Because of social media, parents are terrified of giving their kids trendy names. Enter: baby name consultants.
vox.com/culture CULTURE The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. ð¶ð» How social media spoils cute baby names ð¼ When my sister was pregnant with her children, she had a single rule: They could not, under any circumstances, have âtrendyâ names. Unquestionably adorable options like Theodore, Oliver, Charlotte, and Nora were vetoed over their rankings on the Social Security Administrationâs [annual list]( of the most popular names in the US. She had a perfectly good reason: When she was born, in 1989, my parents named her Emily not only because they liked it, but also because they didnât know of anyone else with the name. Within a few short years, however, Emily would become the single most popular name for baby girls, a title it held for more than a decade. âEveryone could spell and pronounce it, but it wasnât terribly common,â a baby name book author [recently explained]( on the abundance of Emilys, proving that even when parents try their best to project a sense of originality onto their children, itâs sometimes the least original choice they could have made. Baby names, it seems, have never been more crucial to get right. On TikTok, a slew of creators have built followings of tens of thousands discussing baby name trends, and crucially, baby names to avoid because theyâre trendy. They reveal baby names they [liked but didnât use](, and baby names they [never want to see again](; they predict famous influencersâ baby names ([sometimes with terrifying accuracy]() and what names [will soon be]( all over every daycareâs class list. Baby name inspiration TikToks have gone ever more niche: You can find viral videos that suggest [âold moneyâ names]( (Caroline, Elizabeth, Charlotte), â[main characterâ names]( (Blaze, Arrow, Falcon), or [âaestheticâ names]( (Rowan, Wren, Atlas). Their accounts are called things like [@WhatsInABabyNameDoula](, [@NamingBebe](, [@DreamBabyNames](, and [@NamesWithSteph](, many of whom now have paid consulting businesses where they help parents-to-be make one of the biggest choices of their lives. Colleen Slagen, the nurse practitioner behind @NamingBebe, says that sheâll sometimes get comments from people asking why anyone in their right mind would pay someone else to name their baby. âFor some people, [baby naming] is naturally a fun process, and for others, itâs actually very stressful, because they havenât spent the last 30 years of their lives thinking about baby names,â she explains. Sheâs been obsessed with baby names for as long as she can remember; in elementary school sheâd fill journals with the names of her future children and discuss her favorites with her sister. She [offers three packages](: a video consultation with 16 baby name options for $99, an 8-name package with extensive name analysis for $175, and 16-name package with name analysis for $250. So far, she estimates sheâs done close to 100 consultations, some with people who werenât even expecting a child at the time. âI think itâs fun to have someone analyze you and your partnerâs taste and come up with something that suits you,â she says. âItâs a form of flattery.â Baby name gurus guess that the topic has gained massive popularity because of our cultural fascination with uniqueness. Blame it on Reaganâs â[cult of rugged individualism](â or perhaps, your phone. âMy guess is itâs gone hand-in-hand with the rise of social media,â says Slagen, referencing the common practice of announcing your childâs name on Instagram, often with personalized Etsy merch. âTen years ago, that wasnât the case. You told your family and small circle of friends. Now you see all these names on social media and it makes them feel like theyâre super popular, which makes people want a unique name even more, because theyâre like, âWell, a girl from my high school used that name so I canât use it,â even though theyâre never going to see that person.â As a Jessica, @DreamBabyNamesâ Jessie Paquette is intimately familiar with the burden of having a trendy name. âI always say to my mom, âYou carried me for nine months and you come up with Jessica? After all that work?ââ Now that sheâs pregnant with her first child, Paquette has a rigid set of rules: It cannot be in the top 200 most popular baby names, she canât know anyone with the name, it has to be pronounceable by her family members with Boston accents (meaning âParkerâ and âArthurâ are out), and it has to be professional-sounding. âPeople got really angry when I said that,â she adds. (Some commenters said that it was weird to imagine your baby sending out job applications; Paquette argued that âyouâre not just naming a baby, youâre naming a future adult.â) It wasnât the first time sheâd incurred the wrath of TikTok. In March, she posted two videos about baby names people may not know are trending, which included Silas, Asher, Ellis, Finn, and August [for boys]( and Eloise, Maeve, Sloan, Freya, Aurora, Matilda, and Clementine [for girls](. Though most of these names arenât particularly high on the Social Security lists yet, she scours moms-to-be apps like Peanut to predict what will be trendy in a few years. âIn all my videos Iâm like, âIf you like it, use it anyway, this is just my opinion!ââ she says. âAnd then people are like, âYouâre a terrible person and I hope your child hates you.ââ The irony here is that having an extremely popular name used to be the norm. For most of American history, [according to the Atlantic](, families typically named their children after an ancestor, which meant that there were usually several Marys or Johns per age cohort. It wasnât until the cultural shifts of the 1960s, with smaller families and fewer children performing labor, that parents wanted to bequeath babies with names that reflected their individuality. âParents are thinking about naming kids more like how companies think about naming products, which is a kind of competitive marketplace where you need to be able to get attention to succeed,â Laura Wattenberg, the founder of Namerology, told the magazine. Baby names have always held a special place in internet culture; nothing bonds strangers quite like a really bad one. There are not one but two Facebook groups with over 100,000 members called âThat Name Is a Tragedeigh,â referring to the American predilection for using quirky spelling on traditional names to make them feel different. The [meme of a woman]( next to a chalkboard of all her unused baby names â Taylee, McKarty, Nayvie, Maylee, and then the winner, Lakynn â is now more than 10 years old, but still pops up any time thereâs discussion of âuniqueâ names, often associated with Mormons in the Western US who, [some have argued](, give children distinctive names because itâs one of the few life areas that the Mormon church doesnât have control over. And of course, never [forget the iconic feud]( between two influencers who both named their babies âBaby.â These days, naming children can feel like an unwinnable game â you could be accused of trend bandwagoning if you name your daughter, say, Harper; youâre called a âtragedeighâ if you go with something truly original; or youâre simply a bore whose child is destined to be one of a billion Liams â hence the baby name consultants who say their DMs and emails are overflowing with requests from confused parents. Taylor A. Humphrey makes a living off of these consults, which she says have numbered in the thousands. âThereâs so much anxiety around what used to be a very mundane part of life,â she says. It isnât just the desire to give children unique names, but also the pressure to please picky family members, friends, and â since weâre all influencers now â the leering public. Humphrey, who has been name consulting since 2018, also works with actual influencers, too, bringing in anywhere from $350 for a handful of baby name suggestions to $30,000 for âbaby name branding,â which helps people in the public eye choose a name that reflects their personal brand, as well as other services. She also works with parents who experience name regret, or the desire to change their babyâs name months or even years after their birth. Most of these cases, she says, come from a trauma around the time of the birth, either during delivery or otherwise (Humphrey also works as a doula and a reiki practitioner to help with such cases). Names from around 100 years ago â long enough to have been forgotten because the people who have them are likely dead â have a tendency to spring back to life, and that seems to be the case now. âThe same thing we see in fashion trend cycles, we see in names,â says Paquette. âWeâre seeing Eleanor, Maude, Edith â cool-girl grandma names.â (She personally prefers names that include a âvâ sound, like Veda, Vera, or Vienna.) Slagen is also interested in the rise of surnames as first names: Rhodes, Miller, and Bellamy, for instance. (In a recent consultation, she offered my own last name as a suggestion: âJennings is not a first name you hear often, but it has a âcool factor,â [she wrote](.) Humphrey, meanwhile, notes the growing trend of overtly masculine names for girls, like Bennett, Earnest, and James. As someone who also grew up obsessing over baby names and who used to write short stories that involved very large families solely as an excuse to name their members, I tend to liken the fascination to that of personality quizzes or other aesthetic, mostly surface-level self-identified categorizations. âJust as capitalism engenders the belief that our value is determined by our productivity, âsocialâ as a business category influences our concept of the self, encouraging us to see self-categorization on platforms not only as self-realization but as a source of capital,â writes Isabel Munson [in Real Life](. âOur value then is based on effective self-branding.â Is there a better way to self-brand than by bequeathing oneâs child a perfect-but-not-too-popular, original-but-not-too-weird first name?
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