Millennial Parents are Officially Unhinged
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- čas přidán 9. 04. 2024
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#reddit #theclick #subreddit - Zábava
Fun fact: in Germany, there ARE laws against it. You're not allowed to name the kid stuff like orahl or Nutella or smth because it goes against the best interest of the child🎉
Was about to say that!
Yes also in Denmark and the Netherlands
There IS still some weird Shit that goes through, but at least there IS the possability to avoids the worst
In most of Europe there are laws like that. Rules like, a name needs to be actually usable as a name, and not obscene. Thank god this is not 'Murica.
GOOD
"Dad am I adopted?"
- "Why are you asking, Grindrleigh?"
LMFAO
jfc im howling LOL
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Lmao
At this point you can call him grindelwald
horse names are the wildest thing ever, like genuinely
I once worked in a stable where there was a horse called 'Kissing me softly'...
no, I'm not joking
The reason for that is, depending on the breed, the animal has to be named starting with the same initial as the sire. You can give the repeat name to offspring and number it, e.g. Paradox II, but otherwise the name can't be the same as that of another of the same breed already registered. So you start running out of normal names pretty quickly Xd
My favourite weird horse name is "Some Strange Twist of Fate".
My father is a horseback ride instructor, so I grew up around horses. I've seen a lot of weird names, but none came close to that.
Best horse name ever: Fifty Shades of Hay. I don't bet, but it was hard not to bet on a horse with that name.
@claudialupper oh my god. Yes
Also dog names. I know of someone who named their dogs Sniper and Remington. Guess what their favorite amendment is?
In Australia, it is illegal to name your child after a ‘title’ such as Princess, Captain, Sergeant, Baron etc. They will be rejected when you attempt to register the birth.
I haven’t heard that
What about the woman who was named Australia....... Then married a guy with the last name day?
There's this mini influencer in my country who works registering baby names. He's a saviour, rejecting ugly names because the law allows him to. The law says the public official can reject names that might be offensive/create conflict in future. People complain about parents rights, but children should have rights too. Especially in countries where changing names is almost impossible.
Hell yeah children rights!
You really should consider how the name will affect them later. Don't give them names to make the bullies really hunt them.
Not just that kid's should have rights too, but *kid's rights > parents' rights!*
It was the parents decision to bring the child to life and for that they owe them not to ruin it before it even began!
Oh yes I live in one such country and really wish I could change it but alas no can do
Tbh thats the type of influencers we need.
Because no Jannet, we will not allow you to name your child Captain Marvel Raw XD Lohaiza just because you want to feel unique!!
"You're naming an adult" is a big thing. My mom wanted to give my younger sister a cute name but went with a legal full legal name that sounded formal but could be shortened to the cute one. My moms exact thought was 'so she has something nice to put on a plaque' and its sad so many parents don't get that
Yeah, a Friend brought forth the recommendation for Lennart which is . . . OK, a normal Name but Not overly Common where I live . . . .but Last Minute the mother changed her opinion to Lenny . . . . Like No one IS ever going to Take him seriously AS an adult cause thats so so obviously a deminutiv . . .why Not Stick with Lennart and Just call him Lenny so He has the Option to Go into a Job Interview without appearing Like He never grew Up and wants to BE Friends with His new Boss?!
When naming my children I consider how their name would sound being yelled across the neighborhood.
Exactly! I really like “Rosie” for a baby girl but want to do “Rosalie” so she can go by that or even Rose
My parents did this too. My mother wanted to give me a cutesy nickname for my name, but my dad told her that was a name for a baby. So they went with a more formal name that can shorten to that nickname.
….Then I married my husband and he has an older sister with that exact same cutesy nickname as her legal name.
So, my husband rarely calls me by my actual name because he says it’s too weird calling me by his sister’s name, lol.
@@arianewinter4266I think Lenny is a okay name?? But I'm not a native speaker so idk
I am Irish and lived in Ireland most of my life so I'm very familiar with the name Ruairi. However, DO NOT GIVE YOUR KIDS AN IRISH NAME IF YOU DON'T LIVE IN IRELAND.
My name is Aisling (Ash-ling) which is a traditional Irish name and very common among Irish people my age. I've never had an issue with it in Ireland but it causes a lot of hassle when I travel. Either I get called Ays-ling, Ashley or my name gets completely butchered. I lived in Belgium for awhile and I just told everyone my name was Ash, that it wasn't short for anything. It was so much easier than explaining my name to everyone I met.
Now that I live in Northern Ireland, where the name isn't all that uncommon, I still occasionally meet people that are just unfamiliar with my name.
When I was in Florida a few years back, I met an American girl named Aisling. She was so excited that 1) I pronounced her name correctly the first try and 2) she had never met another Aisling her whole life.
Her name causes issues for her all the time, just because nobody she meets for the first time is familiar with it. So sure, if you live in Connemara, naming your kid Ruairi is fine, but if you live in Colorado, please don't do that to your child 🤦
Cosigned, a Rhonwyn who's never been to Wales. I do like my name, but, well, it could have been easier.
@@rhonwynv yeah it's a gorgeous name but that's got to be rough outside of the UK and Ireland
Or at least if you want to give your kid an Irish name outside of Ireland, give them a spelling that's a little more manageable for English speakers. Like, call the kid Rory, maybe. Or go with Orla instead of Orlaith.
When I came out as trans, I had wanted to try the name "Aoife" (I liked it a lot and my nan in Ireland suggested it)
And if I had a nickel for everyone who pronounced it "Ow-wife", I'd have enough to buy a pillow to specifically scream into.
I had since then swapped to "Maeve", or "May" for some people.
P.S. I know a Siobhan irl, and when I heard Click mispronounce it as "See-oh-bon" one video, she and I died inside.
For the name generator, Payven Layne sounds like a construction company.
Just a very gentle reminder: -eaux in french in pronounced oh or ow. So Sneaux is Snow, Reignbeaux is Rainbow… they are still very, very unfortunate theaux
Leaux quality comment (not)
Neaux way
you really did just deaux this huh... congrats
"Eaux" is technicaly the plural of "eau" which mean water
@@griff2009I always find that funny
For Ora-Leigh to be the butt of every joke her name would have to be Ana-Leigh
my boomer sister was named Leora
Aura Lynn honestly sounds like a much better name than the other options. If they're head set on it.
Guys, Aurelia is *right there*
I guess that must really suck for her? 🤔🤨😉😂
The BUTT of the joke....
In Finland we actually do have a board where you need to get permission for an unusual name and they either accept or deny it. Every year, some magazine publishes a list of last year's accepted and denied names, and they're a hoot :'D Apparently they're more lenient if it's an adult changing their own name, but relatively strict with kids' names :D
Also! Here, when a baby isn't named yet, a common nickname to call them is "caterpillar" (toukka) :D
My twin and I aren't even truly identical sisters, but people STILL got our faces or our similar names mixed up all the time until even graduation day last year. It was to the point people would walk up to me and start talking to me thinking I was her and I had never even seen them before in my life. It was even worse in elementary school when our mom made us dress in identical outfits to school, and constantly the adults would be like "now which one are you again" or "oh it's one of the twins" as if we were one entity or something instead of individual people. As a victim of being twins with similar names PLEASE DON'T GO THAT LAST STEP AND GIVE THEM THE EXACT SAME NAME. It still follows us even as newly adult women with completely different styles of clothing, I can't imagine how much worse it'll be for those twin boys. People already constantly compared us everywhere we went, especially in school, but it must be even worse when you're named like a machine model 1.0 and 2.0.
I'm going to name my child "Gorgorax, Destroyer of Worlds."
Or Jason, if it's a boy.
"Gorgorax want's their mummy"
Ok, hope it's a boy, I think Jason is just a way better name than anything destruction-related and sounds nice
@@arcticpossi_schw1siantuntija42 it's a joke...
The Doctor “I speak baby!” *listens to infant babbling* “He say his name isn’t Alphie, it’s Stormageddon Dark Lord of All.” 😂
I was just having a conversation with a coworker yesterday about Greek mythology and all the heroes having names like Perseus, Achilles, Ajax, Hercules, Odyssey, Theseus…and then there is Jason. Only slightly relevant, but this reminded me of it.
Don’t give your kid a weird name. If they’re trans enough they’ll do it themselves.
Sincerely, someone who named themselves Bug
Honestly that's a pretty cool name
Yeah my mum can post on Facebook about her new son onion
enbies named Bug should have a show down like the guys named Josh did cause istg i have 3 friends named the same and if i get a 4th one im gonna start assigning them numbers
Bug, you have such a real name
Literally. Like, I didn't do much, I just used a different, still well-used spelling of the name (I've named myself Rhys instead of Reece), but one of my nicknames is Basil. At least it's better than stuff on r/tragedeigh
My cats name in the shelter was Pootie. I refused. She is now Chara, after a binary star system. Way more fucking dignified.
My mother (b. 1924) had some great advice when it came to naming children...1. Remember what life is like bein' a kid, 2. Take a min. to consider Monograms (spelling out something embarrassing) and indeed 3. consider it's use in professional context. Something unique is fine, but life is challenge enough without being saddled by your own name.
Rip Christopher
"My condolences to the family"
"Erh, Rip is the baby's name!"
"My condolences to the baby"
I constantly ask myself this whenever I see Rip Torn in a film... Is that an incredibly metal SAG name or ignorant parents?
idk Rip does sound like a cool name, if it doesn't so happen to be right before what would normally be someone's first name, like, Rip Lee sounds cool, definitely wouldn't name my child after a Metroid character, but it sounds cool
Apparently Rip can be short for the German name "Rippert", and I think used to be a more popular given name in the States (based on "Rip" van Winkle). It might not be that bad as a name, just the formatting of that embroidery looked more like a memorial. Though, "Ripley" would probably trip people up less.
@@Techy404 You're absolutely right, out of all the names in the video this is mostly harmless if a bit unfortunate. But still funny :P
@@lfr8666 You're absolutely right, out of all the names in the video this is mostly harmless if a bit unfortunate. But still funny :P
The name "Siobhan" is an Irish name pronounced "Sha-vawn." The spelling comes from when the indigenous language was converted to the english alphabet. It is spelled correctly and not a Tragedeigh.
Yeah, but Like really confusing and hard on everyone Not socialised Irish . . .the spelling Problem stays the Same . . .
I was about to say. That name seemed to be the most normal one on that list.
It's not spelled correctly, actually, the person spelled it Siobahn and they also tried to use it as a boys' name. (ETA: I was talking about the first instance of Siobhán being mentioned, not the second one where the person completely butchered the spelling)
@@arianewinter4266but if you're Irish I think its fine to keep your cultural name lol.
@@unapologeticallylizzy Eh... Mismatching the gender of a name isn't bad, really. There are hundreds of names that have been flipped around, it just happens, that's not an issue in the long run. Outside of Ireland, about 6 people will have a pre-loaded idea that this name is for girls, and that goes for any uncommon names anywhere. They're just sounds at the end of it, so it's whatever. Misspelling it, though, that's an issue. That's no longer the name, that's just messing people up for no reason. There's no history on misspelling it and pronouncing it a certain way, now you're just ignoring everything about the name anyway, so why would you bother with that at all?
Idea: if you have multiple fur babies, and you can’t think of matching names, just name them after Saturn’s moons!
*(This rule only applies to cats, not human children)*
You can’t stop me from naming my human child Albiorix.
@@alarictheredboi276yearsago4 Jokes on you, I could become a well-respected politician and make a law against it just to spite you
I just remember seeing one meme of a guy calling his daughter Mayonnaise, but would shorten it to may.
May is a normal name, so nobody would question it, but that daughter would forever know that she was named after a condiment.
Reminds me of Family Guy when it's revealed Meg's full name is Megatron... I truly feel bad for people with these kinds of parents
i went to school with a girl called vagina, pronounced 'vah-gee-na' whose mother threw a tantrum any time anyone mispronounced her name. unsurprisingly she went by gina.
I didnt knew Vipziepop had children😂
@@mysticpumpkin8520 Honestly Gina is so much better than Vaggie
Bro the pronounciation of the name is literally how it's pronounced in Russian it's so bad I'm so sad for the child 😰
@@justsomething1349 despite being russian, I read g as j here, heh
@@justsomething1349 I don't understand the thought process of some people...like how could that name have gone any other way
People who wanna be unique with names… I feel so bad for their kids 😢
I think there was this woman who named her kid, no joke ‘methamphetamine rules’ or something like that 💀
It's in comparison to America I am so so glad we have restrictions on how to name your child here.
My neighbors name their kids Malibu and Manhattan
If they like quirky names so much, why don't they rename themselves? :D
In Sweden, it’s illegal to name your child tjottablottaplingplong 👍
There's an old bulgarian joke from the soviet times where the parents wanted to name their daughter to both of her grand mothers, Mara and Tonka. So they named her Maratonka (running shoe).
I'll do you one better; a joke about a russian baby named Mikoniy. sounds kind of like it might be somewhere a diminutive for Mikhail? No, it's the word for a baby's first bowel movement, which is composed of white blood cells and skin lining from the mother, and is particularly green, tarry, and foul smelling.
When I was in high school, a teacher once told the class that if you have a very obscure name or one that isn't spelled correctly, a lot of potential employers will throw your résumé right into the trash. So not only are these parents setting their kids up for a childhood of bullying with these garbage names, they're diminishing the kids' prospects all throughout life. Worth considering before giving your kid a "quirky" name like this: how will it treat them down the line?
My cat’s name is “Toothless” after the dragon, his middle name is “Trogdor” can confirm wacky names for cats are socially acceptable
Omg I love this 😭
"Trogdor was a man! I mean...he was a dragon man! Or maybe he was just a dragon... But he was still TROGDOR"
One of my cats is also named Toothless after the dragon! 🐈
Awsome! Great PET name. 😊
I named mine Kevin, I considered Toothless but it didn’t quite suit him (I didn’t expect Kevin to suit but once I said it, it was his name)
amazing moment when baby finally starts calling his parents "Meaummeigh" or "Dahdheey"
I laughed so hard I woke up my Meaummeigh and Dahdheey 🤣🤣
Really impressing that this young child can already pronounce words with such a complicated spelling!
I read this in a peppa pig-ish voice in my head
You forgot the apostrophe: Dahdhe'ey
My mom used to work in juvenile court. She has seen multiple kids named “princess”. Probably one of the worst names you can be stuck with.
My parents were smart enough to make my middle name unique rather than my first, my middle name being a combination of their middle names which ended up as Lee-Ellen. Parents, give your children regular names, if you want something unique, use older names that aren't as common, don't mess with the spelling!
My mom new a woman named "Female." Her parents were from another country and didnt speak English well. When given paperwork for birth certificate, it had female on it and the parents thought in US the hospital names the babies and left it
Had twin students named Male and Female, pronounced "mah-lee" and "f'mah-lee".
Yes, their parents spoke English.
*knew, not "new". 🤨🤔🤦🤷🙄👎
Knew*
Learn the langzage BRFORE you immugrate
@@JediLoreenyou understood what the person meant and this isn’t college so it’s fine
"You can't just make up phonetic stuff that doesn't exist."
The English language: Ghuld mae behir
I resent that it only took me two attempts to read that last thing...
Ah, smells like Welsh.
can someone explain that last part?
@@saasseliHold my beer
@@ReyvLC huh, now it seems obvious, thanks
So nice to see that second last one is such a big Yugioh fan that they named their kid after their favourite card: Reign-Beaux, Overlord of Dark World
I'm from Utah, and it's an entire joke that this subreddit is basically materialized itself in the state.
And you know an unacceptable amount of parents of Mahckeyighleighs get angry at people not being able to figure out how to say their kids' names, but will ask people from non-English speaking countries if they have an 'English' name because theirs is too hard. 😑
I grew up in a very multicultural area of southern Ontario, and the amount of substitute teachers who butchered some of the easiest names. Badir, Guled, Amman, these were not difficult! I can’t even imagine the horror that’ll come from some of these atrocities.
And you just know that as soon as the room hears the mistakes the sub makes, that’s going to be used against the kid by someone.
@@qwinlyn ever had a teacher who always butchered a name when the only difference was K instead of a C?
@@Chocobo0Scribe usually they would over emphasize the K. Think eri-K rather than Eh-ric (insert Canadian Eh joke here)
The real trip up tended to be vowels. Many, many mistaken vowels. And the worst part was that there were many that wouldn’t apologize when they said it wrong, but would instead just move on without a word.
@@qwinlynI am 37 and my name is Keair. It is pronounced exactly the way it is spelled (like Key-air). To this day, my doctor's office I have gone to for eight years calls out my last name (which is Snyder, no easier honestly then my first name but there are no food brands named Keair so maybe that's it....I am American after all 😂). And it is not just the doctor's office. You would think my name was really challenging. Hell, people will read it and add an 'a' at the end that doesn't exist so that they say it 'Key-air-a'.... That's the one that really drives me bat shit! And I can still recall the dread of a substitute teacher all these years after leaving school. Lmao
Needless to say, I named my daughter River. The alternate name (the one I wanted more for her but I married a nerd and she's named after a Doctor Who character) was Stevie Lynn. I figure no one could screw that up. 😂
@@qwinlyn - I know exactly what you mean about the vowels, my deadname threw people off constantly. The day someone tried to make a nickname from that name was the day that I _definitely_ wanted to go get it legally changed long before I realised I was enby/agender because that was the final nail in the coffin
7:05 Fun fact: it is legal in some states in the US to petition a judge to change your name even as a minor if the name in question is bad enough. The legal case that decided this? TululaDoesTheHula vs. Illinois. Yes, TululaDoesTheHulu was her actual first name. At 9, she successfully petitioned a judge to have it changed to Nicole. The judge ruled it was causing her undo distress and her grievance was valid, granting her the name change legally.
Poor baby!!! :( the shit she had to have gone through to already be petitioning a court at age 9?? I only vaguely knew what Judge Judy was at 9yo.
Jesus christ...
Yup, that sounds murrican enough 👌
Please don't hate me... it's 'undue' distress... I'll go away now.
TULULADOESTHEHULA??? 😭😭😭💀
Someone get Gojo Jojo and Mojo Jojo in the same room together, I want to see what kind of carnage unfolds.
Brexcen Rose.
The fact that that sounds like one of my favorite Pokémon is an amazing coincidence that I’m very happy about.
"Piggy" is an awful name. They'll get bullied, and then they'll read Lord Of The Flies at school about how Piggy gets crushed with a rock.
that was literally my first thought when i heard it, when my class read it we already made enough fun of Piggy as it was, especially when a younger kid joined the school and looked EXACTLY like the movie Piggy- poor kid i hope his class don't watch the movie when they reach that point
I'd be seriously worried the kid would develop an eating disorder with that name, being called a pig and being bullied. It's not just a bit uncomfortable for the child, it can lead to a deadly mental disorder. I developed my anorexia due to being tall early as a child, if I were named Piggy it would NOT have helped.
Thank god Sweden can forbid names due to "inconvenience for the name carrier".
BAHAAA🤣🤣🤣🤣
have nicknames died?
But that is not their name, its the cute nickname their uncle/aunt (I don't remember) was calling them while they are a baby until they have another option.
Or they’ll think of the Downward Spiral album by Nin…..😬😬😬🫠🫠🫠
No effing way someone named their child Rubella! 🤦♀️
“This is my son, German Measles, and my daughter, Smallpox! And little Yersinia is on her way this spring!” 🤦♀️ 🤦♀️ 🤦♀️
Yersinia sounds like a name someone from Colombia could have
I wouldn't be surprised if there was someone out there called Koev Idixx or Coron Avighroos
@@Sucellusification, it does sound close to Yesenia, but still, it would be pretty awful to name your child Yersinia Pestis.
Roseola was in this video somewhere too. We're just naming our kids after rashes now.
@@Ri_F I seem to remember a Click video a couple of years back where someone posted the birth of their new son, Covid.
I´m German and my name is Cynthia. I live in a country where this nobody can neither spell nor pronounce it. I am called Zinnzia, Sinntia and got a letter adressed to Xyzinzia once. I always loved it when my mum yelled at me as a kid. Zünnti-aaaaaaaaaaaa I make a sound like that when my toes find furniture on my way to the toilet before I do. I am 39 and even my mum respects I want her to call me Cyn instead. Still plenty of people I try to tell the same , but who kindly ignore it and proceed to call me Zyntia (Z is a harsh sound and not as smooth and soft as it is in English. I hate my name to this day and always will, but I can´t change it because in Germany you can only change your name if it is an insult itself in another language, does not indicate gender. It is listed as a name and in Germany we don´t do fancy middle names (at least not common in eastern Germany in the 80s) or adding any number of names from 1 to like 10 to your first name like they do in English speaking countries. In case you happen to have a first and middle name you can change your middle name to your first name. But well, ofc I don´t have that. Forever Xynzia :(
Oh no! Cynthia is such a pretty name, but I don’t think I’d be too fond of it either if even my own mom mispronounced it my entire life. Giving your child a name that you yourself can’t pronounce is a decision with a very threatening aura.
Our son, born in 2022 is named Axel. We always get the same responses: "that's the coolest name ever!" Or "he will always be the coolest guy in the room." OR "he's going to be a heartbreaker". I just want him to be a good person and not get bullied for his name...
"Harlotte" should just call herself "Harley" like "Harley Quinn", that'd be super cool and a great reference, and then she should quietly get her name changed legally. Best thing is nobody will assume "Harley" is an abbreviation.
I can't help but imagine her as the most based hilarious granny. Picture bringing your fella to meet the famileigh for the first time and going "so this is my mom Xorxys, uncle Glenn short for Glendalf, and granny Hoor"
And Charlie was right there (Charline being another fine choice)
@@ElaineAlwaysMSalso Charlotte. JUST ADD A C.
I like scrolling the comments while watching the video so i usually see comments about parts of the vid i haven’t seen yet. I literally choked on my food when I read this, WHO TF NAMES THEIR DAUGHTER THAT. 😭😭😭
@@ElaineAlwaysMS There are even women already named Charley. But I guess she didn't want to "combine" Charlotte and Harvey that way round...
It's like all the people who have a "completely new" business idea and think they will be super successful because nobody else does it.
Hot take: naming your child with nonfunctional pronunciation or after an interest of yours/inside joke is a telltale sign you're a narcissistic parent that sees the child as an asset or property rather than recognizing that it is a person outside of yourself.
That clocks.
Literally. Nothing says “I see my child as my pet or my toy” more than some fuck ass name like Maddesynnleigh
Absolutely this.
Yup. And the child will probably hate it later. So, there will be troubles with legal changes
Well, for 9 months they're told it's just a part of them rather than a unique being growing inside them, is it any surprise that mentality persists even after birth for some women?
19:02 So, when I was a wee lad, Cars was my absolute favorite movie, but I didn't know the main character's name until I was quite a bit older. The reason for this is that I have always had trouble with names, and movie characters are especially difficult. The thing about Cars is that it opens with:
"Speed. I am speed."
And the 3-year old Hillbilly was like "great, his name is Speed, thanks for making it easy!"
It wasn't until I was about 6 that I started to wonder who this Lightning McQueen everyone was talking about was.
Whats ridiculous is how many people want "unique" names but instead of finding a actually unique name they take a really common name and spell it the most ridiculous way possible
As an *author* that creates unique names for my characters and their kingdoms in the fantasy settings.... I double-check every name I make up. EVERY name. FOR FANTASY CHARACTERS.
I SWEAR YOU CAN DO IT FOR YOUR KID. I PROMISE.
H A R L O T T E ? ARE YOU KIDDING ME? G O D .
Unless you want to make a meme out of that poor NPC 😅
Same 😭
if you want further motivation; remember Drizzt the Dark Elf? never took off in slavic countries, cause his name sounds like the word for uh. a shart. it's onomatopoeic...
I think we should apply the same rules to baby names as with graphic design: when in doubt, show it to a group of 13-year-old boys. If they laugh, you rethink it.
But the problem is these parents here don't seem to be in doubt about their name choices at all.
@@Cenn_DevelRule 1: Always have some doubt about choices that will last a lifetime
@@hmnhntr Alright 👍
While it is true that pets don’t know their names and therefore aren’t embarrassed by them, I’ve worked in veterinary clinics and was a dog groomer for many years and the staff will absolutely judge the owner about that craziness. I also had an acquaintance throw a toddler-in-adult-body tantrum because she saw the sticker on the kennel card for her cat that was going to be spayed, and it only said Tallulah, and “her name is Tallulah Rain!” I had to wait until she ran out of breath for a second to explain we had no way to change the font size on the sticker printer and that was all that would fit. Actually had to show her the file (yes, this was long ago when we had paper files) so she could see that we did have her cat’s “full legal name” in there. (This was a rescue cat, not purebred, so I have no clue what organization legalized this name.)
I had a friend in high school that I thought was named Brian. It turned out that his Mom had filled out his Birth Certificate without any one noticing it that his name is officially BRAIN. She misspelled Brian by accident. At the time he was saving money to change it when he turned 18. And yes this was way before Pinky and the Brain.
Whenever someone says “danger is my middle name,” or something similar, I’m reminded of when my mother told me that if I was born a boy my middle name would’ve really been “danger”
My parents were legitimately set on naming me DANGER -
I am trans, specifically genderfluid, and still pissed they didn’t go through with it anyway.
Danger would be a great middle name, for someone self naming.
Do it yourself
i changed my name a while ago, and I'm still working out middle names, but it would be so funny to just have a list of adjectives as my middle names, like danger, caution, hubris, procrastination, secret, ominous, lore, friendship, and plausible
(i probably won't make any of that my legal name, it would be really inconvenient, but it would be hilarious)
I changed my name when i became an adult because I'm also trans non-binary. You should absolutely do it, that'd be epic
aw
Exchange overheard in the maternity ward:
Dr: "what's the baby's name?"
Mum: "Fire"
Dr: "oh.... Does he have a fiery personality?"
Mum: "emotionless* "no"
Dr: *silent*
I imagine them parents calling for that child in a crowded place and realising their terrible mistake "Fire! Fire!"
SMH 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
Names have meanings too like do parents just forget that 💀like why couldn’t this parent name their kid “Aidan/Aiden” ?? it’s gender neutral and means fiery 😂😭
@maevetravis2123 as long as their name doesn't mean something humiliating in a language commonly taught in school, that's fine.
Unlike for example Nemo, which is Latin for NOBODY.
I know of one kid who was given that name and Latin is taught at most Gymnasiums (High school and college equivalent) here in Europe... 😰
@@LRM12o8 Honestly makes the movie Finding Nemo a bit amusing.
On the bright side they’d get the crowd out of the way really quickly
Something like this happened many years ago to an Israely friend. They had named one son Itai (a common name in Israel). And since the dad was the captain of a tradeship the family sometimes joined him. In Japan the son got lost and the mother ran around calling his name. Several Japanese people were very concerned and wanted to call an ambulance. Itai in Japanese means horrible pain.
6:40
22q deletion syndrome, aka DiGeorge syndrome, is from a small deletion on chromosome 22. Symptoms usually include heart problems, frequent infections, cleft palate, and intellectual disabilities.
15:13
Funny story actually.
I saw this video and the post within it, and got so mad that I told my discord server of my close friends to never ever name their child Tinderleigh for any reason or I would kill them.
One of them took this as a challenge, and made the name even worse.
Someone else entirely mentioned "Gaylord" at some point.
This friend is now named
"Tiendueyrleiagh Geiayghloardde".
Thank you Click.
I mean, Gaylord is a real historical name. Goes back a few hundred years and everything. bit inconvenient that the word 'gay' means something different now than it did then, of course
In Poland the employee can refuse to register your kid's name if they think they are inappropriate or harmful to the child, some of rejected names were Nutella, Koka (from Cocaine), Joint, Batman.... 🤦
One would hope US would also have some office worker tell you that your name for the baby is absolutley stupid and will harm the child later in life
It's state-by-state and very lax. Some will ban things like emoji because their system can't type it, some will ban swears. But like, Kentucky has no laws.
Examples of controversial/strange names that have been approved: Messiah, Santa Claus, "Darren QX Bean!", Sexy Crabtree, Ynot Bubba, and Beezow Doo-Doo Zopittybop-bop-bop.
There's also states that don't legally require you to name your child, I'm sure with specific circumstances, such as Michigan and Nevada.
@@Bruh-on-main Oh thank you!! Good to know! But also horrifying seeing some of the approved ones 💀
To be fair though, batman is an actual name. The Australian city Melbourne was almost named Batmania after a guy named John Batman.
@@sandrosliske But wasn't that his surname...?
Also I think main language in Australia is english, Poland uses polish, so even our regular names are different from english ones; Wiktoria - Victoria, Mateusz - Matthew, Jakub - Jacob, Grzegorz - Gregory
That and both "bat" and "man" are totally different words in polish than in english, and the only "Batman" written like "Batman" in polish is the superhero
And I don't think any polish kid will be like "oh they're called Batman like the city in Australia!" 😆
@@wikitygrys was just giving an example of Batman being an actual fucking name mate.
My 12 year old self really thought, the worst names a baby could get was old names that I associated with 70+ year olds. As I have grown older, I have been exposed to the true horrors of baby names.
Baby Bertha? Baby Gertrude?
I’d much rather name a baby in 2024 Gertrude/Matilda/Maynard/etc than a key mash or innuendo
My nieces initials for her first middle and last name spell Vag… I hope she never realizes
@@thethe4665 baby Phyllis baby Enid baby edwin
@@thethe4665 What's wrong with Gertrude? That's how you get Trudy, which is a perfectly acceptable and boring name.
"*Screaming frantically* YOU NAMED THE BABY -distorted censorship noise-"
Why was that so funny to me?? lmao I had to pause the video I was laughing so hard I was crying 🤣🤣🤣
For that "My Child is Unique" Name Generator, I got "Gray Lie Lynne". Of course as a Texan, I somehow end up cursed with some variation of Lynn.
As for weird names, sorry parents but you will never top the majesty that is Will Power. Just give it up.
Also: Thank you Click for unintentionally putting one of my favorite Bee gees songs back into my head.
Nevaeh is Heaven spelt backwards...😑
My daycare nanny named her child Peasant. My asked her why she would do that to her child, she replied with a shocked expression and said, "But don't you know, it's a beautiful bird!" 🙈 Dear parents, BEFORE you sign it on the birth certificate, please make sure you spell the name CORRECTLY. This girl has been mocked relentlessly, because her mother couldn't spell Pheasant. A simple mistake perhaps, but a lifelong disaster.
Even if you spell it correctly, be aware of pop culture history around the world. Anyone who hasn't tried to sing the pheasant plucker song at least once at a party, really needs to.
Uf ... if in my old school she would have prob. commited to not existing anymore ... people got bullied soooo bad (i almsot got unalived once) ... if someone called "peasant" would have been around they would have been the main target for some Father and motherless Bullies .... UF
I just remember a girl from high school whose middle name was Gayfox since she was born on Guy Fawkes day. At least she had a perfectly normal first name!
@@phantomflounder7591 My brother was born on Guy Fawkes' Day... his middle name's Edward...?
Our dad was James though.😂
@@CandyHatsuneWolff what
"Rhys" is a Welsh name pronounced "Reese", someone pronouncing it as "Rizz" would be my thirteenth reason
As a Rhys... I concur. Spain without the S
how do people even consider to say Rhys as "rizz"
My best friend is trans and named himself Rhys and from that moment on when I heard the name spoken I always transcribe it as “Rhys” even though “Reese” is a more common spelling
I can actually see how “Rhys” could be mistranslated by some. It’s the h/us of other popular words that lead to it…
Mystery
Hysterical/hysterics/hysterically
System
Symptoms
Symptomatic
Systemic
Hysterical
I will stop now 😂
I was assuming it was after Rhysand from Sarah J Maas’ books. Totally forgot Rhys is a legit name
Had a girl in my Spanish class a couple years back named "Haleigh," pronounced "Hailey"
She was a bold and attention seeking girl, so whenever i talked sbout her to my friends, i used the name "sleigh" 😭😭
Talk about wanting to have your child hate you or be fodder for bullying in school!
Accirding to the chart: first would be brin; midfle would be ley (brinley - not too bad), kast would be kal. brinleykal - NO!
A name is the first gift you give your child. Treat it as a gift to them, instead of one to yourself.
This is beautiful
wise. simple. thx.
A great way to explain why these tragic names are so bad is because these people treat their kids like they’re gonna be kids forever. “They’re cute so we’re gonna give them cute original names” is a mindset of someone who doesn’t see their tiny human as a cute thing rather than A PERSON just tiny. Kids aren’t pets don’t names them as such
Exactly. You need to think of this name as something that will be on a resume or letterhead.
On the flip side I don’t understand how you name someone a strictly old person name like Barbara or Gary
Ngl, the name generator thing, gave me a not terrible “I was born to hippydippy parents in the peak of the lsd soaked 60s” kinda vibe 😂 Reyven Wolf. I’ll take it 😂
Those look like the names you desperately type in when you already tried out 100.000 names before in an MMORPG and every single one of them was already claimed.
As an Irish person, the spelling Ruairí is pretty common here, but if you're in another country you'll have problems
Literally came here to say the same 😂 as long as they prounnce it properly 😂 Americans are always butchering as gaeilge 😂
I worked with a lot of Polish ppl in the past and I noticed many names are ones I know already, but the spelling is just different. Once you understand the phonics, it's fine, but I could see people tripping up while reading it for the first time.
@@srose1088
To be fair, the whole Polish language is basically just the tragedeigh version of Czech/Slovakian.
Im having trouble with 'maria' like don't say it like mareeha or marya.... or any other possibility 😅
@@Alias_AnybodyAs someone with strong Polish heritage who knows the very very basics of Polish language- I agree with this statement xD
It'd been more than 20y since my dad passed away, but I'll never forget how bloody close I went to lose it at his funeral in front of the whole family. I was already on the edge emotionally, and then I saw that the final resting place of my father was right next to a man called "Divine Woodpecker". Not proud of it, but I had to trot out of sight with my face buried in an handkerchief because I was indeed in tears, but for all the wrong reasons. Let's add "it may cause hysteria on mourners" as an extra reason to avoid fucked up names for our offspring.
Divine Woodpecker sounds like a damn codename, "Commence Operation Divine Woodpecker"
Hey, it cheered you up on a sad day. That's gotta be with something!
maybe he was native American?
@@Cainmak I'd like to second this, that's a real possibility
@@Cainmak I see how that can be seen as a possibility from a Central/North American pov, but the event is set in Italy, and "Divine Woodpecker" is a literal translation of the poor man's name from Italian. Instead of a noble chief our hero was just a victim of his creative parents, I'm afraid.
When i was younger, i had kids in my class called: Lente (spring), merel (its a type of bird), gras (grass), tuin (yard)... I wish i was joking
What's wrong with the name, "Grindr Truckstop-Glory" for a newly adopted son? We could have gone more traditional with "Tabernacle Gravy-Stain", but we don't want him to be teased. What is wrong with people????
Also I'm crying Click's like "yeah I have dyslexia let's do a video where I have to read the most unhinged spellings on the planet"
Bro I just had the most bomb ass idea for the guy that wants to name his daughter after Reddit. Reddit - Eddit - Edith. Boom, her name is Edith, problem solved
If anyone is that invested in reddit, they aint getting a kid unless they kidnap one
Edith is awful though.
@@jenniferpearce1052 at least it isn't an app though
Edith is kind of a bomb name, ngl
What's your point? You'd rather them be named Reddit?@@jenniferpearce1052
50 year old with a quirky Hippie name here. My name has 4 letters. Very few people can either get it right or later forget it. Or spend too much time arguing with me to tell them my real name. It was odd and low-hanging fruit in school. Adding letters to it would have been hell! Stop. Think. Just no.
5:21 for those who don’t know, Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch is a town in Wales. That’s its name. I don’t recall what it was translated into English, but it’s the directions to get to the town.
Point is very difficult to pronounce. Even I can’t pronounce all of it, and I’m not Welsh either. But very cool when someone pronounces correctly!
Shawn: Yawns
Shaun: Yauns
Sean: Yeans
Yeah does are normal variations. I’m sure people will come out with “Shaughwnne” in the future 😂
To be fair seán is the original spelling cause it’s an Irish name
This is a true story according to my old friend who was a camp counselor. At his camp they had young girl name Le-a. "Lee-ah, Lay-ah?" He'd ask. "No" she replied, "it's pronounced Ledasha. The dash ain't silent."
Oh weird. I knew a dude who worked in a university doing intake either for students or new employees (I don't recall which) and he can't across a La-a. She explained her name using the same wording, too!
Bro, my coworker used to go to church with a girl named Le-a, pronounced the exact same
@@calih2011 @notbot2648 Wow! As it turns out, it is a small world after all.
I'm naming my baby traditionally. Tra-ion Kar-ian.
I hope everybody in this comment section knows that the "Ledasha" story is actually just made up, racist bullshit, that got turned into a copypasta YEARS AGO
Evercyn Wolf sounds like she’d be in twilight ☠️
When I was little I moved to the UK and since my name isn’t English people never pronounce it correctly so I decided to go by Mal. I remember in high school a teacher called me 🍕margarita🍕 and another time I got called malgasita🥲
I work in a men’s prison. I’ve seen some interesting names. Imagine naming your sons General, Colonel, Major, Lieutenant and Sergeant and having them all end up in prison. Sergeant told me he also has sisters named Empress, Queenie, and Duchess. I’ve also have met King, Sir and Knight. My all time favorite though, is Orange Astine Brown III. THE THIRD! Sr. and Jr. had also spent time in prison. Then there was Jon Junior IV. Seriously!?
hahahaha
I knew someone named "Orange Peel"; he went by his middle name for so long, that he didn't believe his parents when they told him his real first name until the birth certificate came out from the files. His younger sister's name is "Briana"; guess they only partly learned their lesson.
I personally think Queenie is a fine name for someone but the rest of those definitely don't work lol. King is a great last name though, would be a good name for a pet too
@@ceeshnia that honestly sounds like a bitlife thing
We had an inmate named Hassle. Really. For some reason he didn't think he was wanted by his family
Poor old guy, I don't work there anymore but sometimes wonder if he ever got his life under control
"2 deletion syndrome (22q) can affect any system of the body, however most children with 22q have heart, immune, learning, speech, and/or behavior difficulties. Each person with 22q has their own unique needs, and interdisciplinary team care is the best management approach. "
My god. Aren't those two girls going through enough without the name bs as it is!?
I thought q (as in 22q) meant Queer, and the mom was talking about themselves since usually it's M for male and F for female, but this makes more sense
@@TheTrueMr.Chickenlmao yeah no, it's definitely talking about 22q deletion 👍🏻
I think my mom had "unique" names for all her kids but in a normal (and sometimes not even purposeful) way. Like, my brother is named Mathew with one t cause she was still drugged up when they brought in the certificate and thought that was how it was spelled. My brother loves having that slight uniqueness to his name. My sister is named Catherine with a C. Again, nothing wild but not incredibly common either. I believe she was named after a grandmother or something. You can have a unique spin on a name without relying on x's, y's, or "leigh"s.
My great grandma moved from Japan to the US. She asked the local (German-American) butcher for some "American" names. One of the names suggested was "Karl" but Japanese being her first language, he was named "Carol" by accident.
In Europe Carol is a perfectly normal name, a version of Charles. She used the wrong equation, but got the right answer still
Only difference between naming children after biblical characters and naming children after video game or anime characters is centuries of normalization.
Is it? I thought those characters in bible were real humans (based on Christianity)
Say what you want about religion but those were real people and names.
@@Moravian_Mf They're still pop culture characters
I mean, sure, but either way, you should be aiming for a reasonable name that a kid can grow with. I know someone who named their first kid Zack after Zack Fair in Final Fantasy 7. It's still a nice name while being from the parent's favorite game. If they named him Zidane, I'd be giving him as much side eye as someone who names their kid Jezebel after the biblical figure.
That's a good point.
But I'd still think it's weird if you told me your kids are Mario, Luigi, Peach and Toad
RIP to the mental stability of kids with learning disabilities whose parents think the default wifi password would make a cute name.
My mom was nicknamed and butchered to hell and back and hated it. She kept it normal and properly spelled for my brother and I. Rachel and Justin. No extra spellings, no "unique" variations. Bless her for doing this for us❤
About the ora-leigh is actually funny because Orly is a very common name in Hebrew (means my light or the light for me) and now I can never see it the same way
As someone with an apostrophe in my last name, I can 100% assure using special characters in a name is assuring a life of problems with banks, the government, and poorly programed apps. That's with what is probably the most common special character in a name too. I can't imagine the hell with Greek symbols.
YES a software we have at work is so incompatible with apostrophes and I always feel bad when we have to go through and awkwardly edit someone’s name just to have the software accept it.
As someone whose first name is hyphenated, I don't even use the hypen online anymore.
Y'all, remember Twilight when Bella names her daughter Renesmé Carlie as a hybrid of her grandparents Rene+Esmé and Carlyle+Charlie? I had no idea how deep this milennial rabbithole went lol. I wonder how this Milennial naming trend started.
Wasnt it supposed be Jacob+Edward? Thats how i remember it 😅 I get the point tho
At least Carlie isn't too bad, relatively speaking.
@@myaren0101Renesme Carlie Cullen was the name she ended up getting with the name for it she had been a boy being Edward Jacob Cullen. Both are weird but naming your childs middle name after your orbiter simp friend is weiiiiiiirrd especially considering Jacob later imprints on her.
Apparently it's popular practice among the Latter Day Saints/Mormons, which I think was Meyer's background?
I know someone who named her daughter Renesme... 🤦🏼♀️
My birth name wasn’t a quarter as bad as these names, but enough people mispronounced and misspelled it that I did end up changing it when I was in my 20s. Luckily, it’s a straightforward process (at least in America) so these poor kids won’t have too much trouble getting theirs changed when they’re old enough.
My full name (first and middle) is after both of my Grandmothers. I have a shortened version that’s generally used and the “modernised” spelling that I have used since my early teens. (As seen here in my email)
All I wanted as a kid was to find *something* with my name on it- you know, the usual key chain, ruler/pencils, door sign, piggy bank ect. I could never find them anywhere (even the abbreviation of ruby or Rubi) in the 80s or even later as a teenager in the 90s.
When I got to age 30 my mum surprised me with a child’s piggy-bank with my “modernised” version of my name on. I finally could get what I absolutely coveted as a kid lol
Okay so when Click said jokingly that his middle name was Danger
That was almost literally my middle name
My parents opted out at the last second because "what if he just grows up to be a wimp" and I still resent them for it my middle name could have literally been Danger. I could have said "My middle name is Danger" with a completely straight face.
Danger IS your middle name
Would sound like from the movies
Also he did it wrong. His name should have been Atlyn Kay...
At least it sort of sounds like a name?
My last name would've been slaughter
You know, if you choose a name for yourself, it's no longer a tragedeigh because you're not forcing it on a child. If only there were an easier way to legally change your name, you could simply change your middle name to Danger if you wanted to.
I honestly think that everyone deserves at least one free name change. Perhaps it could become a cultural "coming of age" thing, where kids are given temporary names at birth and then choose their own name in their teens or adulthood.
@@LoremIpsum-dp1liYES. That'd be so much better, especially for those of my friends who go by different, more gender-comfortable names.
omg it's like only 5 minutes and I'm already CRYING
"Morgue-ann" would've been the crap they made fun of in Johnny the homicidal maniac.😂
33:58 this is like naming your kid “Chinese” or “Jewish” or “Aboriginal” for the record- the Romani are a southeastern European ethnic group.
To specify Romani people are most likemy Indian decented people inhabiting most of Europe and are not even that closely related to each other. To give an example Finnish Romani people are more related to Finns than French Romanis
The first name of the spokesman of the German Romani council is... Romani 😅 (Romani Rose)
Here are my children: Pikeigh and Ghyppo
While there has been some local intermarrying over time in their wide travels, the Romani are originally from the Indian subcontinent and retain some cultural aspects.
If my parents named me something like "Rohn'aald" I'd die of shame the moment I was born.
Like, am I human or an alien warrior cat?
You're a shape shifter who hasn't found out how to sprout a tail and a pair of antlers yet, easy.
That sounds like the name of a dragon in skyrim.
My sister got named Jeylana, but the goverment was like: nope. And now she's just Jelana.
LOL THE WARRIORS SHADE
The Warrior Cats usually have more sensical names
love how at 5:38 youtube was like "keyboard 'like button' -mashes" yea no the click is asking the viewers to like the video
8:55 Huxlee may (please help-) 😭😭😭
“Dad, how did I get my name?”
“You were named after the place your mother and I met”
“Gee, thanks Dad”
“You’re welcome, Walmart Parking Lot”
Best comment I’ve read all week
22q means that they have 22q11-deletion syndrome, also called CATCH 22, a genetic disorder that affects a lot of the organs and also often leads to developmental delay and learning difficulties. Which seems to me to be a situation where having an impossible-to-spell name would be extra annoying.
Wow. Those names are even more abusive than I originally thought
If it’s genetic maybe that’s why their parents couldn’t spell the names right in the first place
No.. Then those names are straight up abusive!
the creepy thing is she stressed that they're beautiful. they think it's better to have developmentally disabled kids than to have lousy looking kids
Side note: catch 22 does not come from this mutation, but the mutation has received the nickname from the older "catch 22" which referred to psych evaluation to be medically discharged in WW2 (catch is that trying to leave the military is the sane thing to do, hence you are capable of service and can't be discharged)
Just discovered, love your energy. A little thing I guess some people may have said already, "eau" / "eaux" are meant to sound like the french "o" 😂 forgot the first one, the second seems to say Rainbow..
"Avocadosia" sounds like a Harry Potter spell to make vegans levitate
Seriously though, in the US studies still show that resumes from "ethnic" names are more likely to be rejected than those with "normal" names.
People with "normal" names are more likely to be already from America and have more money so better educated and more qualified for anything. It's not a name thing.
Yup
The only except I can think of are maybe names of Western European or Jewish heritage.
But I doubt people are gonna be okay with pronouncing Shakked Azoulay.
(שקד אזולאי translation; almond azalea )
Don’t even get me started on how many times people would ask someone named Bar if they mean the place where they server beer.
aaaaaAAAAAAAAHHHHHH!
@@Alberto2That's just racist.
@@oakenshadow6763 How? That's just how it is.