Freakonomics Radio - 122. How Much Does Your Name Matter?
Episode Date: April 8, 2013A kid's name can tell us something about his parents -- their race, social standing, even their politics. But is your name really your destiny? ...
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Dalton Conley is a sociologist at NYU.
He has a book coming out soon called Parentology.
It's about, well, here, let's have him tell you.
I think the subtitle says it all, which is a social scientist experiments on his kids so you don't have to.
Here they are.
Okay.
So here they are. You. So here they are.
You guys want to introduce yourselves?
I don't care who goes first.
Okay.
I'm E like the letter.
I'm 15 and I'm a student.
Okay.
Hi E.
I'm Yo in like the slang.
I'm 13 and I'm a student too.
That's right.
Dalton Conley named his daughter E and his son Yo.
But there's more.
Can you give your full name?
E. Harper Nora Jerry Majenko Conley.
Okay, so E is your first name.
The capital I see.
The idea is that she can choose what it stands for.
Right.
So E, you still call yourself E at 15.
Do you do so happily?
Yes, I love my name.
I don't blame you.
Once you're called something your whole life, you can't really change it.
Yo, can you give us your full name?
Yeah, sure.
Yo, Shing, Hano, Augustus, Eisner, Alexander, Weiser, Knuckles, Jeremijenko, Connolly.
So Yo, okay, where's your first name, Yo, comes from where?
I think it comes from the Y chromosome.
And that we were confounding ethnic stereotypes, so, you know, plenty of, there's plenty of Howard Chung's out there who assimilate to white America by how they choose their first name.
That's a classic immigrant strategy.
But there aren't many Conleys who take a Chinese...
Right, going the other way.
Yeo was actually born with a slightly less complicated name.
Yeo, Augustus, Eisner, Alexander, Weiser, Jeremijenko, Conley.
The Xing, Haino, and Knuckles were added later when he was about four.
And what about the order where these names were dropped in, the Haino and the Knuckles?
Whose choice was that?
I think that's just pleasing to the ear.
So the obvious question is, why? Why such unusual, complicated names? To some degree,
it's an experiment. Because Dalton Conley thinks that who you are, who you turn out to be,
may be related to what you're called when you're born.
Of course, it's hard to separate out cause and effect here until Kim Jong-un allows me to randomly assign all the names of the North Korean kids. But I can't know that I'm weird because I
was given a weird name
or because my parents are weird and they passed that on.
But my gut tells me that it does affect who you are and how you behave
and probably makes you more creative to have an unusual name.
All right, on balance, for both of you guys,
would you say that having an unusual name has been a positive or negative overall?
Well, you can never really know because you can't live another life,
but I do think that I'm grateful for my name,
and it has been a positive impact.
What is it like to have a dad who's a sociologist
who looks at children and people through a lens?
Well, it's trained me a lot in dealing with other adults
because when I was a kid, he could know when I'm lying,
so I got really good at lying and stuff.
But it kind of sucks to be experimented on.
All of a sudden, he's like,
guess what, son, you're not getting computer or TV for a month
because I want to see how that goes.
So you've told me how you feel about having your name,
but how do you feel about your parents giving you these names?
Well, it doesn't really weigh on me at all anymore,
but there's a bunch of people on the internet
that get super mad about,
have these angry comments about any article about it.
Like my dad's been called the retard of the decade and stuff for naming me that.
Really? Of the decade?
That's quite an honor.
The F-tard of the decade.
And does that hurt your feelings or more on your dad's behalf?
No, I found it really hilarious.
From WNYC and APM American Public Media, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
Hello, Freakonomics Radio.
Hello, Freakonomics guys. Hello, Freakonomics guys.
Hello, Dr. Lovett.
I'm calling to tell you about my name.
My name is Bronwyn Stein.
Arwin, Laurelyn, Hanukkah, Nick, the third.
Mashiach Hawk.
M-A-S-H-I-Y-A-T-H.
A-Z-Z-O-R-R-A-H-H-J-A-S-E-L-Y-N.
You're never supposed to trust a man with two first names.
A-U-N-A-K-U, wait, A-U-N-A-H-H-K-W-A-apostrophe-I-L.
My full name currently is Letter M.
Marie Maxwell.
My name used to be Vonnie Wobig, so my initials were VW, but then I got married and now my initials are VD.
Yeah.
My name is R. Eugene Russell, which is both the question and the answer.
So what do you think of someone who names his kids E and Yo?
Well, that probably depends on a lot of things.
Your personal preferences, also your religious and familial traditions.
You may think it's clever and creative.
You may think it's silly, even cruel.
Now, will E and Yo, the people, turn out to be different than if they'd been named Sarah and Jake.
As E put it, very wisely,
Well, you can never really know because you can't live another life.
You can't live another life.
And that's why it's hard to measure something like the effect of a name.
My Freakonomics friend and co-author, Steve Levitt,
he has spent his academic career trying to come up with clever ways to measure things.
And he's thought quite a bit about the names we give our kids.
Yeah, I think ultimately all a name really does is it's a vehicle for the parents to signal what
kind of person they are.
It's really a means of establishing.
They are and or the kind of person that they hope their child will become.
I don't even know if I think it's the second.
I think it really is about the parents that as I've studied naming, what I've come to believe is that the primary purpose when a parent gives a name is to impress their friends that they are whatever kind of person they want to be.
And I think some of the best evidence of this comes from the radical revolution in black names that happened in the 1970s.
People don't really remember this, but if you go back to the 1960s, blacks and whites basically were giving their kids pretty much the same sets of names, not really very different, a lot of overlap.
But within about a seven-year period in the 1970s, names just completely diverged.
And among most African Americans now are given names that virtually no whites have. What we saw was in a period that really coincides with the black power movement and a very strong move away from the initial civil rights movement was that names changed completely.
And many black parents decided, I think, that the identity they wanted for their children was one that was distinct from white culture.
Now, the fact is that black and white names 100 years ago could be really different, too.
Black baby boys were often given names that relatively few whites had.
Ambrose and Booker, Moses and Percy.
And the modern equivalents, Deshaun and Marquise, Tyrone and Demetrius.
Some years back, Steve Levitt started to wonder if these distinctively black names mattered. That is, whether they affected, for better or worse, the life of a kid with such a name.
So Levitt did some research with Roland Fryer, an economist at Harvard,
who was devoted to explaining the gap between blacks and whites in education, income, and culture.
Here's Levitt again.
We didn't really care about black names, per se.
What Roland and I were trying to get at was black culture.
So the idea was we knew that we observed really big differences in economic outcomes for African Americans and for whites.
We know we observed really big cultural differences between African Americans and for whites. We know we observe really big cultural differences
between African Americans and whites.
And the question was, is there any causal link between those two?
Could it be that somehow black culture was interfering with black economic success?
And the difficulty whenever you start talking about things like culture
is how do you quantify it?
How do you capture what culture means in a way that an economist in data would find it?
And so what we settled on was the idea that you could use names as an indicator of culture
because the set of names that parents choose are very different for blacks and whites,
and they also reflect the way that people think about the world.
My name is Hawa Nana Aradua Lasana.
My parents are Ghanaian and Liberian,
and I'm first-generation African-American.
My first name is Shana. It's a Jewish name, but people always seem to think I'm black.
My name is Stefan, and I'm coincidentally African-American.
So people automatically assume that my name is Stefan when they're reading it,
even though it's spelled S-P-E-P-H-E-N.
So the ultimate question we wanted to answer is,
does your name matter for the economic life that you end up leading? Are people who are, quote, saddled with distinctively black names
facing a burden when they enter the labor market?
So wanting to study names and having the right data set are two different things.
But we managed to stumble onto an amazing data set that was kept by the state of California.
It encompassed the birth certificate of every person born in the state of California
between 1960 and the year 2000.
And it included the name of the baby, the first and last
name, the first and last name of the mother, and the maiden name of the mother, along with a lot
of other information about the hospital and the kind of health care that the mother had that gave
you a hint at some of the economic circumstances. And this turned out to be the absolutely perfect data set to do what we wanted to do.
What we could do is we could match up two young African-American girls at birth, say born in 1965, who are born at the same hospital about the same time to a set of parents who
on all the data we have look very similar, except that one of those sets of parents give their daughter a distinctively black name,
like Shaniqua, say, and the other set of parents give their baby a more traditional white name,
like Anne or Elizabeth.
And so what do we do?
We follow those girls.
We fast forward, say, 25 years into the future when those girls grow up in California and have babies themselves.
And so from when they give birth, we can see what kind of lives they're leading, whether they have fancy health care, whether they're married, how old they are when they have babies, things like that.
And we get a glimpse into their economic life. It's not perfect. We certainly don't know everything about them, but we know certain things about them.
And we were able to see something quite remarkable, which is that the name that you were given at birth seemed not to matter at all to your economic life.
Remember that conclusion.
The name you were given at birth does not seem to matter at all to your economic life. In other words, it's not the name your parents give you.
It's the kind of parents you have in the first place.
And different kinds of parents, of course, choose different kinds of names.
So let's say two similar families, both African-American, each have a baby girl. One
is called Molly, which it happens is one of the whitest girls' names in America.
And the other is called Latanya, which is a distinctively black name. Now, if decades later, Molly becomes, let's say, a professor at Harvard,
and Latanya is just barely scraping by, well, the reason won't be because Latanya's parents
named her Latanya. Begin, if you would, just by introducing yourself, say your name and what you
do. Sure. I'm Latanya Sweeney. I'm a professor of government and technology here at Harvard.
Okay, so there you go. At Harvard, Latanya Sweeney studies how technology can help solve
society's problems. In the course of doing so, she occasionally discovers a new problem.
Like the day not long ago, when she and a colleague named Adam Tanner were working in her office.
He and I were working on a different project and he needed to find a paper of mine.
So he went to my computer and Googled my name.
And along with the links to various papers and so forth,
this ad popped up to the right that said,
LaTanya Sweeney arrested.
And I basically almost fell out of the chair because, one, I'd never been arrested.
And then my name is so unusual that it's hard to imagine that that could have been a mistake.
And the name appeared right in the ad.
So then we typed in his name and his name, a white male name, Adam Tanner. And the same company had an ad. So then we typed in his name and his name, a white male name, Adam Tanner, and the same company
had an ad, but the ad just said, looking for Adam Tanner. It was very neutral. It didn't have any,
the word arrested didn't show up, no reference to a criminal record.
So did you immediately become suspicious or did you just think, well, this is some kind of one-off
and let me explore further? Well, right. I mean, on the one hand,
you think it's one-off, but on the other hand further. Well, right. I mean, on the one hand, you think it's one-off.
But on the other hand, it's something kind of fluky.
But on the other hand, you're like, well, why did it happen?
And so we began just entering names and all kinds of names.
And we spent a couple of hours doing so.
The ads were for a company called Instant Checkmate, which sells public records.
The ads appear when you do a Google search for the first and last name of a real person.
But a given name search might generate different versions of the ad.
Some of them are neutral, like looking for Molly Sweeney.
And others, like the one Latanya Sweeney found, seemed to offer up arrest records.
Sweeney and Tanner started doing lots of name searches to see if they could find a pattern
to the ads.
And we began focusing on LaTanya versus Tanya.
And what we found in each of those cases was if you had LaTanya with a last name, you got
an ad suggesting that you had an arrest record.
And if you typed in Tanya with a last name, you got an ad suggesting that you had an arrest record. And if you typed in
Tanya with a last name, you didn't. Then Adam jumps to this conclusion. He says, oh, I get it.
They're coming up. The arrest ads are coming up when there's a black sounding name. And I said,
that's impossible. That's crazy talk. And I eventually got to the point where I said,
OK, I'm a scientist. Let me put on my official science hat
and start from step one. And I'm going to show Adam he's wrong. That was the whole goal,
was to show him he was wrong. The goal was never to write a paper. The goal was to show Adam he was
wrong. The first step for Sweeney was to simply define what is a black name and what is a white name. So she assembled
some data, which included the lists that we created for our first book, Freakonomics, of the
whitest and blackest names among baby boys and girls. So the white female names were Molly, Amy,
Claire, Emily, Katie, Madeline, Caitlin, and Emma. The black female names, Imani, Ebony, Shanice,
Aliyah, Precious, Nia, Deja, Diamond, Latanya, and Letitia. The white male names were Jake,
Connor, Tanner, Wyatt, Cody, Dustin, Luke, and Jack. And the black male names Deshawn, DeAndre, Marcus, Darnell, Terrell, Malik, Trevon,
and Tyrone. In order to prompt the Google ads, Sweeney needed to find real first and last names,
some black and some white. So she would type in a search like Shanice PhD or Molly MBA to find real people, some of whom were, like herself, professionals.
And then she would feed those real names back into Google to see what ads they would prompt.
So break it down for me, Latanya.
Having a distinctively black first name makes it how likely to prompt an ad for an arrest record and compare that to having a distinctively white name then?
Well, a black identifying name was 25 percent more likely than American is more likely to get arrested than the average white American.
Well, what's interesting is these ads appear regardless of whether the company actually has a criminal record for that name in their database.
As most people know by now, Google makes its money with a program called AdWords, which serves ads that are linked to the content that you search for.
Advertisers, like Instant Checkmate, agree to pay a certain amount each time their ad is clicked on.
They provide Google with several versions of ad text, and they can specify which keywords, or in this case, which key names, will prompt
each version of the ad. It is, of course, in the best interest of both Google and the advertiser
to serve the ads that will get the most clicks.
The idea of the Google algorithm is it says, okay, we don't know which of these five versions of ads are going to make the most money.
So what we're going to do is we're going to let the algorithm learn over time which one tends to get the most clicks.
So at first, all five ad copies, say for Ebony Jones, are equally likely to appear.
And so it would randomly pick one on a search for Ebony Jones, display it.
If that one gets clicked, it gets weighted.
And so over time, the one having the heaviest weight will get displayed more often.
If we assume for a moment that Instant Checkmate had placed the ads
somewhat roughly the same text for all the names evenly,
let's just assume that's the case. Then an explanation of
what we're seeing is that it's basically some kind of bias effect from society. So people see an
arrest ad for a black name, they tend to click it. But when they see the arrest ad associated with a
white name, they tend to ignore it. Okay, so this is important, though, because when you come out
with a finding like this, most people immediately want to search for the villain.
You're saying the villain might be the company, the villain might be Google, and the villain might be all of us.
Right.
So let's get back to your name. So when your name first showed up, when Adam searched for your name on your computer and the ad that was generated said Latanya Sweeney arrested.
Take me down the road now from there to why that matters, what it implies, what it made you feel personally about your name being there.
And more broadly, how what's wrong with that? In terms of for me personally,
it was really this shock factor, you know, that I had never been arrested. And it's kind of you
don't want that associated with you. You know, like, why should that be associated with my name
or my image to anyone? And when I put my scientific hat on, the question was, what does racial
discrimination really mean? And how do you operationalize it scientifically or statistically?
And so racial discrimination basically results when a person or a group of people are being treated differently. opportunities, there might be some kind of economic loss or something along those lines
that they would otherwise be entitled to, but they're being denied it on the basis of race.
The other thing that I look to in terms of structuring how this fit into societal norms
versus technology was realizing that searching online, especially when the ads are delivered
by such a huge service like Google Ads,
it almost begins to harbor this notion of structural racism. That is that you can't help
but it foster a discriminatory outcome. So two people are in contest. I Google one name and I
end up with an arrest ad. I Google the other name and there's no implication of an arrest ad.
Even if I never click it, it has the difference of that implication.
So even though you obviously have a good job now, did it concern you for your future?
No.
No.
No, I tell you, when I got really moved in that regard was more looking at the faces
of the names of these young PhD students and people who are just launching their careers.
There was one name, I forget which name it is, but I remember it was a young woman.
She was so proud.
She had just published her first paper.
She was a graduate student in a PhD program.
And there's her name and there's this ad arrested and how wrong that was.
It just seems so wrong. For the record, a Google spokesperson told us that, quote, AdWords does not conduct any racial profiling.
It is up to individual advertisers to decide which keywords they want to choose to trigger their ads, end quote.
Instant Checkmate didn't respond to our query, but an official statement from the
company about the Tanya Sweeney study says, quote, Instant Checkmate would like to state unequivocally
that it has never engaged in racial profiling in Google AdWords and that we have absolutely
no technology in place to even connect a name with a race, end quote. So whoever the villain is here, and it may be us,
the people who click, the point is that in this case, your name matters. Now, remember,
Steve Leavitt and Roland Fryer's research found that your name doesn't affect your economic
outcome. But you can certainly imagine a circumstance
wherein Latanya Sweeney,
before she got hired at Harvard, let's say,
might have suffered the consequences of her name
if an HR person was Googling her
and saw that arrested ad,
even if the HR person didn't bother to click on the ad.
And even though Latanya Sweeney herself hadn't been arrested.
It could certainly change the calculus of a hiring decision, don't you think?
When we come back, we'll tally up the score.
Does your name matter or doesn't it?
And we will look at the naming patterns among
conservative families, which tend to be pretty conservative, and liberal families.
Educated liberal mothers tend to be choosing names that sort of are obscure cultural references. And
so these are the Esmées and the Unas and the Archimedes and the Emersons. And we think this is a way that liberals
sort of signal their cultural, for lack of a better word, their sense of cultural superiority.
Hi, my name is Rocket Haverland, and I live in Denver, Colorado. I'm 10 years old, and
I think my name, Rocket, is actually kind of cool, and other people think it is.
My dad's a rocket engineer, so a lot of people think that my name, Rocket, was because of him,
but actually, it was the opposite.
He was in college when I was born, and then when I was one or two,
he got out of college and was looking for a job and tried out for this rocket engineer interview.
And when he was in the interview,
he mentioned that his son's name was Rocket,
and so he got the job.
So I kind of think he got the job because of me.
And my sister wants me to mention that her name is Roxanne.
Oh!
From WNYC and APM American Public
Media, this is Freakonomics
Radio.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
My name is Harry Gill Potter.
Sometime around 2000, all of a sudden, every time I went to the airport or tried to use my credit card,
suddenly everybody thought it was really, really funny.
Hi, my name is Chardonnay Bickard.
My twin sister's name is Paris.
My parents' name is Chardonnay and Paris because it related to where we were conceived.
My dad always said that it was better than being named Bud and Ford, which is probably some other kid's conception story.
Hi, my name is Ellen, Ellen Chang, but actually my formal name on my passport is Ching Ching Chang.
That is a translation of my Chinese name.
Originally in Chinese, it's actually pronounced Zhang Jingqi,
but it became Ching Ching Chang, which is weird.
So the economists Steve Levitt and Roland Fryer went through decades of baby name data
and concluded that the name you give your child
does not move the needle on that child's future economic life.
But there's other research which finds that a name may matter, at least on some dimensions.
Boys with feminine names, it's been argued, act up more in school.
A girl with a masculine name, meanwhile, is more likely to have a successful legal career.
And another study by Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Malinathan
was called, Are Emily and Greg More Employable Than Lakeisha and Jamal? This study found that
if you send out a resume with a white-sounding name, it's about 50% more likely to get a callback
than an identical resume where all you've done is
change the name to a black sounding name. So which argument is right? Does the name matter
or does it not matter? I think that both could be right. There are ways to reconcile them. So
let's start with the audit studies. That's Steve Levitt again. The audit
study is the one with the resumes. So in the audit studies, what researchers do is take identical
resumes and they just change the name, the first name, so that one name is distinctively black and
another name isn't. And they send those out to employers and see whether there's a callback.
And what they find every time is that if you have a distinctively black name, you're less likely to get a callback. So how can that be reconciled
with the fact that in our data, in real life data, how people actually lived, the names didn't seem
to matter? Well, I think the answer comes in a couple different ways. The first is that just
because you get a callback doesn't mean that you're likely to get a job. And so to the extent that there are discriminatory employers out there,
and those discriminatory employers are using your name to figure out whether or not you're black,
then indeed the worst thing you could possibly do would be to show up for an interview,
if you are black, with a white name,
and have wasted all day trundling downtown to do the interview for a discriminatory employer who's not going to hire you anyway.
Now, that's one possibility.
The other possibility is that there are two different kinds of labor markets.
There's a sort of formal labor market that involves resumes and applying, and really hardly anybody gets jobs that way.
That's not the typical way people get jobs.
And your black name might hurt you in that segment, but it might actually help you in other areas. So you can certainly imagine that within the black community, having a distinctively black name would help you get
along better with people, signal that you're part of the community, and might work in your favor
in all sorts of informal networks that aren't captured in these audit data. Hi, this is Dee Dee Jones, but my first name is actually Ray Dena.
My parents very romantically named me Ray Dena after themselves, Raymond and Dena.
However, in the mid-80s, when applying for jobs in Denver, used Ray Dina Jones on my
resume and got a big fat zero number of responses. Now, newly minted CPA, pretty marketable kind of
person back then, sent out resume after resume with no response, changed my resume name to D.D.
Jones rather than Ray Dina Jones, and instantly started getting responses. So I
think I might be the blondest, most blue eyed person ever discriminated against based on the
name that sounded very, very ethnic. All right, let's get beyond black and white names. The fact
is that your name will probably not affect your life
too much in any significant way, but it can tell people a little something about who your parents
are. There are patterns to be gleaned from names data, not only ethnic and religious patterns, but
clues about your parents' values and their social standing.
Yeah, one of the most predictable patterns when
it comes to names is that almost every name that becomes popular starts out as a high class name
or a high education name. So in these California data we had, we could see the education level of
the parents. And even the names that eventually become the, quote, trashiest kinds of names. So the Tiffany's and the Britney's and I'll probably get myself into trouble and the Caitlin's and things like that start at the top of the income distribution.
And over the course of 20 or 30 or 40 years, they migrate their way down, becoming more and more popular among the less educated set. And as names become popular among the less educated,
the higher educated parents absolutely abandon these names and don't want anything to do with them. We named our daughter Esme, you know, because it's this kind of obscure literary
reference to a J.D. Salinger short story as a way of signaling to other people, oh, if you know that
Esme references J.D. Salinger, you as a way of signaling to other people, oh, if you know that Esme
references J.D. Salinger, you'll know of our, you know, great intellect.
That's Eric Oliver.
I'm a professor of political science at the University of Chicago.
Okay.
And what's a successful political scientist like you doing mucking around in the baby
name research ghetto?
Well, I was very interested in this question
of ideological polarization.
We hear a lot these days about liberals and conservatives,
and particularly about how liberals drive Volvos,
drink lattes, listen to NPR,
conservatives drive trucks, watch NASCAR.
And I wanted to see if there was any truth
to these allegations.
And the difficulty is when you look at consumer products is that consumer products are marketed to specific groups.
And a lot of products, what may look like a conservative or a liberal product, may be more a function of region or social class and not necessarily a product of ideology per se. So is Subaru a liberal car or is just Subaru a car that's more likely to be driven in snowy
mountain roads, which typically are more liberal voting areas?
But baby names, Eric Oliver figured, were a pretty straight up indicator of, well, of
something.
Baby names, what is at first glance may seem like a relatively frivolous kind of concept.
They're incredibly powerful indicators of status, of aspiration, of taste and identity.
And so we thought, wow, you know, baby names would be a great place to look.
If we were particularly interested, do liberals and conservatives have fundamentally different tastes? Also, do liberals and conservatives exhibit any systematic differences
in how they signal to each other or to the rest of the country what their tastes are, what their
values are? And do these signals penetrate more than just, say, something like a bumper sticker
or a t-shirt with a political slogan, but actually influence other ways that they sort of act and talk and behave in society.
Eric Oliver, like Steve Levitt, used the very rich database from the state of California.
In addition to listing every baby born, it listed information about the mother,
including age, race, education level, and zip code, from which
it's easy to figure out whether the family lives in a predominantly liberal or conservative
neighborhood. So as a mother becomes better educated, she's much more likely to give her
boy or girl a popular name and much less likely to give her an uncommon or unique name. And one
of the statistics that just leaps out at us about this is that amongst
African-American mothers with less than a high school degree, 36% of them give their daughters
a unique name. Now, just the statistical probability that you could give your child a name that nobody
else would have is really kind of remarkable. And if you think about it as a sort of act of
imagination, it's pretty astounding. Let me ask you this, though. So you're saying that generally, higher income families, higher status families tend to use
more popular names. But we should distinguish, and I may be wrong here, but let me ask you,
once you get over a certain level of education, the most highly educated families then tend to
go a little bit more into the less popular, more cutting-edge
names or no?
Well, this is where ideology starts to have an effect.
Amongst educated white mothers, mothers with some college education or a college degree,
by and large, they tend to favor more common or popular names for their children than less
educated white mothers, except when you start talking about their ideology.
Suddenly, you get a big difference here.
And what you find is that conservative mothers are much more likely to stay with
and choose common or popular names,
but liberal mothers now are starting to choose
more uncommon names.
A liberal mother is about 50% more likely
to give her girl an uncommon or unique name
than a conservative mother.
And she's about 40% more likely to give
her boy an uncommon or unique name compared to a conservative mother. Now, there's a big difference
between the uncommon names that an educated liberal mother is giving her child versus an
uneducated, non-ideological mother. Our less educated mothers, when they're giving unique
or uncommon names, they're oftentimes either taking a normal name and giving it a very weird spelling like Madison with two Ys, or they're just making a name up that has never existed before like Doringa.
Uh-huh.
Oh, I like Doringa.
Whereas our educated liberal mothers tend to be choosing names that sort of are obscure cultural references.
And so these are the Esmées and the Unas and the
Archimedes and the Emersons. And we think this is a way that liberals sort of signal their cultural,
for lack of a better word, their sense of cultural superiority. It's a way of signaling
great cultural capital. Why don't you tell me the central finding about the sounds of liberal
versus conservative names? conservatives tend to be drawn to more kind of masculine, paternalistic kind of metaphors in
their political rhetoric, and that liberals tend to be drawn to more nurturing, feminine kinds of
metaphors in their political rhetoric. And we wanted to test this out and see that, well,
does this also influence name choice? And would conservatives choose more masculine-sounding
types of names and liberals choose more feminine-sounding kinds of names? Well,
then that begs the question, what's a feminine-sounding name and what's a masculine-sounding types of names, and liberals choose more feminine-sounding kinds of names. Well, then that begs the question, what's a feminine-sounding name and what's a masculine-sounding
name? Boys' names are more likely to have hard consonants, to be monosyllabic.
Kurt.
Yeah, Kurt. And to have that er sound is very common in boys' names. They're more likely to
have that o, like kind of jo sound. Whereas girls' names are much more likely to end in a schwa-ay sound,
that like Ella or Thea. And they're much more likely to have Ls in them. And they're much
more likely to end in that E sound. Gotcha. So Ls and vowel endings for girls and boys,
kind of short, stout, compact, hard consonants, roughly? Right. So what we find is that,
by and large, conservatives choose more
masculine-sounding names for both boys and girls. Ah, okay. And liberals are much more likely to
choose feminine-sounding names for both boys and girls. Gotcha. And so if you really want to know
the most quintessentially kind of ideological-sounding names, let's compare the Obama
girls and the Palin kids. So the Obama girls are Sasha
and Malia, very nice, feminine, soft sounding names. And then think about the Palin kids. We
have Trigg, Track, Bristol, and Piper. And there's Willow there too. And I think that was an
ideological hiccup on Sarah Palin's part. All right. So let me just ask you off the top of
your head, Eric, let's say that you now knowing what you know about this research were to see
two houses on a hill, one on each hill. And in the one is a high income, very ideologically
liberal family. And then the other is a-income ideological conservative family. And they're all white.
And both families have 10 children.
Okay?
I want you to name the 10 children in each of the households, please.
Just tell me what you think they'd be.
Say there are five boys and five girls in each house.
Okay.
So in the conservative house, the boys would be likely to be something like Andrew, Ethan, Dylan, Caleb, and Carter.
The girls would have names like Casey, Mackenzie, Jordan, Taylor, and Sarah.
In our liberal house, we would have some of the same names because there are a lot of names that go across ideology.
So we'd probably find another Ethan in the liberal house.
But we're more likely to find a Joshua, a Dylan, a Charlie, and a Leaf among the boys. The girls would have much more
distinct kinds of names. They would have names like Lola, Mia, Thea, Eliana, and Ruby.
Gotcha. So I guess the question is this, though. Most signaling, it strikes me,
is done subconsciously at best, but not overtly consciously. In fact, I guess what I'm saying is
most people would never admit to saying, I want to give my child an X name or a Y name so that
people will know that I am X or Y. Do you agree or no? Oh, I very much agree. And that's what's
fascinating about this is that there are these trends happening in names, but I don't think the
people who are giving the names are conscious of the forces that are influencing their own
behaviors and their decisions. And this is common with baby names. I mean, everyone thinks that
they're choosing, oh, a name that's just so special for their child, and it's only when
they get to the playground and there are half a dozen other Ellas there, they realize that, oh,
you know, maybe I'm part of a social trend.
Hi, my name is Stephen Daniel Fast.
My name is Stephen William Zekoff.
First name is Steve, never Stephen.
Stephen with a P-H, not with a V.
If you use a V, I'll become very aggressive and refuse to cash your checks.
So, Levitt, you and I share a first name, although we spell it differently.
You go for the V. I've got the P-H.
I have to tell you, last time I looked, the P-H was definitely the higher end of the two names,
although obviously you're higher end than me. So how much can that really say? Yeah, my parents missed the boat. By the time
they named me, Steve was in serious decline. I was the tail end of the Stevens. You're a few
years older than me. Your parents were definitely hipper than my parents. No, no, no. Plus they were
just looking for the good saint. But our names, especially if you combine the two spellings, we were, I think, top three or four in the country at the time.
Have you looked at it lately, Stephen?
I haven't, but I know we're almost impossible to find right now.
Yeah, yeah.
Let me ask you this.
So when we wrote about names in Freakonomics, we made it pretty clear that naming is not destiny, right? That was
really one of the single biggest takeaways. In fact, we told the story of these two brothers
in New York whose parents had named them Loser and Winner. And the fact was, is that Loser turned
out to have a great life as an upstanding citizen. He was a police detective. And Winner had been a
career criminal. And we told that story to reinforce the point
that naming is not destiny. However, do you find that a lot of people who read Freakonomics get it
or remember it exactly wrong? Yeah, it is amazing how everyone thinks that we said the opposite.
People want so badly to believe that name, the destiny. And what's funny, I mean, the ultimate is Morgan Spurlock.
So in the Freakonomics movie, he gets a chapter on names, and he does it completely backwards.
And we tell him that it's completely backwards, and he's completely unbothered by the fact that he's gotten it completely backwards and makes names Destiny.
It's just an example, Dubner, of how you and I, we can do whatever we want, but nobody cares in the end.
People will read it. They'll talk about it. They'll say how great it is. And then they just do the opposite.
So what Levitt is talking about is the Freakonomics documentary that came out a couple years ago.
It was made by a bunch of different directors, each of them focusing on a different chapter of the book.
Morgan Spurlock did the chapter about names. Now, as you just heard Levitt say,
the film version seemed to come to some different conclusions than the book. So we called up Morgan,
full name Morgan Valentine Spurlock, by the way, to get his take.
I have to disagree with Dr. Levitt here because what we started to find in the course of making
the film is that, you know, names can make a difference. And even though data starts to show
you that ultimately at the end of the day, for most people, it doesn't at all. People are still
going to do what ultimately they believe is going to be best for their child. And it may work in the end.
Most of the time it doesn't.
But that's never going to stop someone from believing that the one name that they give
their kid is going to put that kid in a better place down the road.
Because, you know, we all like to believe that our kids are somehow more special.
No matter what's happened in the past, no matter what historically has been proven,
that, you know, somehow our one kid is going to be the one that breaks out from what everyone else has had happen to them in the past.
One thing that most of us probably can agree on, just about every parent thinks that his or her kid is special on some level.
And part of what makes each of our kids special
is the names we give them.
But from what we can tell,
your name is not your destiny.
Even if your name is Destiny or Esme or Archimedes or Kurt,
it is true that your name may tell the world something, maybe even
something fairly significant about your parents' religious or ethnic background, their level of
income or education, maybe even their politics. But just think about it for a minute. Think about
all the things that make you, you. Your intelligence, your taste, your health, your work ethic and morals and decision-making,
to say nothing of luck.
Now, considering all of those heavyweight forces,
how much could something as superficial as a name really affect your life's outcome?
Plus which, if you really think your name is holding you back,
isn't that hard to change it?
You remember the Conley family? The dad is Dalton. He's the sociologist at NYU, and he named his kids Yo and E. They have thought about names more than any other family I know,
so I figured they'd be good people to ask about this. Let me ask you one last thing.
So my name is extremely boring, Stephen.
There are a lot of people my age named Steve or Stephen.
I meet them all the time.
And honestly, it's kind of a letdown.
It's like you meet someone new
and you kind of want them to be something interesting.
And it's like, oh, you're Steve also.
You don't feel some camaraderie
or that you're a member of a club?
Less than that. I'm the member
of a club that I don't want to belong to.
It's just like boring.
But I don't have the courage
or whatever to give myself a new name.
So since you guys are so good
at having a lot of names
and giving yourself alternatives,
can you give me a name?
Can you rename me?
Eyelash.
Perfect.
Signing off for Freakonomics Radio,
this is Eyelash Dubner.
Thank you for joining us,
E, Yo, and Dalton.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by WNYC, APM, American Public Media, and Dubner Productions.
This episode was produced by Katherine Wells.
Our staff includes Susie Lechtenberg, David Herman, Beret Lam, and Chris Bannon.
Colin Campbell is our executive producer.
And a special thanks goes out to you, our readers and listeners, for sharing your unusual names with us.
If you want more Freakonomics Radio, you can subscribe to our podcast on iTunes or go to Freakonomics.com,
where you'll find lots of radio, a blog, the books, and more. © transcript Emily Beynon