Celebrity Baby News: Toni Pearen and Will Osmond

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Former TV presenter Toni Pearen, and her husband Will Osmond, recently welcomed a daughter named Ever – the choice of name was apparently inspired by a friend. Ever Osmond joins big brother Lucky, aged 2.

Toni started out in television on soap E-Street, and then pursued a career in music, where she had two Top 10 hits. After a brief stint on soapie Home and Away, she moved to Los Angeles in 1995, where she worked as an actor, singer and songwriter, and guest-starred on several television shows. She returned to Australia in 2002, and became the host of Australia’s Funniest Home Videos. Since being replaced by Shelley Craft in 2008, she has had some small acting roles, and appeared on Dancing with the Stars.

Will is a former restaurateur who ran a fashionable cafe-bar called Will and Toby’s with his younger brother for several years. Since the business folded, he has become a landscape gardener. Will and Toni were married in 2007, on Will’s parents’ country property.

Predictably, the press have been quick to label Ever a “weird baby name”, although the Daily Telegraph did get an un-named expert to explain that it was on trend, and pointed out that Milla Jovovich has a daughter named Ever, and Alanis Morissette has a son of the same name.

The Baby Name Stealing Olympics

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As the Olympics are on, here is a light-hearted look at the competitive world of “name stealing”. Being a competition, I have sorted them into teams, and awarded each entrant a prize, which hopefully will fix their naming dilemmas.

These are not real situations or real people – and they are definitely not real names of real babies. I lurked in parenting forums and also quizzed people about baby name stealing they had witnessed or experienced (or even committed), and as themes came up repeatedly, made them into stock characters and plots. If you think you recognise someone you know (or yourself), it’s because these disagreements seem to repeat over and over again.

During my months of research, I noticed a few things about “name stealing”:

  • Younger parents seemed to be more concerned about name stealing than older ones (but possibly younger people are more likely to share their stories on the Internet).
  • People who appeared less educated seemed more concerned about name theft (but maybe educated people were less likely to speak openly about their personal affairs)
  • Parents-to-be who had chosen names that are fairly popular or well-known seemed to be most susceptible to fears about name theft, and the most upset about people stealing “their” name.
  • It was an almost entirely female preoccupation, with the few men involved usually being dragged into it by their partners, or stuck between two women. I did not find one example of two fathers fighting over names by their own initiative.
  • I didn’t notice any significant difference between the numbers of boys names and girls names that were believed to have been “stolen”, but my impression was that women were more likely to become attached to names they had chosen for a son, and more likely to become emotionally volatile if they felt the name was under threat. Perhaps coincidentally, the few times I saw men became involved in a baby name feud, it was over a daughter’s name.
  • The longer someone had liked a name, the more likely they were to feel ownership over it, and the more possessive they were in regards to it.
  • Family disagreements over baby names were more acrimonious than ones between friends – probably because it’s harder to escape from a family member than a friend. However, plenty of people became upset over a perceived name theft even from a distant acquaintance.
  • Disagreements in small communities were more heated than ones between people in big cities – again, probably because it’s harder to escape someone in a small town.
  • Feuds over baby names could be long-standing or even permanent, and in extreme cases, passed on to the next generation.
  • People who don’t believe that “name stealing” exists have almost zero sympathy for its “victims”. Astute Readers will be able to tell I belong to this sceptical group.

TEAM FACEBOOK FEUD

Claire and her partner Scott are expecting a baby boy, and after a lot of discussion, they eventually agree upon the name Zachariah. Claire wastes no time in announcing their decision on Facebook. To her surprise, she receives a hurt and angry message from one of her FB friends, Meagan. Meagan says that they all chose their favourite baby names back in high school, when they were 14, and Zachariah was her name! She demands that Claire change her choice of baby name, or she will de-friend her at once. Claire has no memory of any such discussion in high school, while Meagan doesn’t believe that Claire can have forgotten, and thinks she is a liar as well as a name-thief. Soon she decides that Claire has been plotting to steal the name Zachariah for the past eight years.

Awarded to Claire: First rights to the name Zachariah, and the suggestion to be more circumspect in her use of social media.

Awarded to Meagan: This Facebook page. Maybe it will help somehow.

TEAM “THE DOG STOLE MY BABY NAME”

Jo has let all her friends know that her expected baby boy will be named Oscar. To her indignation, next time she visits her pal Vanessa, she finds that she has named her new bulldog puppy Oscar. Vanessa says that it can’t be helped – her dog just looks like an Oscar. An enraged Jo is now looking for another baby name.

Awarded to Jo: A calculator, so she can subtract the length of a bulldog’s life from the length of a man’s, thus demonstrating her son would have 72 years where he wouldn’t be sharing his name with the dog.

Awarded to Vanessa: A box of puppy treats for Oscar.

TEAM NAME NAZI

Katrina spends a lot of time on baby name forums, and considers herself quite the expert. She often shares her 101 “name rules” with friends, and tries to impress upon them how much more knowledgeable she is about names, and how superior her tastes are. Katrina has over 400 baby name combinations collected in a Word file, which she likes to show friends, online and in real life. Of course, she cannot possibly use all of them, and she doesn’t have a partner or any plans to get pregnant as yet, but she is well and truly prepared for when it occurs. When her friend Gemma announces the name of her new baby girl, Katrina is shocked and angry to find that she has used Name Combination #219 without asking permission – Cleo Araminta Lilac. Apparently Gemma became so convinced that Katrina’s tastes were better than her own that using a name she had come up with seemed the only route possible.

Awarded to Katrina: The joy of seeing one of her name creations on a real live baby, and the suggestion that she get a blog so she can boss strangers around instead of her friends.

Awarded to Gemma: My congratulations on her new baby, and the suggestion that she try to develop her own own tastes, rather than allowing herself to be brainwashed.

TEAM FAMILY INTERFERENCE

David and his wife Karin are expecting a baby girl. At a family dinner party, David finds himself seated next to Karin’s formidable sister-in-law Felicia, who asks what names they have picked out. David explains they aren’t sharing them before the birth, to which SIL responds, “Well don’t even think about Scarlett – I’m using it if we ever have another girl, and you can’t have two Scarletts in one family”. David is disconcerted, because Scarlett is their first choice for their daughter. He now feels that if they go ahead and use it, they will be accused of name stealing the moment they announce the new baby’s name.

Awarded to David: First rights to the name Scarlett, and the spine to stand up to his wife’s relations.

Awarded to Felicia: The chance to discover whether the world really does explode if there are two girls named Scarlett in the same family.

TEAM RENESMEE

Chantelle is very proud of her new baby boy’s name, because she created it herself – it’s Kyden, which is a combination of her parent’s names, Kylie and Dennis. She is furious when she discovers that Becca from her gym also has a little boy about the same age named Kyden. Becca likewise created her baby name by combining two names – that of her brothers, Kye and Jayden. Chantelle and Becca are each absolutely certain that Kyden is a unique name, and therefore the other woman must have stolen it from them. They are both upset that their son’s name’s specialness has been tarnished.

Awarded to Chantelle and Becca: A copy of Breaking Dawn. That will explain everything. Also, different gym schedules.

TEAM CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS

Alicia is terrified that her older sister Nicole will use all her favourite baby names before she gets a chance to. She throws a massive tantrum, and demands that Nicole sign a contract promising that she will never use Alicia’s favourite names. There are about twenty names on the list, and for some reason, Nicole agrees to this and willingly signs the contract. In due course, Alicia has three children – none of whom are given names from the dreaded “name contract”. Nicole is now rather annoyed, as there were two or three names on the list that she would have liked to use for herself.

Awarded to Alicia and Nicole: I think a time-travelling lawyer is the only thing that can fix this situation.

TEAM EMOTIONAL BLACKMAIL

Alex and Sam are expecting a baby girl, and have already chosen the name Isabel for her. They have warned their family and friends that they have “reserved” the name in advance, and like a bunch of chumps, said family and friends agree. All goes merrily until a cousin announces that their new baby will be called Elizabeth. Alex and Sam immediately ask them to change it, as it is too close to Isabel. They intend to use the nickname Izzy, and this will clash with a potential Lizzie. Cousin protests they weren’t going to use Lizzie as a nickname, but Alex and Sam are very persuasive. Both gentle, charming people, they have had a difficult time with fertility which evokes much sympathy, and have a way of becoming tearful and pleading that others find difficult to resist. As time goes on, it becomes apparent that Isobel, Isabelle, Izabel, Ysabel, Isabella, Sabella, Isadora, Isabeau, Isolde, Bella, Belle, Ilse, Libby, Sybella, and in fact any name even remotely similar to Isabel is also forbidden.

Awarded to Alex and Sam: Aww, I can’t stay mad at you, with your big puppy dog eyes. Here, have some cake.

Awarded to Friends and Family: A really HUGE baby name book so they can all pick names that sound totally different to Isabel. Sympathies to anyone who marries (or partners) into this circle and wishes to name their daughter after great-grandmother Sybil.

TEAM “GREAT MINDS THINK ALIKE”

For several years, Bree-Anne has had the perfect name combination selected for her son – Ryder Lucas. She decides never to share it with anyone so that it cannot be “stolen”, and, now that she’s six months pregnant, remains tight-lipped about the name she has picked out. To her absolute horror, her neighbours, Meikeyla and Dylan, welcome a baby boy named (you guessed it) Ryder. Middle name: Lucas. A distraught Bree-Anne is absolutely convinced that Meikeyla and Dylan, have stolen her baby name, even though she cannot explain how. “They just did!” she insists. To her, it is inconceivable that anyone else could have thought up the name Ryder Lucas, and she now considers her neighbours spies, thieves, and possibly mind-readers.

Awarded to Bree-Anne: A tin foil hat, to prevent anyone else picking up on her brain waves.

Awarded to Meikeyla and Dylan: A real estate guide. They may want to move house.

(In line with the theme of this article, the accompanying image was stolen from Abby Sandel’s Pinterest account – I think it’s originally from PostSecret).

Saturday Celebrity Sibsets: Children of Olympic Gold Medalists

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As the London Olympics are still on, the Celebrity Sibsets for this week had to be children of Olympians. These are sibsets of those Australian Olympians who have won a gold medal at past Olympic Games, and still have young children.

Alyson Annan – hockey (marital partner: Carole Thate)

Sam Henk Brian (2007) and Cooper (2008)

Lauren Burns – taekwondo (husband: Nathan Muller)

Mac Banjo (2009) and Piper (2010)

Jamie Dwyer – hockey (wife: Leoni Dwyer)

Julian (2008) and Taj (2010)

Grant Hackett – swimming (estranged wife: Candice Alley)

Jagger Emilio and Charlize Alley (twins 2009)

Chantelle Newbery – diving (husband Robert Newbery)

Jet (2002) and Ryder (2006)

Susie O’Neill – swimming (husband Cliff Fairley)

Alix (2004) and William (2006)

Kieran Perkins – swimming (estranged wife: Symantha Perkins)

Georgia (1997), Harry (1998) and Charlie (female – 2005)

Adam Pine – swimming (wife: Sasha Pine)

Maxmilian (2002), Buster (2004) and Xander Xavier Adam (2010)

Petria Thomas – swimming (husband: Julian Jones)

Aiden (2006) and Zara (2009)

Todd Woodbridge – tennis (wife: Natasha Woodbridge)

Zara Rose (2000) and Beau Andrew (2002)

(Photo shows Jamie Dwyer with his family; Jamie is competing at the London Olympics, where he has set an Australian Olympic goals record)

Celebrity Baby News: Todd Goldstein and Kirsty Hope

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AFL footballer Todd Goldstein, and his partner Kirsty Hope, welcomed a daughter named Mackenzie last week. Mackenzie Goldstein joins big sister Olivia, aged 18 months.

Todd plays for the North Melbourne Kangaroos, and has been with them since 2008. Being very tall, Todd began as a basketball player, but switched to football in 2006.

Callisto and Brook: Birth Announcements from Sydney (July)

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Girls

Aina Clara

Amelie Brigitte Autumn (Hercule)

Ayla Doris (Jacob, Talia)

Callisto Grace “Calli”

Claudia Belle (Charlie)

Harlow Mabel (Cooper, Sonny)

Iris Arianwen (Alec, Amelie, Rafe)

Mary Frances

Remy Lou (Charlie, Oscar, Evie)

Sophie Rose Ivy (Connor, Layla)

 

Boys

Archie Caelan (Bronte, Caelan)

Billy Bruce (Brayden, Lewis)

Brook Brian (Sasha, Jacob)

Cash David Arthur (Summer)

Hector Dashiell Camac (Edmund)

Hugh Daniel Robert

Jeremy Mains

Montgomery Henry (Archibald)

Vijay Joseph (Tom, Dellan, Darren)

Zachary William Robert (Sienna)

Sarah also has Birth Announcements from Australia: check them out on her blogs, For Real Baby Names and Name Soiree.

(Picture shows jousting at the Winterfest Medieval Fair, which was held at  Parramatta Park in western Sydney June-July 2012)

Madalena Cara and Lorenzo Tulio: Birth Announcements from Canberra (July)

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Girls

Eden Delilah

Eleanor Hilary (Tallulah)

Evelyn Claire (Austin)

Halina Jane

Madalena Cara (Sebastiano)

Matilda James

Natasha Heather Celine (Douglas, Imogene, Isobelle)

Suella Rose (Mary-Grace)

Thalia Isabella

Vera Lillian Lina

 

Boys

Aiden John Bennett

Ethan William Nicholas

Felix Arranz

Hayden Grae (Kale)

Lachlan Sydney

Lorenzo Tulio (Raphael, Samson)

Tate Noel (Harrison)

Tobey Campbell

Tristan Andrew

William Hamish Nicol

Wondering where the Birth Announcements from Perth are? They are at Ebony’s blog, babynameobsessed. Go there to find out what people are naming their babies in her home state of Western Australia!

(Picture shows morning mist over the city of Canberra, July 2012; photo from the Canberra Times)

 

Celebrity Baby News: Anthony and Anita Carbines

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State MP Anthony Carbines, and his wife Anita, welcomed a daughter named Ava Lucy on May 24. Ava Carbines was born at St Vincent’s Private Hospital in Melbourne.

Anthony represents the seat of Ivanhoe in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs for the Australian Labor Party, and has done so since 2010. Before his election, he was a journalist with the Geelong Advertiser, and then chief-of-staff to Labor MP and Minister for Education Bronwyn Pike. His stepmother is Elaine Carbines, who represented Geelong for the Australian Labor Party from 1999-2006.

Famous Name: Lauren

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Last Friday night in London was the opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympics, and wasn’t it a corker? I got up at 5.30 am on Saturday to watch it, and was glued to the screen in wonder, and sometimes fits of laughter at its cheekiness. Our own Lou from Mer de Noms was front and centre for this historic event, as she is volunteering at the Games over the summer. She chummed up with her seatmate, a friendly Londoner named Osama, who you can hear on her video of the event.

The Australian flag bearer during the Parade of Nations was basketball star Lauren Jackson. She is the first female flag bearer from Australia for quite some time, as the last four standard-bearers have been male. Indeed, beach volleyball player and five-time Olympian Natalie Cook threatened to boycott the ceremony if a woman wasn’t chosen. I’m not sure whether her threats influenced the decision-making or not, but during the ruckus which followed, it turned out that the men’s basketball players fly business class, while the women’s national team, which have a higher ranking worldwide, has to fly economy, due to lower funding.

Maybe there was an uncomfortable feeling amongst sports administrators that female athletes were getting rather ripped off. This neglect is an utter disgrace, because Australia has been blessed with scores of talented sportswomen, and without them, our medal tally at any Olympics would look pretty lame. I think choosing a female flag-bearer was the absolute least that they could do.

Lauren Jackson was an admirable choice. The daughter of two national basketball players, and the granddaughter of another, she has been playing since the age of four and competing since six. She joined the under-20 national team when only 14, and the women’s national team at 16. She plays for the Seattle Storm in the WMBA, and has also played basketball in Russia, Spain and Korea. Widely acknowledged as Australia’s best basketball player, London is her fourth Olympics, and she has three Olympic silver medals so far. Can she make it gold in 2012 with the help of her team? Only time will tell.

The name Lauren began life as a male name, a short form of Laurence. However, that all changed with Hollywood star Lauren Bacall. Born Betty Joan Perske, she was working as a fashion model under the name Betty Bacall when Nancy Hawks, the wife of director Howard Hawks, spotted her on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar. Once she passed her first audition, the elegant socialite Nancy took her under her wing and taught her how to behave, speak and dress for success. Nancy also changed her name from girl-next-door Betty to the more stylish Lauren.

Lauren Bacall’s first movie, the wartime romance To Have and Have Not, came out in 1944. At this time, Lauren was #772 for boys on the US Top 1000. The very next year, Lauren had entered the US charts as a girl’s name at #355. Lauren wasn’t a popular boy’s name (it had never been in the Top 500) and Betty Perske’s screen name finished it off. It hasn’t charted for boys in the US since 1989.

In Australia, we were obviously just as taken with Lauren Bacall, and the name Lauren was #357 for the 1940s in New South Wales. It rose through the 1950s and ’60s, and took off during the 1970s, to become the #9 name of the 1980s in New South Wales, and the #5 name of the 1980s in Victoria. Perhaps as Ms Bacall’s career gracefully waned, the name became less closely associated with its famous namesake, helping its popularity grow – or maybe it was a matter of a generation who had grown up watching Bacall becoming parents.

Because of its high popularity, there are many successful Australian women named Lauren, and many of them seem to be involved in sport, such as sprinter Lauren Hewitt, netball player Lauren Nourse, and Olympic gymnast Lauren Mitchell, who was covered at Ebony’s blog, babynameobsessed. In the field of entertainment, we have Lauren Newton, daughter of Bert Newton, singer Lauren Buckley who competed on Australian Idol, and Lauren Brain, who is a member of Dave Hughes‘ radio show.

Lauren maintained its Top Ten status for the 1990s, peaking as the #7 name in New South Wales, but dipping to #8 in Victoria. It has been declining since then, and last year it disappeared from the Top 100 altogether as it dropped to #109. This puts us out of step with the rest of the English-speaking world, because Lauren is still Top 100 in the United States, Canada, New Zealand, England/Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland.

It’s a shame that we have tired of Lauren so easily compared to other countries. Part of the reason may be because its fortunes were closely tied with its twin name, Laura. Both names rose at the same time at similar rates, and fell at similar rates too. Laura is currently #118 – just nine places lower than Lauren.

It seem unlikely that Laura and Lauren can stage a comeback – but if Lauren lifts even a little in the rankings next year, I will attribute it to the Olympian Lauren Jackson.

What Do You Think of These Names for Twin Girls?

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Brandi is expecting twin girls in September, and thinks she has the final names in place, but would like to get more opinions before they are born.

The names are:

Maude Magnolia Faye

and

Poppy Viola Ruth

Viola, Faye and Ruth are all family names that must be used, while Maude, Poppy and Magnolia are names that Brandi loves.

  1. Brandi is from the Central South of the United States on the Great Plains, and wonders if the names Maude and Poppy sound too much like Ma and Pa in the accent of her region? They say the names MAWD and PAW-pee, and Ma and Pa like MAW and PAW (I think).
  2. Brandi’s other children are named Bryce, Max, Jack and Pearl. Does Poppy clash because it’s two-syllables, or is it too matchy with Pearl?
  3. Is there a chance that the twins’ names could get confused into Moppy and Paude? Or will that happen with any set that is commonly referred to together?

Brandi wants to know if anyone can see “issues” with the names that she has missed; she would love feedback and is open to suggestions. She also loves the name Clementine, and almost chose that as her husband didn’t like Maude, but when he suddenly changed his mind they went with Maude after all.

“““““““““““““““““““““““

Well, you’re asking for opinions, and mine is that Maude and Poppy are absolutely delightful names for twins. I think they’re pretty and retro-chic, and they sound great together – they’ve got a British Revival kind of feel to them. I adore the name Clementine, and Clementine and Poppy would also sound charming, should you happen to change your minds again.

I don’t think I can really comment on the accent issue; it’s hard for foreigners to understand all the nuances of another country’s way of speaking. (I did read several articles on your state’s accent, and opinions ranged from “they’re not Southern” to “they sound like Australians” to “they don’t have an accent”, so I’m confused). All I can think is, if they do happen to sound similar to the words Ma and Pa, there’s a lot of names that sound similar to certain words, and nobody really thinks about it.

I don’t think Poppy clashes or is too matchy with the rest of the sibset. I think the names go together nicely, as they’re all short, simple names. I don’t think Clementine would clash either, but it would probably stand out very slightly, being a longer name. I don’t think it’s a problem though.

There probably is a chance that the names could get confused into Moppy and Paude occasionally, but yes, I do think that’s something that could happen with almost set of names. I often say people’s names the wrong way around when I’m tired or stressed, and I would definitely have called your sons Max and Jack “Mack and Jax” by now if they were mine! I just can’t see this as a big deal, and if you can cope with Max and Jack, you can definitely cope with Maude and Poppy.

I can’t really see any “issues” that the names have, at least no more than the usual amount for names. It’s possible you’re over-thinking things a bit, or have said them over and over so many times that they are starting to sound a bit peculiar.

So basically it’s a thumbs up from me. What do you think, dear Readers? Loving Maude and Poppy, or are you foreseeing problems that I’ve totally missed? Feel free to share!

NOTE: The twins’ names are Marigold Mora Faye and Poppy Viola Ruth!

Celebrity Baby News: Jason and Kimberly Belmonte

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Ten-pin bowler Jason Belmonte, and his wife Kimberly, welcomed a son named Hugo in April this year. Hugo Belmonte joins big sister Aria, aged 2.

Jason is from Orange in New South Wales, and began bowling at the age of 18 months. He has been competing since the age of 3, and won his first event at the age of 4. At 17 he became the first Junior Australian to bowl a 300 game overseas, and won several gold medals as a Junior Champion. Since then, he has gone on to win dozens of sporting awards and titles. Last year he was voted “Best Bowler” by fans at the ESPY Awards. He competes professionally in the PBA League in the United States, has four PBA titles, and lives in the US. He is known for using the two-handed “shovel” style to deliver his shot.