Celebrity baby name: True

American actor Forest Whitaker
Forest Whitaker

Actor Forest Whitaker and his late ex-wife, Keisha Nash, were the parents of four children:

  • Ocean, b. 1990 (Forest’s son from a previous relationship)
  • Autumn, b. 1991 (Keisha’s daughter from a previous relationship)
  • Sonnet, b. 1996 (daughter)
  • True, b. 1998 (daughter)

Their youngest, True Whitaker, was interviewed several days after the birth of Khloé Kardashian’s daughter True (in April of 2018). In the interview, she told the story behind her name:

Whitaker discovered that her parents originally planned to name her Truth before deciding on True, which was inspired by Lauryn Hill‘s version of “Can’t Take My Eyes off of You” by Frankie Valli. “I remember to this day my mother singing the lyrics ‘You’re just too good to be True’ to me in my little cradle.”

True Whitaker’s birth did not noticeably affect the usage of the baby name True in the late ’90s, but the birth of her older sister did give the rare name Sonnet a boost in 1997.

Sources:

Image: Adapted from Forest Whitaker by David Shankbone under CC BY 2.0.

What gave the baby name Miles a boost in 1986?

The characters Gordon, Susan, and baby Miles from the TV series "Sesame Street" (in late 1985)
Gordon, Susan, and Miles from “Sesame Street

According to the U.S. baby name data, the usage of Miles rose slowly during the first half of the 1980s, then saw a higher-than-expected increase in 1986 specifically:

Boys named MilesBoys named Myles
1988887 [rank: 265th]385 [rank: 464th]
1987835 [rank: 262nd]411 [rank: 434th]
1986777 [rank: 275th]382 [rank: 440th]
1985456 [rank: 397th]213 [rank: 602nd]
1984409 [rank: 408th]162 [rank: 681st]

The spelling Myles saw a similar increase the same year.

Why?

My guess is a character from the children’s TV series Sesame Street, which was “the most-watched program on public television” in the mid-1980s. (Fourteen million people — five million of whom were adults — tuned in to the daily program at least once per week.)

In December of 1985, two of the show’s main characters, married couple Susan and Gordon (played by actors Loretta Long and Roscoe Orman), adopted a baby boy named Miles. He was played by Roscoe Orman’s own 1-year-old son, Miles Orman.

The real Miles continued portraying the fictional Miles on Sesame Street for about eight years. The role was then handed off to child actor Imani Patterson.

What are your thoughts on the baby name Miles?

P.S. A year before joining the cast of Sesame Street, Roscoe Orman played the title character in the movie Willie Dynamite

Sources:

Image: Screenshot of Sesame Street

What gave the baby name Yasiel a boost in the 2010s?

Baseball player Yasiel Puig
Yasiel Puig

According to the U.S. baby name data, the rare name Yasiel saw a relatively steep increase in usage from 2012 to 2014. Much of this new usage took place in the state of California specifically.

  • 2015: 48 baby boys named Yasiel, 12 (25%) born in CA
  • 2014: 69 baby boys named Yasiel, 20 (29%) born in CA
  • 2013: 39 baby boys named Yasiel, 15 (38%) born in CA
  • 2012: 12 baby boys named Yasiel
  • 2011: 18 baby boys named Yasiel

What accounts for the increase?

Cuban-born professional baseball player Yasiel Puig (yah-see-el pweeg), who played all but one of his seven MLB seasons (2013-2019) with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Yasiel, an outfielder, had an impressive rookie season. (In June, his very first month in the Majors, he won two National League awards: Rookie of the Month and Player of the Month.) The following year, he was a starter in the 2014 All-Star Game.

The usage of his name rose again in 2017 and 2018, corresponding to the two years Yasiel made it all the way to the World Series with the Dodgers. (They lost to the Houston Astros and the Boston Red Sox, respectively.)

What are your thoughts on the name Yasiel?

P.S. Another Cuban ballplayer with a Y-name, Yoenis Céspedes, had a (small) influence on baby names around the same time…

Sources: Yasiel Puig – Wikipedia, SSA

Image: Adaped from Yasiel Puig during game against Yankees 9-13-16 (5) by Arturo Pardavila III under CC BY 2.0.

What gave the baby name Lauryn a boost in the late 1990s?

Lauryn Hill (Time magazine, Feb. 1999)
Lauryn Hill

According to the U.S. baby name data, the usage of Lauryn began rising during the second half of the 1990s, then saw a pronounced spike in 1999:

  • 2001: 1,083 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 289th]
  • 2000: 1,408 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 224th]
  • 1999: 1,883 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 167th] (peak usage)
  • 1998: 628 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 421st]
  • 1997: 498 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 498th]
  • 1996: 338 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 659th]
  • 1995: 241 baby girls named Lauryn [rank: 818th]

What was influencing the name during those years?

New Jersey-born rapper and singer Lauryn Hill.

During the 1990s, Lauryn was a member of the hip-hop group the Fugees along with Wyclef Jean and Pras Michel. The trio’s second (and final) album, The Score, was released in early 1996 and soon became one of the best-selling hip-hop albums of all time.

The Fugees' album "The Score" (1996)
Fugees album

Of the album’s four singles, only “Fu-Gee-La” was released commercially in the U.S., and therefore eligible to appear on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart. It peaked at #29 in March of 1996.

But the other three singles — “Killing Me Softly” (a cover of the 1973 Roberta Flack hit), “Ready or Not” (which featured an Enya sample), and “No Woman, No Cry” (a cover of the Bob Marley classic) — were no less popular, judging by how frequently they were played on the radio.

In early 1997, the Fugees won a pair of Grammy Awards — one for The Score, the other for “Killing Me Softly.”

Later the same year, however, the group broke up.

Lauryn Hill's album "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill" (1998)
Lauryn Hill album

Lauryn went on to release her first solo album, The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill, in August of 1998. It eventually surpassed The Score in terms of sales, becoming one of the best-selling albums of all time.

The album’s most successful single, “Doo Wop (That Thing),” ranked #1 on the Hot 100 for two weeks in November.

Here’s the music video:

The other two singles, “Ex-Factor” and “Everything Is Everything,” entered the Hot 100 in 1999. The first peaked at #21 in April, and the second at #35 in July.

And two more tracks — “To Zion” (featuring guitarist Carlos Santana) and “Can’t Take My Eyes Off Of You” (a cover of the 1967 Frankie Valli hit) — also saw significant radio play.

In early 1999, Lauryn Hill won five Grammy Awards: two for The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill, two for “Doo Wop (That Thing),” and one for herself (as Best New Artist). She became the first female artist to win five or more Grammy Awards in a single night, and Miseducation became the first hip-hop album to win Album Of The Year.

Around the same time, she became the first hip-hop artist to be featured on the cover of Time magazine.

What are your thoughts on the name Lauryn? How about Lauren? (What’s your preferred spelling of the name?)

Sources:

Top image: Clipping from the cover of Time magazine (8 Feb. 1999)