Yeah, and every time the name thing comes up, Chris points out that the kid's middle name is Benjamin, so it's not like he's a complete monster.
At least none of the kids is named Infinite. Honestly, when your name is a common word there are just too few names that won't escape some sort of mockery. Because we live in a puerile world, sometimes.
The funny thing is that almost none of us had noticed that Ariel's name is a pun...
She married into that one, though. I would have. That's a subtle one, and therefore a good one.
Including that none of them are saints' names, because it was a Catholic blog. Weirdly, one of the examples given of "not a saint's name" is Aidan; Saint Aidan was at Lindisfarne.
Utah has its own odd name space. Some names borrow from the majority religion, but most are simply ill-conceived collisions among nonsense syllables. The formula
something-en is the most common. The rest are contrived respellings of reasonably acceptable names, requiring even common-sounding names to be spelled explicitly whenever invoked. I know a half-dozen or so Bradens, each with a different spelling.
Outside of Utah I think the most amusing example was a recruiter I used to work with named Cortney Marshall, who insisted on going by Cort.
I leave my documentary appearances off my theater resume to avoid confusion. I put them on my professional resume. Before that, casting directors had trouble comprehending my on-screen appearances.
Good catch on the saint name. I believe a kid needs at least one name to go by that isn't going to get him teased at a tender age. Oddly enough, my neighbor kids growing up all had interesting nicknames: Tad, Izz-Bizz, Bomb, Boo, and Geedo. They were used so frequently that we lost sight of how ridiculous some of them sounded, and even occasionally forgot their real names. I'm hoping the Church Invisible continues to provide names that are still viable centuries hence.
The larger issue of asserting that someone is fake because they have an unusual or clever name is, I agree, consummately grasping at straws.