Fair amount of chatter over the 'net about it too. I'm guessing that this is exactly what the parents wanted.<o =""></o>
This also brings up an interesting question about children, and the internet. Here we have a baby named to generate controversy. How is she going to feel about this as she grows up? How is she going to feel about any potential 15 Minutes of Fame she may receive? What happens when she goes to school, and everyone knows all about her birth, has seen her short TV spot, and has photoshopped images such as this one ready at hand to tease her with? Similar questions arise with the Star Wars Kid, Judo Jump Man, Achia, Crazy Chinese Firecracker Boy, and numerous other people who have achieved notoriety on the web for their ludicrous videotaped actions.
*thoughts fueled by five cans of diet coke and head cold drugs.
Like "I'm Sandy, Sandy Beach", only better!
Suuuuuuuure Kas, 'head cold' drugs.
*tries to delete thread*
Poor kid...
*laughs*
I think its great!
*thinks up some names for his own*
I think its great!
*thinks up some names for his own*
Wow. Has anyone read some of the (other) message boards currently discussing this topic? Some awfully bitter people spend their days surfing the net.
But there have had to be names like this in the past, right?
'Aryan Justice' could be a normal name if you said it right.
There's a right and wrong way of saying it?
1. It'd be ironic if she were black.
2. Who surfs hospital birth sites?
3. lol.. *wonders what names Seth thought up*
2. Who surfs hospital birth sites?
3. lol.. *wonders what names Seth thought up*