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Monthly Archives: September 2011

Celebrity Baby News: Kelly Landry and Anthony Bell

30 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

Model and TV reporter, Kelly Landry, and her husband, accountant Anthony Bell, welcomed their first child on Tuesday September 27; a girl named Charlize Grace.

Kelly is a reporter on Channel Nine’s travel show, Getaway, and Anthony is on the BRW Young Rich List; his accountancy firm has been listed as the most productive for eight years running.

Kelly and Anthony fell in love on their first date, which was set up by a mutual friend, and were married secretly in New Zealand last February, after only six months of dating. They held an “engagement party” at Rose Bay restaurant, Catalina, with most of the guests only realising it was actually a wedding party when video footage of the nuptials was shown.

Celebrity Baby News: Cam Shepherd and Sam Bonar

27 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

Rugby union footballer, Cam Shepherd, and his fiancee Sam Bonar, welcomed their first child yesterday – a boy named Roman Paul. Roman Shepherd weighed 3.5 kg (7 pounds 13 ounces), and was 51 cm long. His birth was announced on Twitter.

Cam Shepherd plays for Perth team Western Force in the international Super 14 competition.

UPDATE October 16

Roman spent a short period in the neonatal unit of St John of God Hospital after picking up an infection, but is now home with his parents.

Cam says that they picked the name Roman for him because it sounded strong; it was the number 1 name on Sam’s name list, and number 3 on Cam’s. After seeing Sam go through 13 hours of labour, Cam decided that Sam’s first pick was their only option. They both love the name.

Cam and Sam’s wedding is planned for December 2012.

(Story and photo from The Sunday Times, October 15 2011).

Celebrity Baby News: Daniel and Kelly Giansiracusa

27 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, famous namesakes

AFL player, Daniel Giansiracusa, and his wife, Kelly, welcomed their son Otis, on September 8. Otis joins big sister Ruby Iris, who is nearly 3, and his birth was announced on Twitter.

Intriguingly, Otis Giansiracusa was born the day before Otis Redding’s birthday, but I don’t know if that was a factor in the choice of his name.

Daniel plays for the Western Bulldogs, and he and Kelly were married in December 2007.

Ruby Anne Susie Murch: A Daughter for Cathy Freeman and James Murch

25 Sunday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby Names

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, english names, famous namesakes, French names, honouring, name popularity, nicknames, popular names, vocabulary names

Cathy Freeman’s daughter was one of the most anticipated babies to be born this year, because Cathy is not only one of our greatest athletes, but also one of our most loved. Australia has been blessed with more than its fair share of fast runners, but Cathy did more than run fast – she has that charisma that draws people to her, and a smile that can light up, not just a room, but an entire stadium.

Her sporting achievements are well-known and add up to a stellar career. She began running aged five, won her first gold medal at the age of eight in Brisbane, and was encouraged by her family to pursue her dream of becoming an Olympic athlete. She won her first international gold medal for the women’s relay at the Commonwealth Games in Auckland, 1990; this made her not only the first Aboriginal gold medal winner at a Commonwealth Games, but also the youngest, as she was only 16. To commemorate her achievement, she was awarded Young Australian of the Year in 1990. In her acceptance speech, she said that she ran for all Australians, but particularly for Aboriginal Australians, whom she hoped to inspire to reach their own goals.

Cathy’s childhood dream came true in 1992, when she became the first Aboriginal Australian to compete at an Olympics Games, in Barcelona. She won double gold at the 1994 Commonwealth Games, and in 1996 received her first Olympic medal when she won silver in the 400 metres in Atlanta. Three subsequent Grand Prix victories and her taking first place at the 1997 World Track and Field Championships in Athens confirmed her status as world champion over 400 metres. In 1998, she received the Australian of the Year Award for her athletic achievements. To date, she is the only person who has ever been awarded both Young Australian of the Year and Australian of the Year.

The 2000 Olympics in Sydney were expected to be the jewel in her crown, and she was chosen to light the Olympic flame at the opening ceremony. Cathy didn’t disappoint, as she won her first Olympic gold medal for the 400 metres, and after the race, did her victory lap carrying both the Australian and Aboriginal flags as a symbol of national reconciliation. This had to gain the special permission of the International Olympic Committee, because although the Aboriginal flag is officially recognised in Australia, it isn’t a national flag, and isn’t recognised by the IOC. Cathy later explained that the carrying of both flags was the culmination of a promise that she had made to herself when she was 16, and just beginning her international career.

Further honours came her way: she received the Olympic Order, the Arthur Ashe Courage Award, the Laureus Sportswoman of the Year Award, and the Order of Australia Medal all in the same year, 2001. After her retirement, she devoted herself to many charitable causes, most notably the Cathy Freeman Foundation, which encourages indigenous children to stay in school and succeed academically.

Catherine Astrid Salome Freeman had become not just an athlete, not just an Olympian, not just a gold medallist, but also a spokesperson, a community leader, a role model, an icon, an inspiration, a star. Her success was beyond the wildest dreams of the little girl who had won primary school sports day races in Queensland.

A couple of years ago I watched an episode of genealogy show, Who Do You Think You Are?, featuring Cathy Freeman. She already knew that her grandfather, Frank Fisher, was a famous rugby league player from an Aboriginal mission, known for being a fast sprinter and a fierce competitor on the field, but was surprised to find her great-grandfather, Frank Fisher senior, served in World War I as a member of the Light Horse. She discovered that she had both English and Chinese ancestry on her mother’s side, and that her mother’s family had been sent to a Palm Island penal settlement for being too independent. They were to remain there for four generations – a place so strictly controlled that Cathy’s mother Cecelia was not allowed to visit family members for Christmas; this was in 1963.

As Cathy read the documents connected with her family history, she shed tears of rage and frustration on behalf of her ancestors. She said that if she had known all this when she was an athlete, she would have run even faster, and her running would have been fuelled by anger. Cathy has a tattoo on one bicep that reads Cos I’m Free, and she realised that her freedom was a historically recent thing.

Despite her magnificent public success, her private life was filled with drama, turmoil and even scandal. But as Cathy explained in an interview: “I might be a champion athlete but that doesn’t make me a champion person. Why shouldn’t my personal life be just as difficult and troublesome as any other woman’s? God, the mistakes I have made and the tears I’ve shed . . . Apart from a certain God-given talent I firmly believe the reason I achieved so much is that running was my escape from a chaotic personal life. Athletics was my refuge, something I could lose myself in.”

Fortunately, her chaotic love life got a lot happier and more stable when she met fund manager James Murch at a charity ball – a man that Cathy describes as “fantastic, fabulous, sexy, beautiful, gorgeous”, and also her best friend. In April 2009, Cathy and James were married in a Ba’hai wedding ceremony that included traditional indigenous elements. They were very open about wanting children as soon as possible, and said they were willing to adopt if necessary.

Cathy dropped a hint that she might be pregnant in September last year, during a ceremony to mark the tenth anniversary of the Sydney Olympic Games. She made a comment about her memory living on through her “unborn children and their children”. After she was questioned what she meant by that, her thought was, “Oh dear, what have I said?”. Pictures of her looking plumper, and a suddenly cancelled charity run across Sydney Harbour Bridge only fuelled speculation.

The pregnancy was officially announced in February, and it was also revealed that pregnancy had triggered gestational diabetes, which is said to run in Cathy’s family, and which Aboriginal women have a higher risk of getting. She had to inject herself with insulin four times a day, and after always being so fit and healthy, it was hard for her to adjust to the idea of her body failing her. In fact, in photos taken during the last few months of her pregnancy, Cathy looks noticeably tired and unwell, although she was able to continue going to the gym.

Her daughter Ruby Anne Susie was born on July 8, and we are told that the delivery went smoothly and both mother and baby were healthy. On July 11, she posted photos of Ruby on her website, and said on Twitter that she was recovering well and loving being a new mum. By the end of July, she was back at work promoting children’s sport.

Ruby was the #1 name last year in Victoria, where the Murch family live, and Cathy and James may well have picked it simply because they love it. However, this pretty gemstone has historically been often used as a name in the indigenous community, and there are several famous Aboriginal women called Ruby, including singer-songwriter, Ruby Hunter; political activist Ruby Langford Ginibi; and Ruby Hammond, the first Aboriginal woman political candidate in South Australia.

I think the middle name Anne may be in tribute to Cathy’s older sister, Anne-Marie, who was born with severe cerebral palsy and spent most of her life in a home for the disabled. Cathy always said that she had to run so fast because Anne-Marie couldn’t move her hands and feet at all, and that Anne-Marie has been a constant inspiration in her life – not just the wind beneath her wings, but a tornado. Anne-Marie died when Cathy was sixteen. The second middle name, Susie, is after James’ mother, who sadly passed away before she could ever meet Cathy.

I must confess that I admire Cathy Freeman a great deal, and basically I would have loved any name she chose for her daughter. I think Ruby Anne Susie is a bright, smiley, sunshiney name that’s cute as a button and also honours loved ones – two completely biased thumbs up!

(Photo from Cathy’s Freeman’s website)

Ludwig Mateo and Zion Wellington – Boys Name Combinations from The Gap Casting Call

23 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

name combinations

Arthur Dylan

Arthur Raphael

Cooper Jackson

Enrique John

Indiana Luke

Isaac Emmanuel

Jack Leopold

Jag Michael

Jake George

Jan Waldo

Jaydrian Sierre David

Jeremiah Tyler

Jesse Jayden

Joshua Tyler

Julian Jethro

Kristopher Vincent

Levi Jagger

Levi Marc

Lourds Angelo

Lowel Jacob

Ludwig Mateo

Nicholas Charles

Noah Bonifacio

Nyak Adrian

Oliver Bruce

Roman Preston

Thomas John

Trey Jasper

Tristan James

Yuan Lorenzo

Zion Wellington

Queenie Sue and Shugar Bella – Girls Names Combinations from The Gap Casting Call

23 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

name combinations

Abigail Bridgette

Adriana Belle

Aleah Keana

Aleyah Ashley

Allee Grace

Alyssa Kae

Amara Mia

Amity Kalila

Avalon Grace

Bella Marie

Bianca Kirana

Bridget Robyne

Charlie Rose

Charlotte Olivia

Danica Jaina

Edith Kitty

Emily Grace

Evangelina Skye

Grace Serenity

Hannah Rose

Holly Marie

Honour Violet

Isabella Grace (2)

Isabella Mia

Isabella Rose

Jaena Kelsi

Jamie Aerin

Kaylii Erin

Keomi Bree

Kiera Joy

Lily Rose

Maria Luiza

Mia Grace

Mia Lili

Michaela Angelina

Mikaela Jamie

Queenie Sue

Rajaa’ Nour

Sahara Ithaca

Samantha Olivia

Shaday Maria Juana

Shugar Bella

Sierra Rose

Sisley Yve

Sophia India

Tiami Mac

Yve Pearl

Zara Laine

Zoe Melody

Celebrity Baby News: Kristy Hinze and Jim Clark

21 Wednesday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, honouring

Model Kristy Hinze, and her husband, American Internet billionaire Jim Clark, welcomed their first child together a week ago – a baby girl called Dylan Vivienne, who was born in New York, but is said to have been conceived in Australia. Her middle name honours Kristy’s mother, Vivienne.

Kristy is the grand-daughter of Queensland politician, Russ Hinze, and the sister of Guy Hinze, who owns Bubs Baby Shops. She has been modelling since she was 14, and appeared on season 10 of America’s Next Top Model. She was host and head judge on Project Runway Australia for the first two seasons. She is currently am ambassador for Sportscraft.

Her husband, James H. Clark, founded several Silicon Valley companies, including Silicon Graphics and Netscape. In 1997 he won the Kilby Award for his contribution to computer graphics and networked information exchange. He has two adult children from a previous marriage called Michael and Kathy; Kathy is married to Chad Hurley, co-founder of YouTube.

Kristy and Jim were married March 2009 in the Caribbean. They are expected to head home to their estate in Florida soon.

(Story and photo from The Daily Telegraph, September 21 2001)

Celebrity Baby News: Simon and Catherine Black

20 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

AFL player Simon Black, midfielder for the Brisbane Lions, and his wife Catherine, welcomed their first child on Saturday September 17. Their son was born at 12.23 pm, weighing 7 pounds 14 ounces (3.5 kg). They have named him Lachlan Thomas.

Simon and Catherine were married in November last year.

(Story from Brisbane Lions, photo from Triple M)

Celebrity Baby News: Michael and ToniLee Luck

20 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

NRL player Michael Luck, second rower for the New Zealand Warriors, and his wife ToniLee, welcomed their first child on Tuesday September 13. Their son was born at 10.01 pm at Auckland Hospital weighing 8 pounds 6 ounces (3.8 kg). They have named him Murphy John.

Michael and ToniLee are both from North Queensland, and first met when they were in high school. They were married in 2008.

Michael began his career with the North Queensland Cowboys, but went to the New Zealand Warriors in 2005. He won Player of the Year at the Warriors in 2009.

Michael and ToniLee love living in Auckland, but hope to return to Townsville within the next few years.

(Story and photo from Townsville Bulletin, September 20 2011)

The Tide is High at Mer de Noms

18 Sunday Sep 2011

Posted by A.O. in Blog Reviews

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Mer de Noms, naming advice

I first got to know Lou when I realised she was following my blog. I think that was when I found out that WordPress doesn’t alert you if another WP user hits the “follow” button; you have to haunt your own dashboard with stalkeresque obsession to discover this. Up until that point, I barely knew I had a dashboard, so much of a novice was I.

Naturally I went and checked her blog out, although at first I thought it was called Merde Noms, which struck me as either aggressively punk or unnecessarily modest. Eventually I worked out that it was actually Mer de Noms, with the subtitle Floating Around in the Oncoming Tide of Names. The blog’s name is a reference to the debut album of rock band A Perfect Circle.

Lou is an English girl from Nottingham, a city most of us are familiar with, because of the dastardly Sheriff who gave Robin Hood such a hard time in the stories. According to her avatar photo, she has long, wavy, red hair, and cunningly hides her real identity behind dark glasses.

At first we bonded over neither of us being from America, but luckily there was so much more to her blog than not being American, as membership of the Commonwealth can only take you so far.

I immediately became a fan of her crammed-suitcase style of blog writing, where multiple subjects are covered under the one heading. For example, in this blog entry on names from her French textbook, she also manages to cover the Canadian Grand Prix, the drought in England, other blogs she has read that week, family names, her gay cousin’s wife’s cat called Edith, and sisterly nicknames.

The thing I like most about Lou’s blog is that she is an avid, even obsessive, name collector, and will find names absolutely everywhere. You might not think that a teenager’s life in a small Midlands city would yield a rich crop of interesting names, but you would be wrong.

A visit to the Tate Gallery in Liverpool gives rise to an examination of the name Tate for boys. A disturbingly empty pantry leads to a long shopping list of herb and spice names, both homely and exotic. The late-night BBC Shipping Forecast listened to while kept awake with nausea makes her ponder the names of British seas and waterways.

Sport is a major focus of name inspiration for Lou, who keenly follows English football, rugby, cricket, and motorsports. The names of sporting stadiums provided the subject matter for one blog; Jenson Button, Lou’s favourite F1 star, has worked his way into many entries discussing the popularity of his name; and the name of Silverstone Circuit itself has been analysed. Her French studies are also zealously mined for name material, with not only French textbooks, but French dictionaries, French films, and French place names encountered on school trips proving valuable resources.

Other popular name-gathering areas are family and friends, children’s books, video games, television, English place names, music, and names of British celebrities. Celebrity babies are announced, as are interesting happenings in the blogosphere.

A favourite blog idea is to suggest alternatives to popular names, unconventional long forms for common nicknames, and unexpected nicknames for standard names. There’s also name data – lots of name data. A dedicated number cruncher, there’s nothing Lou enjoys more than looking at the popularity of names, whether aristocratic, natural, common, rare, or double-barrelled.

Lou has been on WordPress for over a year, and started out on Blogspot, so she’s an experienced blogger by now. She releases male and female Names of the Week; Name Spot of the Week, where she looks at a particular name or group of names; Sibset of the Week, where the families of famous people are brought to light; and Weekend Posts, which look at all manner of naming issues.

These can be found by clicking on The Week, and going to the drop-down menus for each category. I think she has made work for herself there, as she could have sorted them into WordPress Categories and then added a Category Menu, but it’s perfectly neat and easy to use.

She also has Master Lists for Male and Female Names on the blog, offers her ten favourite posts under Get Started, and is busy working on providing popularity data for each name as well. There aren’t any tags on her blog entries, but she does have a handy search bar called Browse Some More, so it is relatively easy to find things.

When I first subscribed to Lou’s blog, it had the Gray-Z theme, which looked cool and grungy, but never quite struck me as in tune with the blog’s subject matter. Recently, she swapped over to the mellower Notepad, which seems like a better fit. In line with this revamp, she joined Twitter, and you may follow her there by simply clicking the blue button. You can also easily subscribe to the RSS feed by clicking the orange button right next to it.

These changes all let you know that the blog is growing and evolving. Lou’s blog posts from last year are slightly stiff and self-conscious, as is common for nearly all of us when we first begin to blog. I think that she has found her voice as a writer, and developed a more confident, relaxed and chatty style which is very readable. She’s settled into a tolerant and egalitarian stance toward naming, and demonstrates that mixture of sturdy practicality and fey anarchy which we think of as the hallmark of the English character.

Lou’s ideas on names, and mine, are quite harmonious, and I have at times stolen ideas found inspiration from her blog. She is a conscientious and considerate commenter on other people’s blogs, so if you can snag her as a subscriber you’re on a good wicket. Unfortunately for me, her opinions on names seem to correspond so well with my own that I’m often left racking my brains to come up with something to add to other people’s blogs, as “Yeah what she said” seems an inadequate response.

What you get at Mer de Noms is a name blog from a modern English perspective, plenty of zippy Gen-Z ideas, savvy insights into the blogosphere, and a very broad scoop from the sea of names. The tide is rising, and this is a young blogger who’s going places. The next generation of naming is here, and the future is in safe hands.

Q & A With Lou

Name: I’m Lucy Emma, if we’re going to be strictly honest about it, even though I regularly lie and say that I’m Lucy Emmeline. Generally speaking, I mostly go by the short form Lou, namely because people were starting to shorten my name to Luce, which they said the same as the word loose, not exactly the best thing to have shouted at you in public. I also consider Lucy to be a rather girly name, not perhaps fitting for a girl who can rattle off all the names of current drivers in F1. Since shortening down to Lou, I’ve had people calling me Lo instead, proof you never can win with some people.

Name you would like to have: Sometimes I wish my parents had gone with their initial front-runner, Demelza, but then I wouldn’t have been Lou, a name I’ve grown fond of. Out of all the names you could get Lou from that aren’t Lucy, I think I lean heavily towards Luca or Lucretia. I met a female Harry the other day, a name I reckon I could’ve rocked just as well, albeit perhaps as a short form of Harriet.

What began your interest in names?: I’m the eldest of four, so I think it started when I was six, and about to welcome my second sibling, who was due to arrive in a few weeks. My parents let me join in on the naming discussion, not thinking I would amount to much; I promptly started campaigning for the name Jack because I thought it’d be nice for him to share his name with the game (not that I told my parents that reasoning). Unbelievably, my parents actually used the name, and so things looked good when another sister turned up when I was nine. They failed to use my choice that time, the botanical Clover. 

How did you start blogging?: One of the rules of life I live by is Thumper’s [from Bambi] – if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all; this makes life on name boards difficult when you’re faced with the suggestion of Elixyvett. I eventually had to pull myself out because I hated seeing people’s front-runners torn apart by the unforgiving. Afterwards, I just limited myself to blogs, but couldn’t really identify with the few that were going at that time. Mostly because, since most were American ones, they were out of step with the current styles here in England, so I just started my own.

Your favourite blog entry on Mer de Noms: I’m still quite satisfied with my post on Gyles Brandreth’s kids. I remember I only knew the first names initially when I wrote up the post, but I then combed all sources available to me looking for the middle names, to see if they’d gone traditional, or equally eye-popping, with them.

I also really enjoyed writing my post on names in British comedy, since that’s pretty much all I watch on the TV, aside from the news and sports.

Your pet naming peeve: I always feel bad for the guys, since female names are usually covered in much more breadth than male names are; I know I’m as guilty as this as everyone else. Of course, my other pet peeve is seeing great names cast aside because someone on the Internet hated it and told you your child would be ridiculed for having such an unusual name – I grew up with a female Brogan who’s never had issues with having a male name.

Your favourite names: Right now, I find myself drawn to short and fun names, things like Beck, Mika, Wren and Kit, but I’m an indecisive person – shelves of biscuits [cookies] in the shop can and have caused much distress for me – so I fully expect to embrace names like Deborah or Meredith in the near future. I also know that I tend to lean towards male names that aren’t exactly butch; I consider all of the above names male. (editorial note: surely not Deborah?!)

Names you dislike: A style of naming I’m not 100% behind is naming your child after a famed person with a notable name, who is still alive. It is kind of rich coming from me, since I love Jenson, but I’m a cynical person and I know there’s still every chance that Button could still do something really dodgy, not dissimilar from the Tiger Woods saga of last year; an example of a name pretty much ruined overnight by its most famous bearer.

Names you love, but can’t use: I love the name Clover, but alas, sister #2 kind of has dibs on that name (I also decided about a year ago that I love Jack, go figure!). When I found out that the name Wren is used pretty much equally for males and females here in England & Wales, the name really clicked for me as a name for a lad instead of a lass, although I do believe the name is set to begin to rise as a female name. I also quite like the name Nancy, but my Great Auntie is one, and my family truly hates the idea of family names, something I’m more than happy to honour.

Your future children’s names: I have names in the back of my head, which I’d love to use – Darcey, Stanley, Jenson, Harry, Flora – but right now I’ve no idea whether I’ll still like them when/if I have children. The only name I’ve consistently loved for years is Cassius, and perhaps Zuleika.

The one piece of advice you would give to someone choosing a name for their baby: No name another person loves can ever be better than the one you love. Going around the naming forums, you pick up on the same scenario quite a few times: you and your partner love this one name so completely, but someone else – usually a family member – tries to write if off. One of my sisters would’ve been Isobel if my Nana hadn’t intervened.

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