Names that became popular or unpopular due to pop culture.

I’m not sure if actor (as opposed to character) names would qualify, but in high school 10 ( :eek: ) years ago, it seemed that every other young african-american mother named her son Denzel.

And Ethilrist, I guess my parents might qualify as odd (or maybe just out of touch with movies), because my youngest brother, born in 1981, got named Jason. :wink: Or was the comedian referring to something other than Friday the 13th?

Actually, going through the Social Security link alanak gave, it looks like Jason was in the top 5 for most of the 70s, then started dropping after 1980, falling of the top ten after '83. So there probably is a connection. That’s a neat site, allowing for all kinds of theorizing…

Warning: Satire…

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/813324/posts

“Linda” owes its popularity to Philip Barry’s play “Holiday,” which was later made into a film starring Katherine Hepburn. The name remained popular for decades after that.

“Adolf” lost a lot of popularity after WWII (or even before: Harpo Marx changed his legal name to “Arthur” in the late 30s), for obvious reasons.

The name Ashley took a nosedive after Gone With the Wind, but came back as a girl’s name.

That’s my older sister’s name! (born in 1958)

My dad was a race car driver, duh.

I wonder how many little Galadriels, Aragorns and Pippins will be running around in a few years (please, no boys named “Merry”).

I’ll bet there are a lot more Quentins around ever since Mr. Tarrantino became popular.

I wonder if the middle initial W will become less popular? :smiley:

Elvis. Uncommon before “the Elvis”.

Cher?

I thought this was very interesting, so I decided to check it at the Social Security name link given earlier.

The play version of Holiday ran on Broadway in 1928. Linda went from #324 in the 1920s to #95 in the 1930s.

The movie version of Holiday was made in 1938.

But Linda dived to #310 in the 1940s.

It was #2 in the 1950s.

Seems like something well after Holiday was the reason for its popularity.

And it’s gone from #170 in 1990 to #412 in 2003. Now’s a good time to name a daughter Linda if you want her to be different in school.

I know a woman whose middle name is Arwen. She says her father wanted that to be her first name, but mom put her foot down on it.

My name, Roger, is way out of style today. Hell, it was out when I was born. It did have a hey day in the 1940’s though. I’m pretty sure it was popularized by Roger Wilco.

I find at least 200 females with the first name Madison in the 1930 U.S. census.

That was almost my first name! It was my father’s idea (he was a huge sci-fi/fantasy fan). But my mom changed it to “Arlyn” (which is actually an old Southern man’s name). In sixth grade, I got tired of having such a weird name and started using my middle name instead.

I’m not sure if you would contribute it to pop culture, but the nickname “Dick” is extremely unpopular now. I’ve never met anyone under 50 who used it.

Better check your facts. There were 3,336 people with the first name Elvis in the 1930 U.S. census, five years before Elvis Presley was born.

I said “uncommon” not “non-existant”. How many Tom, Davids, Micheals & the like- Millions.

Well, if you put it that way, the name Elvis remained uncommon. There were never millions of people named Elvis.

Maybe it was this:

And a-one. And a-two…

When I go to sleep,
I never count sheep.
I count all the charms about Linda…

There were certainly many Jennifers before Erich Segal’s “Love Story” was published, but that book and the ensuing Ali McGraw film made Jennifer the most popular girls’ name of the 1970’s.

I remember hearing that “Kizzie” started getting some circulation within the black community after Roots came out.

I really like the name Ian Andrew, which is the name of Deanna Troi’s father and child. No Tiberiuses or William Thomases though.

I know an “Arwen”, but she’s well into her late twenties by now. (Her mom was an English literature professor.)

As for naming girls after cities: Dallas, Phoenix, and Helena on my class lists at two different schools (Dallas and Phoenix at one school, Phoenix and Helena at the others, and as I found out, they were named after the cities (at least with the middle on, I would have claimed the creature!).