How popular is the baby name Iuma in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Iuma.
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Back in February, video game company Bethesda Softworks announced that it would give a prize to the parents of any 11/11/11 baby named Dovahkiin after Laat Dovahkiin (a.k.a. Last Dragonborn) — the protagonist (and player’s character) in their latest game, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.
I didn’t blog about the offer, but I did mention it in a comment on the 11/11/11 post.
So what happened?
Well, one couple took them up on it.
Megan and Eric Kellermeyer (of the webcomic site Shards) welcomed a baby boy on 11/11/11 and named him Dovahkiin Tom Kellermeyer. Megan discusses the naming decision here.
Megan and Eric now get free Bethesda video games for life. (Hopefully Bethesda will last longer than IUMA did.)
In 2002, Acclaim Entertainment held a baby name contest. The video game company offered $10,000 in savings bonds to the first family to welcome a baby on September 1 and name it “Turok” after a the dinosaur-hunting protagonist of the video game Turok: Evolution, set to be released the same day.
Did anyone take them up on the offer? I don’t know. Acclaim Entertainment went out of business in 2004, so there’s no one around to ask.
Long before MySpace and Napster, there was the Internet Underground Music Archive, or IUMA (pronounced ie-YOO-mah).
Created in 1993 by a trio University of California computer science students, IUMA (www.iuma.com) was the first major music distribution website. Its goal was to help unsigned artists publicize their music and talk directly to fans.
In mid-2000, IUMA launched the “Name Your Baby IUMA” contest.
You love your baby. You love new music. Prove your love and devotion to both by naming your baby IUMA!
Why a baby name contest?
We had a really small advertising budget. And we were looking for a way to let the whole world know about IUMA and IUMA artists. We couldn’t afford TV or radio ads, and we couldn’t afford giant billboards! Then we realized that these ads get far fewer impressions than someone’s name! We decided to throw our advertising dollars into a campaign that will have a lifetime of impact!
The parents of the first ten U.S. babies named “Iuma” between August 1, 2000, and November 1, 2000, would get their choice of either $5,000 or $100-worth of music downloads per month for (the baby’s) life.
So did any parents take the bait?
Yes, a handful of babies were indeed named Iuma in 2000. Enough baby girls got the name, in fact, that the music site’s acronym appeared for the first and only time in the U.S. baby name data that year:
2002: unlisted
2001: unlisted
2000: 8 baby girls named Iuma [debut]
1999: unlisted
1998: unlisted
And that’s not all. Several baby boys also got the name, as did a handful of international babies (in Brazil, Germany and Russia).
Which of these babies became the 10 verified winners? Here’s the official list:
Iuma Dylan-Lucas Thornhill, born on August 11, 2000, in Hutchinson, Kansas
Iuma Ross, born on August 21, 2000, Williamsburg, Pennsylvania
Iuma Becht born on September 1, 2000, in Augusta, Georgia
Iuma Carlton, born on September 8, 2000, in St. Petersburg, Florida
Iuma Farish, born on September 13, 2000, in Dallas, Texas
Iuma Devi, born on August 31, 2000, in Cambria, California
Iuma Godfrey, born on September 21, 2000, in Los Angeles, California
Iuma Daigre, born on October 5, 2000, in Houston, Texas
Iuma Radnedge, born on October 6, 2000, in Dallas, Texas
Iuma Hebert, born on October 6, 2000, in Dallas, Texas
The rest of the babies named Iuma (including Iuma Rose Carter of Carvers, Nevada; Iuma Heidi VanRyker of Darmstadt, Germany; and Iuma Dara Lewis of New York City) didn’t make the cut.
Here’s what Travis Thornhill — father of the first-born winner, and bass player whose band used IUMA for promotion — told reporters upon winning (and choosing the $5,000 option):
My wife was overdue, and the hospital had to induce labor for the child to be born. On the day we were going into the hospital, I logged into IUMA and saw the ‘Name Your Baby IUMA’ contest, which I took as a sign. My wife liked the idea because the child’s grandma said this baby would bring prosperity, and this contest could be what she was talking about. Plus, the kid will have a cool story when he grows up.
Hopefully the other winners also went with the one-time payment of $5,000, as IUMA went belly-up about a year after the contest. It was offline entirely by 2006.
P.S. Though the company is long gone, much of the music itself is still online! Check out the Internet Archive’s IUMA collection.
Images: Screenshots of IUMA’s webpage
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