhood trauma.

Posted by: Ed Dravecky at July 30, 2005 04:10 PM

It could be worse, you know. Try to imagine my horror when Bob Dole announced he was taking Viagra as a treatment for "E.D."

Posted by: Christine at July 30, 2005 08:12 PM

Well, at least your name doesn't come up first when you enter the word "failure" in the Google search engine!

They save that honor for someone else that we all "know and love" :)

Posted by: Clay at July 30, 2005 09:52 PM

David-

My girlfriend, her mother, and I are all from Atlanta. I can verify poor Shithead's appelation from the mother's word, but I strongly (or hopefully) believe that the gelatin twins are legendary. There's some comedian who has adopted the alias Shirley Q. Liquor in a series of comedy tapes, and Lemonjello and Orangello are her fictional children.

Of course, the names could indeed have been inspired by reality. Like the jello kids you mention, Shirley's children are constantly decribed as "guests of the state..."

This all gets less funny and more depressing the more I think about it.

Posted by: Peter Badore at July 31, 2005 12:42 AM

Ah yes, the Harry Members story reminds me when I worked at the P.O. one of the bigwigs was named Harry Cox. No joke!

Posted by: Ole' Greenskin at August 2, 2005 03:04 PM

Your a disease to the hearts of Hulk fans everywhere. I can't believe you quit!!!!

Unacceptable...

Posted by: James M. Gill at August 2, 2005 03:24 PM

Oh, yeah. A disease that gave us over a decade of the best Hulk stories out there.
If you want to express your disappointment with Mr. David leaving the book, I suggest you do it in a way that is not insulting, as that seems to undermine your own arguement. If PAD sucks so badly, why on earth would you want him to continue writing the book?
...Oh, hell.
I'm feeding the troll, aren't I?
Oops. My bad.
Sorry, guys.

Posted by: Bobb at August 2, 2005 03:33 PM

James, the signs are pretty clearly posted...

Posted by: James M. Gill at August 2, 2005 03:39 PM

Yet much like Yogi, they keep coming in, and there's no shortage of fools like me that think, "Oh, what's the harm in one little bite..."
when will we learn? :P

Posted by: Bob Jones at August 2, 2005 09:36 PM

Gary Seven in Manhattan? Did you check for any "Roberta Lincoln"s living nearby? BTW, for those folks with the VD stories? My initials are BJ. Having grown up in the Italian North End of Boston in the 50s & 60s, though, I've a got a quick comeback, or twenty, at the ready. Gedouddaheah.

Posted by: BrakYeller at August 3, 2005 12:13 AM

FWIW, the current sheriff of Aiken County, South Carolina is Mike Hunt. He insists on being called "Sheriff Mike Hunt," and ran for the office under that name... I still keep one of his campaign signs despite being a Georgia resident. He's two years into his term and he's managed to make more drug busts than half the state combined, making a real dent in drug trafficking through Aiken... though one has to wonder what, exactly, drove him into law enforcement in the first place.

And I always thought "Chlamydia" would make a great name for a Wagnerian-style opera...

Posted by: Bob Jones at August 3, 2005 12:25 AM

In my 9-5 job, I see tons of names. I often ask myself: Why would a mother name her daughter 'Latrina'?

Posted by: Yolande at August 3, 2005 04:41 PM

I have to jump in here too. I went to school with a girl with the last name 'Hoare.' She was teased mercilessly and hated it. A year later, she'd legally changed her name.

Posted by: Den at August 3, 2005 05:01 PM

A woman that I used to work with was named, "Joy Banger."

Posted by: Gerard at August 12, 2005 04:22 PM

Well, searching Wikipedia for anything related to my last name (BTW, I'm in no way related to Fab Morvan -thankfully), I found this:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morvan's_syndrome

Lucky I don't suffer from it.

Posted by: gilles tanguay at August 24, 2005 05:20 PM

i would like a information package about PAD facts.

Posted by: jeffrey ray lippincott at September 27, 2005 03:19 PM

This is teriffic, I look for information on an artierial disorder, and all I get is some cry baby complaining about his initials being PAD.Big problem (or not),I've never heard of you,however I have heard of the other PAD,that I believe is way more importaint than you!!Grow up!