| Denise Richards |
| Love the name Denise. The two Denises I know are white/Caucasian, and both are kind souls and salt of the earth. ❤️ |
| I know two awesome Denises, both Black, smart and very nice. |
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Some are very nice.
If you see a trend with any name—for that matter—it could be who raised them. Same person who named them also tried to instill their values. If you’re named Missy, it could be you had a bad mom as well as a specific name that bad people like. (I know a nice Missy too) It’s not about the name Denise or Missy, it’s about the name’s correlation to the parenting. |
Sarah here. Unfortunately all Sarahs I meet bother me. I’ve thought about changing my name many times over the years. I’ve also thought about whether or not I might be a “Sarah”. Which is a scary thought. |
PP with neighbor John. I’ve actually never seen his name in writing so I got suspicious and googled him. His name is J-O-N. He’s our proof. |
In the weeks leading up to the election, I was stunned at the incoming predictive polls- my question being how was there even a critical mass of people who would even consider voting him in? My spouse repeated that above statement each time- not half, but MOST people have a lower than average IQ, so it shouldn't shock anyone. And so, here we are. This post, and everyone else here, who is attributing personality characteristics to common names is really a pretty good example of the general population's level of intellect. This does not bode well for future mankind. |
I’m willing to entertain this comment as long as you share your name first. |
This. I have never met a white person named Denise. I suppose it depends entirely on the diversity of the places one has lived. One of my most favorite math teachers in school was a Denise. She was (and probably still is) African American. |
Have you seen the Key and Peele skit about A A Ron, Balakie and De-Nice? Very funny. |
I don't think your husband understands statistics. |
That is quite funny. |
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It’s an outdated name people stopped using, so you’re looking at gen x middle class women mostly who have that name.
So I think it speaks to a generational thing more than anything else. |
| Pp here. By middle class I mean born middle class. They may be wealthy now, or poor, but the people who named them were likely middle class people who had a kid in the 1970s or thereabouts. |
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I can never embed YouTube videos correctly but this song is so perfect for this thread.
https://youtu.be/P6B-r3QQw9M?si=IXfZuFFcT3ncKlNf |