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cultfaction · 1 year
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Jamie Bernadette's serial killer film Sebastian now streaming on TUBI!
Sebastian is now streaming on Tubi and we have the trailer, poster, and synopsis. The crime-driven horror film in which a serial killer ravages a city stars horror icon Jamie Bernadette (I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu), Darius McCrary (Family Matters), Torrei Hart (Hollywould), and Luca Della Valle (Distant Vision). The supporting cast includes Clifton Powell (Ray), Cocoa Brown (9-1-1), Jermaine…
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houseofzoey · 7 months
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Overall Thoughts on the House of Night Series
By my standards, this series failed in basically every way possible - except monetary success.
The characters are poorly developed, the majority of them fulfilling shallow archetypes or offensive stereotypes with minimal nuance or meaningful exploration. This is true even of major characters, particularly Damien, Stevie Rae, Shaunee, and even Aphrodite.
Much as Aphrodite is beloved by haters and fans alike for her hardships and ability to actually tell off Zoey on occasion, she's ultimately just the lovable bitch/mean-girl-turned-best-friend trope and sees little thoughtful development. We're told that she changes, such as when she declares that she doesn't want to be like her mother and opts not to mix Xanax and wine - but then she's back to the same "substance abuse for laughs" shtick in the next book. Aphrodite's only actual, consistent change is that she stops hating Zoey and considers her a close friend. But otherwise? She's still a quintessential mean girl. She insults people for how they dress, looks down on the poor, bickers and picks fights with everyone, and - oh yeah - is racist, ableist, and queerphobic. Because it's "funny".
Personally? I think Aphrodite is one of the most despisable characters in the series, specifically because a) she has all the makings of a great character with huge potential for complexity and development, b) we're told she goes through incredible growth and change without really being shown it, and c) she's a raging bigot and that's meant to be funny/charming.
I've talked at length about how Zoey, Kalona, and Neferet are giant disappointments as characters, so I won't harp on that here. The main takeaway is that P.C. Cast doesn't know how to establish interesting, nuanced characters, and she certainly has no idea how to develop the cardboard cutouts she does introduce.
It doesn't help that this series has so many characters. A lot of them introduced once and then promptly forgotten. Remember Hannah Honeyyeager? Red? Montoya? Ant? Enyo? Sappho? Kaci Crump? Yeah, I don't blame you if you can't recall more than one detail about any of these characters - if you can even remember anything about them at all.
I can understand wanting to make the series feel well-populated, seeing as it is set in a school in a major city. But there are ways to do that without it feeling like the author just picks fifteen names out of a hat at the beginning of each book and throws them into the text at random intervals. The end result is that the HoN doesn't feel well-populated; it feels cluttered.
The overabundance of meaningless characters leads to other problems, too. Namely... well, names. One great example of this is Shaunee Cole having a thing for Cole Clifton. That's ridiculous, especially because no one ever comments on it, despite this being the exact sort of oddity that these characters would banter about for at least a page. P.C. Cast just didn’t notice she did that. There's plenty of other examples of identical or extremely similar names throughout the series, such as:
Zoey's brother Kevin and Detective Kevin Marx
Erik and Erin
Neferet the person and Nefertiti the cat
Shaylin and Shaunee
Drew (human) and Drew (fledgling)
Kaci Crump, Cassie Kramme, Casey Young, and Kacie Lockwood (from the Other World spinoff)
Even Damien and Darius are a bit close. The author mixed up their names in narration at one point, and it was never caught during the editing process.
(It's also worth noting that P.C. and Kristin have stated that, if the HoN TV show ever comes to fruition, Shaunee and Erin's names will be changed to Monique and Misty.* Monique is already the name of a Priestess working under Damien at the NYHoN in Loved.)
This is only made more absurd when you remember that every single fledgling and vampyre - all these people who got Marked as teenagers - have complete freedom to change their name to whatever they want. Why are there three fledglings named some variation of Cassie (only Casey is human)? Where are all the kids naming themselves Destiny and Ebony and Serendipity? Why aren't more kids named after their favourite celebrities or characters? You're telling me not a single teenage boy named himself Mike Hawk? Where are the kids who gave themselves four middle names because it sounds fancy, or who made their initials into an acronym?
The number of characters who did something like this is very small: Aphrodite, Jack Twist, James Stark, Venus, and Thor are the only ones I can immediately think of. Frankly, that's absurd.
I know exactly why it's Iike that, though. PC Cast isn't thinking about world-building and internal logic when she names her characters. Instead, she regularly names her characters after real people she knows. Here is a non-exhaustive list of such names:
Shaunee Cole
Erin Bates
Damien Maslin (specifically the last name)
Seoras
Cassie Kramme**
Chera Kimiko
Adam Paluka
Mr. Shaddox
Bryan "Dragon" Lankford
Anastasia Lankford
(On a somewhat related note, both P.C. and Kristin both have multiple self-inserts throughout the original and spinoff series. For P.C., it's Sgiach and Tina. For Kristin, it's Zoey and Kacie. This is mostly harmless - except Tina. Tina is literary brown face, because the white author made her self-insert indigenous, specifically Creek. Otherwise, these self-inserts just end up glorified and coddled.)
This kind of offhandedness and carelessness with world-building plagues the series. It's why historical figures are casually mentioned to be vampyres with no thought to how that would actually impact history. It's why the author says, "yeah, all the best actors and singers are vampyres" but then never considers how different media would look if all the most famous entertainers were nocturnal and allergic to the sun. It's why only a handful of countries have large vampyre populations and many of them (such as Italy and Greece) are known to be incredibly sunny and have long days and long summers, while places like Canada are far less populated despite vampyres being minimally affected by the cold. It's why there's 25 HoNs in the world, seven of which are in the US, while only three are in Asia, one is in Africa, and there are none mentioned in Russia or South America. It's why there's only one HoN in Canada despite it being an enormous country that is difficult to travel because of terrain (mountains, wetlands, tundra), weather, and sheer size.
And the thing is, I can excuse Rule of Cool world-building, or world-building that is shallow/poorly thought out. But the execution and context matter. All throughout the text, there's this very clear vibe that the author thinks she has built this incredibly rich, detailed world that is well-researched and grounded in reality while still being fantastical. In reality, the world-building is about as deep and sturdy as a list of bullet points on a wet napkin: It's not detailed, half of it is unintelligible, and it's gonna fall apart if you put even the slightest pressure on it.
I think a great demonstration of both poorly thought out world-building and poorly developed characters is Nyx. She is a loving goddess who prizes free will and thus operates under the principle of non-interference - but she spent eons gaslighting Kalona and all of vampyre society; regularly pops in to give special powers, helpful hints, or immediate solutions to specific fledglings/vampyres if she likes them enough; openly plays favourites; and gives fledglings extremely cruel, painful, or confusing gifts with no explanation as to why said gifts work the way they do. Why is Stark able to accidentally kill someone because of a metaphor he didn't intend to use? Why do visions cause Aphrodite's eyes to bleed? It's also fundamentally unclear what she wants at numerous points throughout the series.
Much of Neferet's descent into evil and success in committing horrific atrocities comes down to the fact that a) Nyx decided that this was the situation in which she wasn't going to give Zoey or anyone else clear warnings or visions about specifically what Neferet was doing, and b) she refused to rescind any of Neferet's gifts, even when she was using them to hurt people and create undead abominations, and had completely turned her back on Nyx in favour of Darkness.
(This is only compounded by the events of the Other World spinoff, wherein Nyx responds to OG Neferet's crimes by erasing her soul from existence so she can never reincarnate or be resurrected. So, I guess she can interfere where she sees fit? She also reduces Other Neferet and a bunch of her soldiers to children so they can have a second chance [horrifying], and causes a bunch of people to instantly complete the Change - including Other Lynette, who was a human. That seems like a lot of very direct interference.)
I also need to acknowledge how absolutely nonsensical the plot of this series is. Like, even just looking at the (intended) core premise of each book, it's all over the place.
Marked: Zoey is Marked and must learn to navigate her new life as a fledgling, which includes discovering she is the Chosen One and ousting mean girl Aphrodite from her position as glorified Student Council President.
Betrayed: Neferet is acting suspicious, which includes accusing Aphrodite of lying about her visions, and being connected to undead fledglings Zoey has spotted around campus.
Chosen: Zoey must heal undead Stevie Rae while also juggling three boyfriends and lying to her friends about all of it.
Untamed: Creepy ravens are all over campus. Aphrodite gets a vision that reveals these are Raven Mockers and Neferet intends to free Kalona from his earthly prison.
Hunted: Kalona and Neferet have brainwashed pretty much everyone at the Tulsa HoN. Zoey and co. need to figure out how to break the spell or get rid of them.
Tempted: After being banished from Tulsa and unable to continue their reign over the HoN, Kalona and Neferet tell the High Council that they are Erebus and Nyx incarnate, and thus Neferet should be the new High Priestess of all vampyres. Zoey goes to the High Council to say they're lying.
Burned: Zoey is shattered in the Otherworld and everyone is trying to save her.
Awakened: Neferet murders Jack so Zoey will stop frolicking on the Isle of Skye and return to Tulsa. Once Zoey returns, Neferet pretends she's a good guy and asks for her forgiveness.
Destined: Zoey's mother had been ritually sacrificed by Neferet to create a living weapon, so Zoey and co. perform a reveal ritual to show how Zoey's mother was murdered.
Hidden: After being shunned by the High Council, Neferet kidnaps Zoey's grandma as vengeance. Neferet is also working a smear campaign against the HoN on local news, which Zoey and co. counteract by doing an interview badmouthing Neferet and announcing an open house on campus.
Revealed: Neferet murders the mayor outside the gates of the HoN, so the school is on lockdown until they can prove that no one living/working there killed him. The Seer Stone is making Zoey increasingly short-tempered and violent.
Redeemed: Neferet takes over a fancy hotel and declares all the hostages her worshippers. Zoey and co. need to figure out how to use Old Magick to stop an immortal without it making Zoey go mad.
Does any of that seem like a logical progression/escalation of events? This isn't even touching on all the random boy drama, abandoned subplots, or nonsensical digressions that only serve to pad the text.
What the author seemingly intended to craft was a Chosen One coming-of-age narrative about a young girl who always felt out of place finding belonging at the HoN while navigating romantic relationships, learning to be a leader, and joining the battle against Darkness.
What we got was a spoiled, selfish brat who complains about every privilege and inconvenience that falls into her lap, who refuses to do anything hard or unpleasant to the point that she repeatedly cheats and leads on her boyfriends, who never takes initiative, and who largely has her problems solved by her subservient friends or a literal goddess.
But it shouldn't be surprising that the plot is all over the place and fails to fulfill the intended themes/messages of the series, because information about P.C. Cast's writing process for the series is also quite inconsistent. Originally, the series was only meant to be a trilogy, but got picked up for more books. However, in a Reddit AMA***, Kristin Cast claims:
We plotted out the story arch, and it naturally ended with twelve books. We also had a per book word count we had to follow, which is why our books aren't as long as other YA novels. However, I don't think anything was rushed. It was all planned from the beginning, and was executed amazingly!
But in several interviews (can only find a couple**** because they were audio/video, not text), P.C. Cast has referenced going rogue - meaning she deviated from the outline. Stark was meant to be Stevie Rae's love interest, Rephaim was supposed to die when Stevie Rae found him, etc. These represent HUGE alterations to the plot, so obviously the whole plot couldn't have been planned from the beginning, nor could everything be executed as intended.
P.C. Cast has also stated that she hates outlining, but Kristin makes her do a detailed chapter-by-chapter outline when they actually co-write. When P.C. writes solo, she knows the beginning, the end, and a bunch of pieces in the middle, and then figures it out from there (which sounds like a plantser style). Given that Kristin wasn't involved in the planning process - she didn't even look at the outlines of the original series because, as an editor, she wanted completely fresh eyes for the text - she couldn't have been the one pushing for a thorough outline of the whole series before P.C. began writing.
And that's not even getting into the fact that P.C. has stated the series was originally planned as a trilogy, which is evident from how the first three books were written. She couldn't have planned a twelve book series because she had no reason to assume she would be able to publish more than three books.
I wish I had a more satisfying conclusion to offer here, but... that's kind of the problem with talking about this series. The problems both span so wide and run so deep that it feels impossible to actually cover everything. I've made tens of thousands of posts - including in-depth analyses of plot, character, world-building, and writing - for every single book in this series, and I still feel like I haven't covered everything.
*Discussed here, around 17:00
**Google searches show this is a real person who attended the same school PC taught at
***Reddit AMA
****PC Cast interview, q&a
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andersonvision · 1 year
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"Sebastian," a gripping horror film spiced with crime and mystery, is now streaming on Tubi. The film stars an impressive ensemble, including horror icon Jamie Bernadette (known for "I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu"), Darius McCrary ("Family Matters"), Torrei Hart ("Hollywould"), and Luca Della Valle ("Distant Vision"). https://youtu.be/ewfHE9gH1Cs Supporting actors feature Clifton Powell ("Ray"), Cocoa Brown ("9-1-1"), Jermaine Hopkins ("Lean on Me"), Jayson Warner Smith ("The Walking Dead"), Tracey Graves ("Super Turnt"), Michael Emery ("Station 19"), and Jermel Howard ("Luke Cage"). The visionary behind this enthralling piece is Mann Robinson ("Super Turnt"), who takes up both the roles of the writer and director. In an impressive feat, "Sebastian" has already scaled Tubi's most-watched lists. The film went viral on social media on its release day, earning praises from opinion leaders in the film industry. Jan O’Connell, a renowned film producer of "I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu," likened the film to the 1995 classic "Se7en" and lauded the cast and director Robinson in a tweet. Darius McCrary, a producer and actor in the film, expressed his pride, stating, “Working alongside my partner Torrei Hart and the outstanding cast she and Mann assembled was an honor. 'Sebastian' marks a significant leap for independent filmmaker Mann and for all his 'Mankind.'” Robinson expressed his gratitude for working with such a talented crew, describing the experience as akin to working with seven acting instructors. Jamie Bernadette, who plays the lead protagonist 'Irene', was all praise for the script and the team. She shared, "Once I read the brilliant script by Mann Robinson and watched his past directing work, accepting the role of 'Irene' was a no-brainer. Coupled with a robust cast of seasoned actors and a formidable production team, we struck gold. They made my job seamless." The plot of "Sebastian" unfolds around the intriguing character of Sebastian (played by Luca Della Valle), a reincarnated Christian martyr born every 60 years. Sebastian embarks on a relentless pursuit to win the affection of Irene (played by Jamie Bernadette), mercilessly eliminating anyone who dares to obstruct his path. Watch the thrilling story of "Sebastian" unfold on Tubi today and get captivated by its unique blend of crime and horror.
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moviesandmania · 1 year
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SEBASTIAN (2023) Jamie Bernadette crime horror on Tubi - trailer
Sebastian is a 2023 American crime horror film about a reincarnated Christian martyr pursuing the love of a young woman while killing others. Directed by Mann Robinson (Super Turnt) from a screenplay co-written by Ken King. The movie stars horror icon Jamie Bernadette (I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu), Darius McCrary, Torrei Hart, Luca Della Valle, Clifton Powell, Cocoa Brown, Jermaine Hopkins,…
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coghive · 2 years
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VaShawn Mitchell Hosts Epic 10th Album Live Recording In Detroit
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Gospel legendary singer, VaShawn Mitchell hosted an incredible live recording at the Sound Board in Detroit Motor City Casino. Fans were lined up hours in advance full of anticipation of what was to come. The show was hosted by Detroit native actor, songwriter and social media influencer Jor’el Quinn with special performing guests including Donnie McClurkin, Jekalyn Carr, Lisa Page Brooks and Shana Wilson. Ron Poindexter directed the heavenly chorus of twelve singers and continued to raise the bar on his own solo feature.  Other special guests in attendance include Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter Bebe Winans, actor Darius McCrary, BET ‘Sunday Best’ alum Clifton Ross III, and Grammy-nominated producer J. Drew Sheard II. Throughout the concert, audience members were enthralled in a trance of praise and worship, ballads, as well as praise breaks that had everyone on their feet. When speaking to concertgoers, people referred to the experience as “the best record so far” and “the best time I’ve had in a long time”. One person even claimed, “This record is going to take over the industry next year!” All in all, no one left disappointed.  The concert also concluded with a call for salvation where individuals were lead to Christ. When asked about the concert, Mitchell says, “Wow what an incredible night! I pray that lives were changed and the people were blessed by the ministry that took place today.” He continues, “as long as God gets the glory, I’m blessed to be the instrument he chose to use to touch someone’s heart in a way they’ve never felt God before.” Mitchell’s new album, ‘Chapter X’ is set to release in early 2023 on all digital streaming platforms. Read the full article
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hauntedzone-byebye · 6 years
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@lunaaltare‘s ocs! she mentioned they were this meme so i traced it please check them out on her blog
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unknown-songs · 4 years
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BLACK LIVES MATTER
A list with black artists who have a song in the Unknown Songs That Should Be Known-playlist (Can be a black artist in a band or just solo-artist) (no specific genre)
Bull’s Eye - Blacknuss, Prince Prime - Funk Aftershow - Joe Fox - Alternative Hip-hop Strangers in the Night - Ben L’Oncle Soul - Soul Explore - Mack Wilds - R&B Something To Do - IGBO - Funk
Down With The Trumpets - Rizzle Kicks - Pop Dans ta ville - Dub Inc. - Reggae Dance or Die - Brooklyn Funk Essentials - Funk FACELESS - The PLAYlist, Glenn Lewis - R&B Tell Me Father - Jeangu Macrooy - Soul
Southern Boy - John The Conquerer - Blues Hard Rock Savannah Grass - Kes - Dancehall Dr. Funk - The Main Squeeze - Funk Seems I’m Never Tired of Loving You - Lizz Wright - Jazz Out of My Hands - TheColorGrey, Oddisee - Hip-Hop/Pop
Raised Up in Arkansas - Michael Burks - Blues Black Times - Sean Kuti, Egypt 80, Carlos Santana - Afrobeat Cornerstone - Benjamin Clementine - Indie Shine On - R.I.O., Madcon - Electronic Pop Bass On The Line - Bernie Worrell - Funk
When We Love - Jhené Aiko - R&B Need Your Love - Curtis Harding - Soul Too Dry to Cry - Willis Earl Beal - Folk Your House - Steel Pulse - Reggae Power - Moon Boots, Black Gatsby - Deep House
Vinyl Is My Bible - Brother Strut - Funk Diamond - Izzy Biu - R&B Elusive - blackwave., David Ngyah - Hip-hop Don’t Ever Let Nobody Drag Your Spirit Down - Heritage Blues Orchestra - Blues Sastanàqqàm - Tinariwen - Psychedelic Rock
Disco To Go - Brides of Funkenstein - Funk/Soul Circles - Durand Jones & The Indications - Retro Pop Cheesin’ - Cautious Clay, Remi Wolf, sophie meiers - R&B Changes - Charles Bradley - Soul The Sweetest Sin - RAEVE - House
Gyae Su - Pat Thomas, Kwashibu Area Band - Funk What Am I to Do - Ezra Collective, Loyle Carner - Hip-hop Get Your Groove On - Cedric Burnside - Blues Old Enough To Know Better - Steffen Morrisson - Soul Wassiye - Habib Koité - Khassonke musique
Dance Floor - Zapp - Funk Wake Up - Brass Against, Sophia Urista - Brass Hard-Rock BIG LOVE - Black Eyed Peas - Pop The Greatest - Raleigh Ritchie - R&B DYSFUNCTIONAL - KAYTRANADA, VanJess - Soul
See You Leave - RJD2, STS, Khari Mateen - Hip-hop Sing A Simple Song - Maceo Parker - Jazz/Funk Have Mercy - Eryn Allen Kane - Soul Homenage - Brownout - Latin Funk Can’t Sleep - Gary Clark Jr. - Blues Rock
Toast - Koffee - Dancehall Freedom - Ester Dean - R&B Iskaba - Wande Coal, DJ Tunez - Afropop High Road - Anthony Riley - Alternative Christian Sunny Days - Sabrina Starke - Soul
The Talking Fish - Ibibio Sound Machine - Funk Paralyzed - KWAYE - Indie Purple Heart Blvd - Sebastian Kole - Pop WORSHIP - The Knocks, MNEK - Deep House BMO - Ari Lennox - R&B
Promises - Myles Sanko - Soul .img - Brother Theodore - Funk Singing the Blues - Ruthie Foster, Meshell Ndegeocello - Blues Nobody Like You - Amartey, SBMG, The Livingtons - Hip-hop Starship - Afriquoi, Shabaka Hutchings, Moussa Dembele - Deep House
Lay My Troubles Down - Aaron Taylor - Funk  Bloodstream - Tokio Myers - Classic Sticky - Ravyn Lenae - R&B Why I Try - Jalen N’Gonda - Soul Motivation - Benjamin Booker - Folk
quand c’est - Stromae - Pop Let Me Down (Shy FX Remix) - Jorja Smith, Stormzy, SHY FX - Reggae Funny - Gerald Levert - R&B Salt in my Wounds - Shemekia Copeland - Blues Our Love - Samm Henshaw - Soul
Make You Feel That Way - Blackalicious - Jazz Hip-hop Knock Me Out - Vintage Trouble - Funk Take the Time - Ronald Bruner, Jr., Thundercat - Alternative Thru The Night - Phonte, Eric Roberson - R&B Keep Marchin’ - Raphael Saadiq - Soul
Shake Me In Your Arms - Taj Mahal, Keb’ Mo’ - Blues Meet Me In The Middle - Jodie Abascus - Pop Raise Hell - Sir the Baptist, ChurchPpl - Gospel Pop Mogoya - Oumou Sangaré - Wassoulou Where’s Yesterday - Slakah The Beatchild - Hip-hop
Lose My Cool - Amber Mark - R&B New Funk - Big Sam’s Funky Nation - Funk I Got Love - Nate Dogg - Hip-hop Nothing’s Real But Love - Rebecca Ferguson - Soul Crazy Race - The RH Factor - Jazz
Spies Are Watching Me - Voilaaa, Sir Jean - Funk The Leaders - Boka de Banjul - Afrobeat Fast Lane - Rationale - House Conundrum - Hak Baker - Folk Don’t Make It Harder On Me - Chloe x Halle - R&B
Plastic Hamburgers - Fantastic Negrito - Hardrock Beyond - Leon Bridges - Pop God Knows - Dornik - Soul Soleil de volt - Baloji - Afrofunk Do You Remember - Darryl Williams, Michael Lington - Jazz Get Back - McClenney - Alternative Three Words - Aaron Marcellus - Soul
Spotify playlist 
In memory of:
Aaron Bailey Adam Addie Mae Collins Ahmaud Arbery Aiyana Stanley Jones Akai Gurley Alberta Odell Jones Alexia Christian Alfonso Ferguson Alteria Woods Alton Sterling Amadou Diallo Amos Miller Anarcha Westcott Anton de Kom Anthony Hill Antonio Martin Antronie Scott Antwon Rose Jr. Arthur St. Clair Atatiana Jefferson Aubrey Pollard Aura Rosser Bennie Simons Berry Washington Bert Dennis Bettie Jones Betsey Billy Ray Davis Bobby Russ Botham Jean Brandon Jones Breffu Brendon Glenn Breonna Taylor Bud Johnson Bussa
Calin Roquemore Calvin McDowell Calvin Mike and his family Carl Cooper Carlos Carson Carlotta Lucumi Carol Denise McNair Carol Jenkins Carole Robertson Charles Curry Charles Ferguson Charles Lewis Charles Wright Charly Leundeu Keunang Chime Riley Christian Taylor Christopher Sheels Claude Neal Clementa Pickney Clifford Glover Clifton Walker Clinton Briggs Clinton R. Allen Cordella Stevenson Corey Carter Corey Jones Cynthia Marie Graham Hurd Cynthia Wesley
Daniel L. Simmons Danny Bryant Darius Randell Robinson Darius Tarver Darrien Hunt Darrius Stewart David Felix David Joseph David McAtee David Walker and his family Deandre Brunston Deborah Danner Delano Herman Middleton Demarcus Semer Demetrius DuBose Depayne Middleton-Doctor Dion Johnson Dominique Clayton Dontre Hamilton Dred Scott
Edmund Scott Ejaz Choudry Elbert Williams Eleanor Bumpurs Elias Clayton Elijah McClain Eliza Woods Elizabeth Lawrence Elliot Brooks Ellis Hudson Elmer Jackson Elmore Bolling Emantic Fitzgerald Bradford Jr. Emmett Till Eric Garner Eric Harris Eric Reason Ernest Lacy Ernest Thomas Ervin Jones Eugene Rice Eugene Williams Ethel Lee Lance Ezell Ford
Felix Kumi Frank Livingston Frank Morris Frank Smart Frazier B. Baker Fred Hampton Fred Rochelle Fred Temple Freddie Carlos Gray Jr.
George Floyd George Grant George Junius Stinney Jr. George Meadows George Waddell George Washington Lee Gregory Gunn
Harriette Vyda Simms Moore Harry Tyson Moore Hazel “Hayes” Turner Henry Ezekial Smith Henry Lowery Henry Ruffin Henry Scott Hosea W. Allen
India Kager Isaac McGhie Isadore Banks Italia Marie Kelly
Jack Turner Jamar Clark Jamel Floyd James Byrd Jr. James Craig Anderson James Earl Chaney James Powell James Ramseur James Tolliver James T. Scott Janet Wilson Jason Harrison Javier Ambler J.C. Farmer Jemel Roberson Jerame Reid Jesse Thornton Jessie Jefferson Jim Eastman Joe Nathan Roberts John Cecil Jones John Crawford III John J. Gilbert John Ruffin John Taylor Johnny Robinson Jonathan Ferrell Jonathan Sanders Jordan Edwards Joseph Mann Julia Baker Julius Jones July Perry Junior Prosper
Kalief Browder Karvas Gamble Jr. Keith Childress, Jr. Kelly Gist Kelso Benjamin Cochrane Kendrick Johnson Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. Kenny Long Kevin Hicks Kevin Matthews Kiwane Albert Carrington
Lacy Mitchell Lamar Smith Laquan McDonald Laura Nelson Laura Wood L.B. Reed L.D. Nelson Lemuel Penn Lemuel Walters Leonard Deadwyler Leroy Foley Levi Harrington Lila Bella Carter Lloyd Clay Louis Allen Lucy
M.A. Santa Cruz Maceo Snipes Malcom X Malice Green Malissa Williams Manuel Ellis Marcus Deon Smith Marcus Foster Marielle Franco Mark Clark Maria Martin Lee Anderson Martin Luther King Jr. Matthew Avery Mary Dennis Mary Turner Matthew Ajibade May Noyes Mckenzie Adams Medgar Wiley Evers Michael Brown Michael Donald Michael Griffith Michael Lee Marshall Michael Lorenzo Dean Michael Noel Michael Sabbie Michael Stewart Michelle Cusseaux Miles Hall Moses Green Mya Hall Myra Thompson
Nathaniel Harris Pickett Jr. Natasha McKenna Nicey Brown Nicholas Heyward Jr.
O’Day Short family Orion Anderson Oscar Grant III Otis Newsom
Pamela Turner Paterson Brown Jr. Patrick Dorismond Philando Castile Phillip Pannell Phillip White Phinizee Summerour
Quaco
Ramarley Graham Randy Nelson Raymond Couser Raymond Gunn Regis Korchinski-Paquet Rekia Boyd Renisha McBride Riah Milton Robert Hicks Robert Mallard Robert Truett Rodney King Roe Nathan Roberts Roger Malcolm and his wife Roger Owensby Jr. Ronell Foster Roy Cyril Brooks Rumain Brisbon Ryan Matthew Smith
Sam Carter Sam McFadden Samuel DuBose Samuel Ephesians Hammond Jr. Samuel Hammond Jr. Samuel Leamon Younge Jr. Sandra Bland Sean Bell Shali Tilson Sharonda Coleman-Singleton Shukri Abdi Simon Schuman Slab Pitts Stella Young Stephon Clark Susie Jackson
T.A. Allen Tamir Rice Tamla Horsford Tanisha Anderson Timothy Caughman Timothy Hood Timothy Russell Timothy Stansbury Jr. Timothy Thomas Terrence Crutcher Terrill Thomas Tom Jones Tom Moss Tony McDade Tony Terrell Robinson Jr. Trayvon Martin Troy Hodge Troy Robinson Tula Tyler Gerth Tyre King Tywanza Sanders
Victor Duffy Jr. Victor White III
Walter Lamar Scott Wayne Arnold Jones Wesley Thomas Wilbert Cohen Wilbur Bundley Will Brown Will Head Will Stanley Will Stewart Will Thompson Willie James Howard Willie Johnson Willie McCoy Willie Palmer Willie Turks William Brooks William Butler William Daniels William Fambro William Green William L. Chapman II William Miller William Pittman Wyatt Outlaw
Yusef Kirriem Hawkins
The victims of LaLaurie (1830s) The black victims of the Opelousas massacre (1868) The black victims of the Thibodaux massacre (1887) The black victims of the Wilmington insurrection (1898) The black victims of the Johnson-Jeffries riots (1910) The black victims of the Red summer (1919) The black victims of the Elaine massacre (1919) The black victims of the Ocoee massacre (1920) The victims of the MOVE bombing (1985)
All the people who died during the Atlantic slave trade, be it due to abuse or disease.
All the unnamed victims of mass-incarceration, who were put into jail without the committing of a crime and died while in jail or died after due to mental illness. 
All the unnamed victims of racial violence and discrimination. 
...
My apologies for all the people missing on this list. Feel free to add more names and stories. 
Listen, learn and read about discrimination, racism and black history: (feel free to add more)  Documentaries: 13th (Netflix) The Innocence Files (Netflix) Who Killed Malcolm X? (Netflix) Time: The Kalief Browder Story (Netflix) I Am Not Your Negro
YouTube videos: We Cannot Stay Silent about George Floyd Waarom ook Nederlanders de straat op gaan tegen racisme (Dutch) Wit is ook een kleur (Dutch) (documentaire)
Books: Biased by Jennifer Eberhardt Don’t Touch My Hair by Emma Dabiri Freedom Is A Constant Struggle by Angela Davis How To Be An Anti-Racist by Ibram X. Kendi I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou Me and White Supremacy by Layla Saad So You Want To Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo They Can’t Kill Us All by Wesley Lowery White Fragility by Robin Deangelo Why I’m No Longer Talking To White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge Woman, Race and Class by Angela Davis
Websites: https://lynchinginamerica.eji.org/report/ https://museumandmemorial.eji.org/ https://archive.org/details/thirtyyearsoflyn00nati/page/n11/mode/2up https://lab.nos.nl/projects/slavernij/index-english.html https://blacklivesmatter.com/ https://www.zinnedproject.org/
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wwwrecktagle · 3 years
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wrecktangle music artist real name list
IRA GABRIEL ALDO MYLES LEROY OMER DEANDRE RICK ELBERT AMADO DOUG CHRISTIAN NATHANIAL GALEN JEFFREY JUAN HAYDEN RUDOLPH STERLING DERICK TIMOTHY REED PEDRO MOHAMMED JORDAN LANNY WELDON CHARLEY THEODORE LEN ELMO MATTHEW BRANDEN KRISTOFER BART JUSTIN JULIO JARVIS RAFAEL QUINN RAYMUNDO SHAYNE RAYMON GINO ISIAH SAMMY MARTIN CHRIS ERNEST LUKE RUPERT LES HERSHEL GALE MARIA CECIL WILL LUCIO DONTE DON ZACHARY MAURO DONNY DILLON SHELTON ABRAHAM EMILE LYNDON STEPHEN RASHAD MICHAEL JONAS DENNIS JEROMY DUSTY QUINTIN OLEN HOYT SAMMIE ARIEL MAURICE DONALD WYATT ANDERSON KELLEY ROCCO MARVIN REYNALDO VERNON RENE ALONZO WRECKTANGLE SALVADOR DINO KURT LEONARDO HORACE JAY HASSAN REYES JEFFRY LUTHER ROB HAROLD EMERY DONNIE GREG WES TED DUSTIN DWAYNE BRANDON CLAY PETER MARCELO GARY JERRELL MARCELINO RODRIGO CHAS ART RON HANK NIGEL JED ABE STANFORD DALTON MCKINLEY RAPHAEL MARGARITO ISREAL LEIF HOSEA LEONEL ANTONIA GARFIELD HOBERT TONY NOEL ARNULFO AMOS DARNELL ROYAL JERALD ALAN WILEY MICHEL JAE PALMER WILMER CRAIG ED ODELL DEXTER PRESTON GASTON HARLAND VICENTE ANDY DORSEY ANTWAN PARIS KIRK CYRUS ROBT JEFFERY CORNELL ALEJANDRO EVERETT TANNER SYDNEY RORY DANTE CARSON LIONEL WILLIE ALI SILAS BERNARDO DEREK GRAHAM MARK HUGO TUAN WILLIS RODNEY BRYANT PRINCE LOREN DIEGO MICKEY DARIUS LYLE CURTIS TOBIAS EDDY DEVIN LOGAN CARLTON ROOSEVELT ISAIAS MATHEW GUSTAVO NOLAN DYLAN MARLIN EMANUEL SHAWN ALFRED JOHNATHAN NORMAN CHUNG TONEY LOWELL ANTIONE HARRY LINDSEY LUCAS TOM CHADWICK ARDEN RAYMOND ROMAN SHIRLEY BRAIN ALLAN AUGUST BOOKER CURT RODRICK WAYLON BUSTER ROY OLIN SIDNEY DAREN MYRON GAYLE PABLO DEMARCUS SCOTTY RAYFORD ARTHUR CARLO BILLIE MANUEL THANH LEON SHAD LOUIS PAT LESLEY JUDSON JAN TEODORO REGINALD JAMAAL COLTON MIKEL LOYD GUADALUPE LEO FRANCISCO ZACK WARD HERMAN OMAR DARIN ARON WALTON ANTHONY HERSCHEL REY IVORY FOSTER WILFREDO BO MARCUS ABDUL DENVER HEATH GRADY FAUSTO CHANCE TY PORFIRIO DANE DAMIEN SHERWOOD GERRY MILO JOSUE DOMENIC STEWART ELLIS CHARLIE WILLIAN GAVIN ETHAN GENE WILBERT ZACHARIAH ANTON MURRAY LOU KIP AHMAD FELTON CHAD PAUL WALKER FRANCIS REID BRADFORD EZEKIEL FLOYD CRUZ MAX ELWOOD ARNOLD RICHARD ANIBAL KENNY THOMAS KENETH HIPOLITO ERICK SID ALDEN BRYON REINALDO JASON LUCIANO KENT CARROL RANDAL JERAMY AUGUSTINE JERMAINE DARREL ZACKARY GARRET WILLARD BARRETT CHESTER EMIL JOHNATHON GRANT EMORY NATHANAEL LANDON SEAN MANUAL TOMMY DWIGHT DEWITT ELIAS DOUGLASS DEMETRIUS MONROE FRANCES JERROD JEAN DESMOND ABRAM RODGER BOYD GERMAN JEROLD RANDY ELDRIDGE ROBBY COLBY JULIAN BENEDICT VINCENT DEAN COLUMBUS GRANVILLE GERARDO OSWALDO DOMINIC NORBERT HERB DARRON FERMIN OTIS STAN ALEX LON SEBASTIAN SCOT ANDREW TYRELL MERRILL LEWIS DONG ROBIN TEDDY ANDREA JOHN WINSTON PHILLIP LEMUEL RICKIE CLEMENTE ADRIAN GILBERT MARCEL MAXWELL WINFORD BRAD BARTON JAROD TRENT SHELDON NOE ARCHIE RUSTY BLAKE EDISON EDWIN REGGIE HUMBERTO JUDE ALPHONSO BARNEY LELAND SHANE ELIJAH TITUS CHARLES FORREST VITO ALONSO DENNY DALLAS JEFFERSON RUEBEN JAMES OLIVER IKE MILTON SAM RYAN TODD JIMMY WILLIAMS RALEIGH NUMBERS RONALD VANCE ANDRES RUDOLF SERGIO TRENTON ISSAC PARKER SCOTT ALEXANDER ARRON KARL NORBERTO JAMEY CLAUDE IGNACIO SHON AGUSTIN ENOCH RODOLFO JIMMIE ISRAEL BLAIR DOUGLAS SHAUN CODY DARREN HIRAM DAVIS ROYCE VIRGIL RIGOBERTO ELI TOMMIE DAMION TERRELL NICK WAYNE NOBLE HAI WILSON HANS LAURENCE RUSSELL FABIAN CLIFTON ROLANDO ALBERT WOODROW ARLEN MILLARD SUNG SETH KIRBY ELDON SIMON MARLON JEREMIAH TERRY LLOYD JOHNIE ZANE NATHAN BUD KERMIT JESSE HOMER MAC JOHNNIE TROY JONATHON EDGARDO BRYCE BENJAMIN MOHAMED WILLY RICH JACKSON LORENZO MITCHEL MARIANO SON RONNIE NATHANIEL JAMIE NICHOLAS EFRAIN ALEXIS REUBEN JOSIAH COY HENRY NAPOLEON ROSCOE BERTRAM MOHAMMAD TRAVIS ARNOLDO DONNELL SAL MARCELLUS WERNER GERALD LINO KEENAN ENRIQUE SOLOMON GIL HYMAN CLIFFORD LINDSAY VINCE HORACIO ESTEBAN LINCOLN CHRISTOPHER ERIK LARRY MERVIN NESTOR AARON TYRON HUGH ALFONZO CARMEN DAN ANGELO LACY TORY JAYSON GRAIG EUGENIO BENNY BURTON JEWELL BASIL BENITO JONAH JOSH JESSIE KAREEM FERNANDO RILEY MALIK JESS BRENDAN HOUSTON CHONG REFUGIO FEDERICO LENNY HARVEY DOMINGO AMBROSE KEVIN LAWRENCE DARRELL JC
BERNIE DANA RUFUS VALENTIN EZEQUIEL FRITZ BERNARD PASQUALE STUART FELIX ALVA GEOFFREY TRACY JULIUS JAVIER MONTE JERROLD THURMAN GAYLORD MASON LONNIE RANDELL SAUL MARC VIRGILIO ROLLAND BRADLY ANDRE MORGAN SHANNON MORTON GILBERTO MILFORD KASEY RODERICK ROSARIO JAMAL FLETCHER LAWERENCE BURL KRAIG JOSEF SANFORD JOE AUBREY BRICE FREDERICK HAL ELDEN ROGELIO GLENN HUNTER TYREE SHERMAN QUINCY QUINTON RENALDO MOISES GREGORIO VINCENZO KIETH SEYMOUR TAD EUGENE GROVER BUFORD STACEY KYLE LUIS MARCOS SYLVESTER VALENTINE KELLY PERCY AUGUSTUS JACINTO ALBERTO JACOB ADAN HARRIS HARLAN LONG KOREY LAMAR CHUCK ODIS BENTON ULYSSES SALVATORE ANTOINE STEPHAN LAVERNE ERASMO AHMED FOREST GREGORY GERARD MEL DALE ROMEO TREVOR KING COLE MICAH IRWIN KEN ORVILLE IAN KEITH CLEMENT OCTAVIO CLARK CARMINE SAMUAL ISMAEL BRODERICK BENNIE JERRY LESTER KENNITH NORRIS LUCIEN PHIL LAZARO RAUL DARYL RUSS TERRENCE LYMAN FREDERIC KRISTOPHER STEVEN DONN HUEY PATRICK GEORGE WILBURN CARMELO WHITNEY MONTY HOLLIS ALFREDO TYRONE JAIME RICKEY SHELBY CORNELIUS CONRAD ROBERT WALTER SCOTTIE COURTNEY DANIEL DAVID KELVIN VON ALVIN DEE GONZALO ANTONIO COLLIN LANE EARNEST GREGG IRVING ERVIN ORVAL CLAIR DONOVAN GERALDO PETE OLLIE RONNY LANCE PHILIP MARTY LAMONT JAMAR SANTIAGO FRANCESCO JOSPEH MATT ARMANDO TOBY AVERY JEREMY NEIL DARWIN NED EDMUNDO HILTON BUDDY BENNETT ASHLEY DUDLEY JARROD BARRY MAJOR SANG EMILIO ANDREAS EMMETT MIQUEL WARNER BERRY EDGAR JOAN IRVIN ROSS MORRIS LUPE BRIAN CESAR BRETT DANNIE EDUARDO DANILO GUILLERMO ALFONSO FILIBERTO CLINT CAMERON DEL IVAN KORY LYNWOOD CLEO JARRETT RHETT BRITT KEVEN LEANDRO DARRICK AL WILFORD LEONARD NEVILLE JAMEL STEVIE CHET NICKOLAS LAVERN EMERSON LEE ISAIAH VERN BURT BEN TRUMAN GIUSEPPE SONNY LEVI JOSEPH DEANGELO MODESTO BYRON JEROME MILAN MARIO JAME EDMOND VAN DEON ROLAND EMMITT BRENT JACK MITCHELL ROBERTO GENARO JOHNNY ANGEL GARTH PORTER DEWEY MITCH GARRETT JORDON DOMINICK CAROL MERLE BERT DAVE OSVALDO WESLEY JODY MAN CLAUD MELVIN LENARD KURTIS CLINTON TREY FREDDIE SOL JON DREW FELIPE TYSON BRANT HOWARD SANTOS ROSENDO COLIN RAY NICKY TIMMY JARRED JAMISON BEAU MOSE PERRY EVERETTE MILES JEFF ARTURO MAURICIO WINFRED ADOLPH STANLEY DELMAR CHANG DANNY LINWOOD CEDRICK COREY GARLAND YONG JESUS ROCKY EVAN NELSON DEVON DUANE DORIAN SPENCER RICO ELOY MIKE CORDELL JARED FREEMAN HECTOR ALEC STEVE THERON RENATO BRET CARY BORIS CRISTOBAL LESLIE WILBUR RANDOLPH WALDO REX DAMIAN LONNY ELTON CARLOS MACK ROGER BRADLEY DARON ERNESTO AUSTIN OTTO THEO ADAM JERE LAUREN FRED MARION EARLE ISAAC JACQUES BRADY ELVIS FREDRICK TRISTAN EMMANUEL TAYLOR THADDEUS GUS WARREN FRANK DANIAL DARRIN FIDEL JOEY RAMIRO LEOPOLDO WILBER ADALBERTO WM MAYNARD YOUNG WENDELL DOMINIQUE ELISEO FERDINAND CHRISTOPER STACY TERENCE CLETUS BROCK BRENTON THAD JACKIE CHASE MAXIMO ARMAND FLORENCIO FRANKIE RICHIE ERIN CORTEZ MOSHE HARRISON EARL TOD CASEY CORY EDWARDO NICOLAS JEFFEREY WALLY MOSES ROLF CONNIE CLEVELAND JOEL LUCIUS EZRA CYRIL LOUIE ELROY WESTON WADE VAUGHN MARCO BRUNO ERICH BRENDON ELVIN BILL ERROL VICTOR WILLIAM NOAH TRINIDAD BOYCE DOYLE GARRY JOSE PATRICIA TERRANCE ROBBIE RUDY MARQUIS ANTONE STEFAN PIERRE NEAL BOBBY BILLY MARSHALL HONG DARRYL JULES CARL JAKE OSCAR JUNIOR DWAIN JASPER RICKY FAUSTINO CALEB MALCOLM RAMON ADOLFO RUSSEL ORLANDO DICK MICHALE ABEL HILARIO BUCK ALPHONSE MARKUS WILTON TOMAS QUENTIN HUBERT RICARDO RUBEN ERWIN LYNN BRUCE JORGE DAMON HAYWOOD FRANKLIN ARLIE DIRK OWEN GLEN BROOKS MICHEAL VAL COLEMAN KENDALL MARY ELLIOT ANTONY CALVIN ALTON SANDY ZACHERY SANTO DARIO BRYAN NORMAND AURELIO DENIS CLAYTON ASA ELLSWORTH DERRICK EDMUND CLYDE ERNIE KENTON JONATHAN HERBERT STANTON KENNETH MINH DEWAYNE CARTER FREDRIC HUNG DUNCAN KENDRICK XAVIER CARROLL RUBIN HERIBERTO MERLIN TIM MICHAL ROD CAREY GIOVANNI EFREN TYLER JOSHUA BOBBIE FRANKLYN EDWARD WILFRED ELLIOTT GUY DION CRISTOPHER DELBERT BOB NEWTON ISIDRO RALPH SAMUEL WALLACE KIM ELISHA JEWEL JOAQUIN TRACEY ALLEN KRIS CHAUNCEY FREDDY FLORENTINO GORDON JIM RANDALL LEIGH DESHAWN GAIL EUSEBIO CLARENCE BLAINE KERRY JOHNSON HARLEY LUIGI ELMER CHI CLIFF OREN OTHA CLAUDIO EDDIE ALVARO CEDRIC MALCOM JOESPH MIGUEL
DELMER ERIC DARELL
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sofrpc · 6 years
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⌖*゚— 550+ UNIQUE AND UNDERUSED MALE NAMES
as requested, i have created a masterlist of 550+ unique and underused male names ! these are all listed in alphabetical order, and although i dont claim any of these as my own, please don’t copy and paste straight into another masterlist. feel free to use the names in any way you like, i hope this gives you muse for your characters (my faves are bolded) — also smash that like or reblog if you found this useful, thank you !
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A
abel, acacius, ace, achilles, adagio, adaiah, adalius, adley, adelio, adonis, adrian, adriel, aiden, akello, alain, alarik, alastair, alek, alfred, alfonzo, ali, alisio, alonzo, amari, amedeus, amias, amos, anakin, andre, ansel, anton, anwar, apollo, aragon, aramis, archer, aries, arlo, arrius, artemis, asher, ashton, asriel, atlas, atlantis, atticus, auden, august, auri, austin, avery, axel, aziel
B
bacchus, baden, bailey, baldwin, balin, balton, bandit, banks, barley, baxley, baxter, baze, bear, beau, beck, benson, bentley, berlin, bianco, bishop, blade, blaine, blaze, bode, bodhie, booker, bosley, boston, brandon, brantley, brayden, braxton, brecken, brennon, brett, briley, brinley, brock, bruno, bronx, brooks, bryce, bryson
C
caelan, caesar, cade, cador, cage, cain, caleb, callaway, callen, callister, callum, calvin, camden, campbell, carlisle, carlo, carrick, carter, casey, casper, castiel, cedric, cesar, channing, charles, chase, chuck, clifton, clinton, cleon, coen, coleman, colton, crew, cristiano, cooper, corbin, corey, cortez, cravin
D
dale, dallas, dalton, damari, damian, damon, dane, dante, dario, darius, davon, dax, dean, declan, dedrick, delius, demarcus, demetrius, dennis, denzel, deon, derek, devon, dexter, dillon, dimitri, dion, dolan, dominic, drake, drew, drystan, duke, dwayne, dwight, dyson
E
eaton, echo, edan, eddison, eden, edrick, eli, eliam, elias, elijah, elio, eliseo, ellis, emilio, emerson, emmett, enoch, enzo, ernest, eros, essex, evan, evian, ezra
F
fabian, falcon, fallon, farley, felix, fenton, finley, finnick, floyd, flynn, fonso, ford, forester, francisco, franco, freddy, frederick, frodi
G
gabe, gabriel, gaius, gabin, galvin, gareth, garrick, gaston, gaveel, georgie, gemini, giorgio, glade, gonzalo, gray, gregory, greyson, griffin, grover, gunner, guy
H
haim, hadden, hadley, hale, hammond, hanan, hanson, harden, harley, harris, hayes, helio, helix, hendrix, hermes, hiram, holden, holland, holmes, houstan, howard, hudson, hugh, hugo, hunter, hyde
I
iago, ian, icarius, idris, iker, ilario, indigo, isaak, isaiah, israel, ithiel, ives
J
jace, jadon, jago, jahziel, jairo, jakez, jakobe, jamari, janos, jaron, jasper, javier, jaxon, jayden, jaylon, jaziel, jenson, jeremiah, jermaine, jersey, jett, joaquin, jonas, jose, joss, jovani, joziah, judas, jude, julian, julius, junior, justice
K
kace, kaden, kael, kairo, kahlil, kai, kaleb, kamden, kanan, karson, kashton, kasper, keenan, keiran, kennedy, keon, kenton, kenzo, keyon, kez, kiah, killian, kingsley, kito, klaus, kobe, koby, kodah, kohen, kolton, kristian, knox, kyan, kynan, kyson
L
lamar, lamont, lance, landon, laney, larkin, lawyer, lazarus, leandro, lee, legend, lennox, leno, leon, levi, lex, liko, link, locke, loki, loman, lonzo, lorenzo, luca, lucian, lukas, lyam, lynx
M
mac, machi, macklin, maddox, magnus, maison, major, makeo, malaki, manning, mano, marion, marlon, mars, martez, mathias, maxton, mekhi, meyer, micah, milian, miller, milo, montey, montez, myles
N
nakos, nasir, nathaniel, neel, neriah, nero, nevada, nicolo, nicklaus, nickolai, nico, nike, nikos, nixon, noah, nolan, norton, nye
O
oakley, oberyn, obi, obsidian, octavian, oison, olimpio, olsen, omar, ontario, onyx, orion, orlando, oskar, oslo, oryn, otis, oxford, oxley
P
pablo, paley, palmer, parker, parson, pauly, paxton, pearce, perkin, phelix, phoenix, pierre, pike, podrick, porter, preston, prince, puck
Q
qamar, quinten, quillon, quince
R
racer, radley, rafael, rafer, ralph, rambo, ramiel, ramone, randall, raven, rayan, reed, reese, rhydian, ricardo, ridley, riker, riley, river, robin, rocco, roderick, roland, roman, romeo, ronan, roni, rowan, royden, rufus, ryder, ryland
S
sadler, safari, salem, salix, salvador, sami, santiago, sawyer, sean, seaton, severo, shayne, shiloh, silas, silvano, simba, skander, skyler, slade, spencer, spiro, stanley, stefan, syrus
T
talmon, tane, tanner, tate, tatum, tavis, teddy, terence, theo, theon, tirion, titus, tobias, tommen, tonio, travis, trey, troye, trystan, turner, tyrell, tyrese, tyson
U
ulan, uri, uriel, urien
V
vadim, vale, vance, valentine, vaughn, venturo, venus, vermont, vero, victor, vidor, vince, volante, voss
W
wade, walker, walter, warner, warren, watson, waylan, wayne, wilder, wilson, wilton, wolfgang, wyatt, wynton
X
xander, xavier, xenos, xylon
Y
yates, york, yuri, yusef
Z
zacharias, zade, zavier, zayn, zed, zeke, zero, zeus, zion
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books I read in 2019 (not including rereads, favorites are bolded!)
Come Close - Sappho
Shanghai Baby - Wei Hui
Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair - Pablo Neruda
Bad Feminist: Essays - Roxane Gay
The Mother of Black Hollywood: A Memoir - Jenifer Lewis
Sula - Toni Morrison
Reinventing the Enemy’s Language: Contemporary Native Women’s Writings of North America - ed. Joy Harjo and Gloria Bird
How to Write an Autobiographical Novel - Alexander Chee
Night Sky With Exit Wounds - Ocean Vuong
If They Come For Us - Fatimah Asghar
Heart Berries: A Memoir - Terese Marie Mailhot
Less - Andrew Sean Greer
The Astonishing Color of After - Emily X.R. Pan
Goodbye, Vitamin - Rachel Khong
Darius the Great is Not Okay - Adib Khorram
Exit West - Mohsin Hamid
Homegirls and Handgrenades - Sonia Sanchez
Heavy: An American Memoir - Keise Laymon
All You Can Ever Know - Nicole Chung
Unaccustomed Earth - Jhumpa Lahiri
The Wife Between Us - Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen
The Way You Make Me Feel - Maureen Goo
A Very Large Expanse of Sea - Tahereh Mafi
Water By the Spoonful - Quiara Alegría Hudes
I Can’t Date Jesus: Love, Sex, Family, Race, and Other Reasons I’ve Put My Faith in Beyoncé - Michael Arceneaux
Bury It - Sam Sax
White Dancing Elephants - Chaya Bhuvaneswar
Pulp - Robin Talley
Shit is Real - Aisha Franz
Silencer - Marcus Wicker
Forget Sorrow: An Ancestral Tale - Belle Yang
Bestiary: Poems - Donika Kelly
Monster Portraits - Sofia Samatar
No Matter the Wreckage - Sarah Kay
Violet Energy Ingots - Hoa Nguyen
Olio - Tyehimba Jess
The Kane Chronicles: The Serpent’s Shadow - Rick Riordan
There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé - Morgan Parker
Nylon Road: A Graphic Memoir of Coming of Age in Iran - Parsua Bashi
The Wedding Date - Jasmine Guillory
Fruit of the Drunken Tree - Ingrid Rojas Contreras
An American Marriage - Tayari Jones
Family Trust - Kathy Wang
Not That Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture - ed. Roxane Gay
Little & Lion - Brandy Colbert
A Girl Like That - Tanaz Bhathena
Suicide Club: A Novel About Living - Rachel Heng
The Disturbed Girl’s Dictionary - NoNieqa Ramos
My Old Faithful: Stories - Yang Huang
Crazy Rich Asians - Kevin Kwan
Girls Burn Brighter - Shobha Rao
Moon of the Crusted Snow - Waubgeshig Rice
Kingdom Animalia - Aracelis Girmay
Happiness - Aminatta Forna
Devotions - Mary Oliver
The Proposal - Jasmine Guillory
The Kiss Quotient - Helen Hoang
When Katie Met Cassidy - Camille Perri
Heads of the Colored People - Nafissa Thompson-Spires
Friday Black: Stories - Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
The Word is Murder - Anthony Horowitz
Miles from Nowhere - Nami Mun
The Lost Ones - Sheena Kamal
All the Names They Used for God - Anjali Sachdeva
Confessions of the Fox - Jordy Rosenberg
Love, Loss, and What We Ate: A Memoir - Padma Lakshmi
On the Come Up - Angie Thomas
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society - Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows
The Love & Lies of Rukhsana Ali - Sabina Khan
See What I Have Done - Sarah Schmitt
Convenience Store Woman - Sayaka Murata
I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter - Erika Sánchez
For Today I Am A Boy - Kim Fu
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo - Taylor Jenkins Reid
Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings - Joy Harjo
They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us - Hanif Abdurraqib
Mongrels - Stephen Graham Jones
If Beale Street Could Talk - James Baldwin
Death of Innocence: The Story of the Hate Crime that Changed America - Mamie Till-Mobley and Christopher Benson
The Gilded Wolves - Roshani Chokshi
To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before - Jenny Han
The Perfect Nanny - Leila Slimani, translated by Sam Taylor
The Travelling Cat Chronicles - Hiro Arikawa, translated by Philip Gabriel
Things We Lost in the Fire - Mariana Enríquez, translated by Megan McDowell
Sunburn - Laura Lippman
The House of Impossible Beauties - Joseph Cassara
Freshwater - Akwaeke Emezi
A Private Life - Chen Ran, translated by John Howard-Gibbon
Invisible: The Forgotten Story of the Black Woman Lawyer Who Took Down America’s Most Powerful Mobster - Stephen L. Carter
Undead Girl Gang - Lily Anderson
They Both Die at the End - Adam Silvera
The Friend - Sigrid Nunez
Severance - Ling Ma
Tiny Crimes: Very Short Tales of Mystery & Murder - ed. Licoln Michel and Nadxieli Nieto
Mapping the Interior - Stephen Graham Jones
Give Me Some Truth - Eric Gansworth
How to Love a Jamaican - Alexia Arthurs
All of This is True - Lygia Day Peñaflor
Swimmer Among the Stars - Kanishk Tharoor
The Wicked + the Divine, Vol. 7: Mothering Invention - Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie
This is Kind of an Epic Love Story - Kheryn Callender
Gingerbread - Helen Oyeyemi
Where the Dead Sit Talking - Brandon Hobson
The Ensemble - Aja Gabel
My Education - Susan Choi
More Happy than Not - Adam Silvera
Nobody Cares: Essays - Anne T. Donahue
Kiss and Tell: A Romantic Résumé, Ages 0 to 22 - Marinaomi
Oculus: Poems - Sally Wen Mao
Let’s Talk About Love - Claire Kann
History is All You Left Me - Adam Silvera
Opposite of Always - Justin A. Reynolds
The Crown Ain’t Worth Much - Hanif Abdurraqib
The Weight of Our Sky - Hanna Alkaf
If You See Me, Don’t Say Hi - Neel Patel
Girls of Paper and Fire - Natasha Ngan
What if It’s Us - Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera
The Map of Salt and Stars - Jennifer Zeynab Joukhadar
October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard - Lesléa Newman
The Big Smoke - Adrian Matejka
Dissolve - Sherwin Bitsui
The Woman Next Door - Yewande Omotoso
The Refugees - Viet Thanh Nguyen
White Tears - Hari Kunzru
Electric Arches - Eve Ewing
The Black Maria - Aracelis Girmay
Bloodchild and Other Stories - Octavia Butler
Soft Science - Franny Choi
The White Card - Claudia Rankine
Mad Honey Symposium - Sally Wen Mao
The Care and Feeding of Ravenously Hungry Girls - Anissa Gray
Next: New Poems - Lucille Clifton
The Marvelous Arithmetics of Distance: Poems 1987-1992 - Audre Lorde
Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea: Poems and Not Quite Poems - Nikki Giovanni
The Arab of the Future - Riad Sattouf
Ghosts in the Schoolyard: Racism and School Closings on Chicago’s South Side - Eve L. Ewing
Gruel - Bunkong Tuon
Marriage of a Thousand Lies - SJ Sindu
Parable of the Sower - Octavia Butler
Good Night, Willie Lee, I’ll See You in the Morning - Alice Walker
That Kind of Mother - Rumaan Alam
Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows - Balli Kaur Jaswal
Hera Lindsay Bird - Hera Lindsay Bird
Queenie - Candice Carty-Williams
And Still I Rise - Maya Angelou
The Man Who Shot Out My Eye Is Dead - Chanelle Benz
Everyone Knows You Go Home - Natalia Sylvester
Naming Our Destiny: New and Selected Poems - June Jordan
The 100* Best African American Poems (*But I Cheated) - ed. Nikki Giovanni
The Haunting of Tram Car 015 - P. Djèlí Clark
Bury My Clothes - Roger Bonair-Agard
Selected Poems - Langston Hughes
Their Eyes Were Watching God - Zora Neale Hurston
Sonata Mulattica - Rita Dove
Winnie - Gwendolyn Brooks
Bicycles: Love Poems - Nikki Giovanni
The Black God’s Drums -  P. Djèlí Clark
Kid Gloves: Nine Months of Careful Chaos - Lucy Knisley
Annie Allen - Gwendolyn Brooks
Parable of the Talents  - Octavia Butler
After Disasters - Viet Dinh
Passing for Human: A Graphic Memoir - Liana Finck
Teeth - Aracelis Girmay
A Surprised Queenhood in the New Black Sun: The Life & Legacy of Gwendolyn Brooks - Angela Jackson
Peluda - Melissa Lozada-Oliva
A Map to the Next World - Joy Harjo
Magical Negro - Morgan Parker
Corpse Whale - dg nanouk okpik
Hawkeye: Volume 1 - Matt Fraction
Cenzontle - Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric - Claudia Rankine
Selected Poems - Gwendolyn Brooks
She Had Some Horses - Joy Harjo
The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hope - ed. Kevin Coval, Quraysh Ali Lansana, and Nate Marshall
Beyond Uhura: Star Trek and Other Memories - Nichelle Nichols
The Past and Other Things that Should Stay Buried - Shaun David Hutchinson
Difficult Women - Roxane Gay
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Go Ahead in the Rain: Notes to A Tribe Called Quest - Hanif Abdurraqib
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Hungry Hearts: 13 Tales of Love and Food - ed. Elsie Chapman and Caroline Tung Richmond
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Speak No Evil - Uzodinma Iweala
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You Can’t Touch My Hair: And Other Things I Still Have to Explain - Phoebe Robinson
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Helium - Rudy Francisco
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Tomie - Junji Ito
Everything’s Trash, But It’s Okay - Phoebe Robinson
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Stag’s Leap - Sharon Olds
Black Card - Chris L. Terry
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Washington Black - Esi Edugyan
From Here To Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death - Caitlin Doughty
I’m Telling the Truth, But I’m Lying: Essays - Bassey Ikpi
A House of My Own: Stories from my Life - Sandra Cisneros
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America is Not the Heart - Elaine Castillo
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Maurice - E.M. Forster
Permanent Record - Mary H.K. Choi
The Downstairs Girl - Stacey Lee
Red Dust Road: An Autobiographical Journey - Jackie Kay
The Ungrateful Refugee: What Immigrants Never Tell You - Dina Nayeri
I Married My Best Friend to Shut My Parents Up - Naoko Kodama
Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI - David Grann
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Moon: Letters, Maps, Poems - Jennifer S. Cheng
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Who Put This Song On? - Morgan Parker
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Eyes Bottle Dark with a Mouthful of Flowers - Jake Skeets
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The Lady from the Black Lagoon: Hollywood Monsters and the Lost Legacy of Milicent Patrick - Mallory O’Meara
Shapes of Native Nonficton: Collected Essays by Contemporary Writers - ed. Elissa Washuta and Theresa Warburton
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Even the Saints Audition - Rachel Jackson
Slay - Britney Morris
#NotYourPrincess: Voices of Native American Women - ed. Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale
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North of Dawn - Nuruddin Farah
Daisy Jones & The Six - Taylor Jenkins Reid
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They Called Us Enemy - George Takei
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It - Stephen King
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My Fate According to the Butterfly - Gail D. Villanueva
The Wicked + the Divine, Vol. 9: “Okay” - Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie
The Deep - Rivers Solomon
I Hope We Choose Love: A Trans Girl’s Notes from the End of the World - Kai Cheng Thom
Mooncakes - Suzanne Walker
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Hot Comb - Ebony Flowers
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Crier’s War - Nina Varela
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Binti - Nnedi Okorafor
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Recursion - Blake Crouch
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thesinglesjukebox · 5 years
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LIL NAS X - OLD TOWN ROAD
[6.73]
We're gonna bluuuurb til we can't no more...
Katie Gill: The problem with "Old Town Road" is that it's more interesting as a thinkpiece than an actual song. The song charting, then being excluded, from the Billboard Country Music charts opens so many questions that can't be answered in one sitting. Is this a further example of the well-documented racism in country music? Or is this just a freak accident hick-hop song that vaulted it's way out of the depths of subgenre hell? Is a twangy voice and references to horses enough to make a song "country"? Does the presence of Billy Ray Cyrus in a remix that dropped on Friday legitimize the song's credentials or just make them worse? Where was all this controversy when "Meant To Be," an honest-to-god pop song, was holding steady on the charts? There are so many questions and so many points of conversation that spring out from this song, that it's a pity "Old Town Road" itself is just okay. Everything about it screams "filler track for the SoundCloud page," from the length to the trap beats to the aggressively mediocre lyrics. The song didn't even chart on it's own merits: it charted because it's used in a TikTok meme! This is like if "We Are Number One" or "No Mercy" made their way to the top of the iTunes charts and people decided to have a conversation about the limits of genre based on those charting. I'm a little annoyed, because the conversation around "Old Town Road" is something that country music should be having... but just not around "Old Town Road." [5]
Jacob Sujin Kuppermann: There are essays upon essays to be written about "Old Town Road" as a prism for the racial divides that have served as undergirding for the modern American genre system since the 1930s division between "hillbilly" and "race" records. It's the perfect hunk of think-piece fodder: a simple core question -- is it country? -- that can spiral out to all corners of culture until the song itself is obscured. So let's focus on the song, instead. Because beyond all world-historical significance, "Old Town Road" fucking bangs. It's all in the bait and switch of that intro -- banjos and horns plunking away until Lil Nas X's triumphant "YEAAAH" (second this decade only to Fetty Wap) drops and the beat comes in. It's a joke until it's not -- maybe you came in from the Red Dead Redemption 2 video, or from a friend of yours talking about the hilarious country trap song, or from the artist's own Twitter, which is more Meech On Mars than Meek Mill, but no matter the source, you'll find that "Old Town Road" has its way of looping into your brain, all drawls and boasts and banjos. It's meme rap, but much like prior iterations of this joke ("Like a Farmer"), Lil Nas X fully and deeply commits -- he doesn't drop the pretense for a single line, keeping the track short enough to not outlive its welcome while still exploring its weird conceit to its fullest. Yet even in its jokey vibe there's some actual pathos -- no matter how put on, the lonesome cowboy sorrow of Lil Nas X's declaration that he'll "ride till [he] can't no more" feels genuine. "Old Town Road" is everything at once, the implosion of late teens culture into one undeniable moment. [10]
David Moore: So here's a true gem of a novelty song -- a phrase I use with both intention and respect; I grew up in a Dementoid household -- that could launch a thousand thinkpieces about hip-hop, country, class, the object and subject of jokes, whether to call something a joke at all, you name it. But what I keep returning to is the economy of it, its simplicity, how there is so much in so little, the way that someone on the outside can grok things inaccessible to the insiders, maybe by accident or by studious observation and a fresh perspective, the way music can be a multiverse, characters from one world complicating or clarifying or confusing the limits of another in a mutually provocative way. I'm not a backstory guy, which is to say I'm not a research guy, which is to say I'm either intuitive or lazy or both, so I don't have any clue where this came from, but I know magic when I hear it, I know what it sounds like when you discover, or simply stumble into by accident, the path beyond the bounds of territory you presumed exhausted, territory that can always get bigger, always invite whole new parties to the party. It's a real party party; you can get in. [10]
Katherine St Asaph: "Old Town Road" is the "Starships" of 2019: a song that objectively is not great, but will be called great for the understandable reason that liking or disliking it now unavoidably entails choosing the right or wrong side. This tends to lead to hand-waving freakoutery about critics not talking about the music, man, but once The Discourse is out in the world, it becomes a real and critical part of the song's existence; not talking about Billboard punting "Old Town Road" would be like talking about "Not Ready to Make Nice" as an workaday country song. The problem is not quite as simple as "the Billboard charts don't want black artists," an argument with historical precedent but now doomed to fail: clearly, people like Kane Brown and Darius Rucker and Mickey Guyton (who's left off lists like this, somehow) have hits. It's more about respectability politics. Traditionalists hate the idea of memes, social media, and perceived line-cutting, all of which means they'll hate a song born not of the Nashville and former-fraternity-bro scene, but via TikTok and stan Twitter. But what they really, really hate is rap and anything that sounds like a gateway to rap; like if they tolerate this Cardi B will be next. Country radio, for the past decade or two, has been pop radio with all the blatant rap signifiers removed; its songs aren't about cowboys or horses but suburban WASP life. Of course, double standards abound. Talking about lean is out; talking about bingeing beer is fine. "Bull riding and boobies" isn't OK because it's from a guy called Lil Nas X -- I honestly think people would whine less if this exact song was credited to "Montero Hill" -- but "I got a girl, her name's Sheila, she goes batshit on tequila" is OK because it's from a guy called Jake Owen, and "Look What God Gave Her" is OK because it hides its ogling of boobies behind plausibly deniable God talk. Fortunately "Old Town Road" is better than "Starships" -- the NIN sample is inspired, and the hook is evocative and sticky. (It fucks with authenticity politics, too -- Lil Nas X wrote his own song, but the big corporate country artists often don't.) Its main problem is that it's slight: a meme that doesn't overstay past the punchline, a song that never quite gets to song size. [5]
Thomas Inskeep: Sampling Nine Inch Nails' "34 Ghosts IV" to (help) create a western motif is hands-down brilliant, so huge thumbs-up for that. Lyrically, this is pretty empty, a bunch of western clichés strung together -- but then again, the same can be said of plenty of Big & Rich songs. Split the score down the middle, accordingly. [5]
Scott Mildenhall: But surely this is how country music should sound? Lil Nas X has performed alchemy in combining two generic styles into something inspiring, flipping the meaning of "pony and trap" on its head. The mechanical sound of trap is rusted into the mechanical sound of fixing a combine, or at least pretending that is something you might do, and such performance is fun for all the family. Well, unless you're an American farming family tired of stereotypes anyway. [7]
Stephen Eisermann: Non country (trap) beat with subtle country instrumentation? Sounds like much of country radio, only way better! [7]
Nortey Dowuona: A burning, humming bass girds under sticklike banjos as Lil Nas X rides into town to water his horse and head back out onto the open road. [5]
Alex Clifton: I spent the weekend re-enacting this scene from Easy A with this song, so it's safe to say I like it. I especially love the "horse"/"Porsche" line, which is unexpected and amazing. [7]
Alfred Soto: The usual genre conversations threaten to smother analysis. If Lil Nas X can use trap drums, then why can't Sam Hunt use loops? Silly. (Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes: "The Constitution is what the judges say it is"). The Kanye allusion ("Y'all can't tell me nuthin'") works extra-diagetically. An assemblage of modest, discrete charms held together by a solid performance at its center -- nothing more. I await the Future-Frank Liddell collab. [5]
Edward Okulicz: It's affectionate and actually quite deferential in its treatment of its parent genres. Crossovers like this have been hinted at, and gestured towards in the other direction quite a bit of late (country artists affecting hip-hop, less so the latter), and the two genres have more in common than the caricatures of the sorts of people who are supposed to listen to them do. Of course, I mean those genres as they exist today, and not in the warped imaginations of purists. You can see why kids have latched on, and it's easy to snarl at Big Chart for sticking their oar in. The kids are right; artists control the means of production and radio and chart compilers can accept that they aren't the tastemakers, and attempts to force their tastes down other people's throats will lead to a backlash. This is not a brilliant song but it's a picture of one of many potential musical futures and, at two minutes, the perfect length too. The right response is to smile, and "Old Town Road" makes it easy to smile -- it's an earworm. Sure, it doesn't give me the same immediate feeling of fuck!!! this is the best that I got when I first heard that version of Bubba Sparxxx's "Comin' Round" but country music survived "Honey, I'm Good" and it will survive this. It might well thrive. [6]
Joshua Copperman: I recently found out that I have a moderate Vitamin D deficiency, but looking up the song everyone was talking about and hearing this basically confirmed that I should go outside more often. There are definitely things to talk about: it's the logical conclusion to "I listen to everything except country and rap" jokes when the inverse has taken over the Hot 100, and it's a song that's set to hit number one because everyone is incredulous that it exists at all -- with a Billy Ray Cyrus remix to boot. The conversations about what makes a song "country" are all fascinating, but it's hard to fully enjoy pieces about something that, as an actual song, is so fundamentally empty. The Nine Inch Nails sample is interesting, but like everything else, more intriguing in theory than execution. This will wind up on every site's "best of 2019" lists, and then in ten years people will snark on how a song with "My life is a movie/Bullridin' and boobies" was so critically acclaimed. As a meme/discourse lightning rod, it's an [8], as a how-to guide for late-2010s fame, it's a [10], but there's little appeal in a vacuum. Adding a bonus point, because music has never existed in a vacuum anyway. [5]
Taylor Alatorre: Remember when the internet was still described as a realm of lawless and limitless potential, when open source could be touted as revolutionary praxis and "free flow of information" was a sacred utterance? Now one of the key political questions is whether private companies should be doing more to banish online rulebreakers or whether the federal government should step in to delimit what those rules are. Whichever side ends up winning, it's clear that the wide open spaces of the Frontier Internet are rapidly facing enclosure. Montero Hill learned this the hard way when his @nasmaraj account was suspended by Twitter as part of its crackdown against spam-based virality. While Tweetdeckers are nobody's martyrs, it's a minor tragedy every time an account with that many followers and that much influence gets shunted off to the broken-link stacks of the Wayback Machine. Rules must be laid down, but their enforcement always entails loss -- the bittersweet triumph of civilization over nature that forms the backbone of every classic Western. Maybe Hill/nasmaraj/Lil Nas X had this loss in mind when writing the jauntily defiant lyrics of "Old Town Road." Maybe he was just riding the microtrends of the moment like he was before. Still, this particular microtrend -- the reappropriation of cowboy imagery by non-white Americans -- feels too weighty to be reduced to mere aesthetics. Turner's Frontier Thesis may have been racially blinkered to the extreme, but the myths and yearnings it spawned can never die; they just get democratized. So it makes sense that young Americans, even those who don't know who John Wayne is, would subconsciously reach out for the rural, the rustic, the rugged and free, just as we feel the global frontiers closing all around us. Our foreign policy elites hold endless panel talks about "maintaining power projection" and "winning the AI race," but most normal people don't care about that stuff. We're all secretly waiting for China to take over like in our cyberpunk stories, so we can drop all the pressures of being the Indispensable Nation and just feast off our legacy like post-imperial Britain. And what is that legacy? It's rock, it's country, it's hip hop, it's "Wrangler on my booty," it's all the vulgar mongrelisms that force our post-ironic white nationalists to adopt Old Europe as their lodestar. In short, it's "Old Town Road." We're gonna ride this horse 'til we can't no more, we're gonna reify these myths 'til we can't no more, because when the empire is gone, the myths are all we have. (Oh, and the Billy Ray remix is a [10]. Obviously.) [9]
Jonathan Bradley: People suppose that genre exists to delineate a set of sounds, and while it does do that, it depends even more on its ability to build, define, and speak for communities. The question of whether "Old Town Road" is a country song or not is in some ways easily resolved: country music showed no interest in Lil Nas X -- or at least not until Billy Ray Cyrus noticed an opportune moment to complicate expectations and grab headlines -- and so Lil Nas X's song was not country. Even taking into account its sound and subject matter, his hit is best understood as a burlesque on country music, one that parodies and exaggerates the genre's motifs and themes for heightened effect. The kids on TikTok, who turned the long-gone lonesome blues of the song's tumbleweed hook into viral content, understand this intuitively: they use the incongruity that clarifies at the beat drop as an opportunity to engage in caricature and costume. And while Lil Nas X, a huckster and a trendspotter before he was a pop star, has been happy to embrace the yee-haw mantle that has been bestowed upon him, his song is a familiar rap exercise in play and extended metaphor. The Shop Boyz did much the same thing with "Party Like a Rock Star" and it would be obtuse to suppose that was a rock song. And yet, as the country historian Bill C. Malone has written, country since its inception has attracted fans "because of its presumed Southern traits, whether romantically or negatively expressed"; there has always been a bit of schtick to this sound. I wondered when we reviewed Trixie Mattel whether country is, on some level, intrinsically camp, and it's tough to declare definitively that Lil Nas X's bold hick strokes are that much more stylized than Jake Owen's performance of small town ordinariness. And just as a country music based on cohesive community rather than sound has found itself broad enough to encompass northern hair metal, Auto-Tuned club stomps, and Ludacris, the gate-keeping involved in keeping Lil Nas X out begins to look suspicious. After all, the first song to debut on Billboard's Most Played Juke Box Folk Records chart, the predecessor to today's Hot Country Songs, was "Pistol Packin' Mama," a hillbilly goof by the decidedly uncountry combination of Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters. As Malone has written, "While the commercial fraternity thought mainly of profits, the recording men, radio executives, publicists, promoters, ad men, sponsors, and booking agents who dealt with folk music also readily manipulated public perceptions in order to sell their products." One of the ways they did that was to tap into already mythological figures of American individualism like the cowboy, who is, after all, a creature of the west and not the South. "The respective visions of cowboy and western life drew far more from popular culture and myth ... than they did from reality," Malone writes of the early country singers who embraced cowboy personae; in some ways Lil Nas X's purloining of meme interest in that same culture places him within a rich country heritage. After all, when in popular entertainment has shameless self-promotion not been part of the aspirant's trade? It does matter how cultural communities react to the music made in their name, but when certain people are adjudicated not fit for club membership, it is worth asking why. Country's culture, I said recently, is "one that's implicitly but not definitely Southern, implicitly but not definitely rural, and implicitly but not definitely white," and it's easy to see how Lil Nas X doesn't fit into that. Country music's racism isn't unique to the genre -- the historical hegemonies of punk and indie rock are at least as determinedly white -- but it is particularly visible. Country is racist like the South is racist like America is racist. Lil Nas X disrupts that settlement, helping us imagine a country music that genuinely encompasses the music of the American South -- a genre that has space for "This is How We Roll" and Miranda Lambert, Lil Boosie and Young Thug, "Formation" and Juvenile, and perhaps even Norteño and banda sounds. That would be, however, not only a far different country music to what we know today, but the music of a far different America. [7]
Iris Xie: Yeet haw! Aside from the great pleasure I've had in showing this to my friends, (Me, two weeks ago: "Have you heard this country trap song???" My friends, this week: "Iris, that song you're talking about now has Billy Ray Cyrus on it??") and either slinging back and forth memey references, engaging in discussions on the state of white supremacy in the music industry while also debating about the song's merit, or hearing my friends start singing "can't nobody tell me nothing..." very quietly at any moment and I can't help but join in -- it's all been very fun. Aside from making plans to play "Old Town Road" on my next country road drive to Costco, something that's occurred to me is that this is a song boosted by the status and calamity of its metanarrative. We could always use more discussions of the double standards that Black and POC artists face in the industry when it comes to genres and participating in it, and I'm honestly glad Lil Nas X just made something that was fun and made sense to him, even if "Old Town Road" doesn't stray too much from the conventions of both trap and country, resulting in a well-balanced mashup that sounds more safe than surprising to me, but is serene in its confidence nevertheless. On the flipside of that genre-mashing, Miley wishes and is probably very jealous of her father now for hopping onto this train, lest we forget about all of her cultural appropriation attempts. But for the song itself, those long, relaxed drawls and the imagery of riding a horse to the trap beat -- why not? We live in weird times now, Black people's contributions to country music were erased, and it's kind of a relaxing song. Also, I'm a fan of the "Can't nobody tell me nothing" lyric, which has become an unintentionally defiant line in the face of all the backlash, resulting in a message to rally around. Now excuse me, as I text my friends that "I'm gonna take my horse down to the old town road." [8]
[Read, comment and vote on The Singles Jukebox]
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riddledeep · 6 years
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LIST OF GEN 2 PIXIES
Offspring of Fergus Whimsifinado (Head Pixie the First) from Sanderson to Southmark. Most are interchangeable, but notable characters are bolded and marked with an asterisk.
Alternatively, click HERE to view a Google Sheet that lists the Gen 2 pixies, their ages during the frozen timestream, ages compared with Anti-Cosmo, and age difference from Sanderson (Basically a prettier and better organized version of this post).
This is a quick reference tool I made for author purposes and ages are not 100% exact to the year (H.P. doesn’t have his pixies exactly on the 500 year mark, after all).
*Fergus Whimsifiando - Head Pixie the First (Gen 1)
*Ennet Sanderson - Vice president of customer service; head of complaints department; H.P.’s personal assistant; Ivorie brand cowlick
*Cecil Hawkins - Sucks his thumb; has a bad hand; does budgeting work
*Alapin Wilcox - Fagigglyne addict; runs emergency response team
*Markell Longwood - Vice President of Pixies Inc. and H.P.’s heir
*Mitchell Caudwell - Foop’s therapist at Wish Fixers
*James Bayard - Kind of a goodball; marketing team
*Luke Madigan - H.P.’s personal secretary; likes birds; especially sneaky; needed glasses early
Oliver Graham - Pixie neotype in Eros Nest
Walter Keefe - In-vitro baby; has dysolfactya; manages the Labyrinth
Hunter Springs - Had a surrogate father
*Elliot McKinley - Extremely religious
Ralston - Emergency response team; annoying suck-up
Walters - Puts everyone else first; rooms with Caudwell/Bayard/Madigan
Thane - Tinkers with mechanics; texts smiley faces
*Charlie Palomar - H.P.’s favorite child; works at Wish Fixers
Cinna - Architect; appears in “Make You Proud” and “Rain Dance”
Kaufman - Known for his short temper
Saddler - Works with the Big Wand in Fairy World; Ivorie brand cowlick
Abernathy - Does concept test work; chronic scapegoat
*Darius Smith - Gyne; Chief Pixie of PixieCo (in Hawthorn Haven)
Tindall - Works in retail
Butler - Personally attends to big-name visitors like ambassadors
Keight
Scott
Clark
Phillips
Richards
Ross
*Newman - Security; large “bouncer”; fastest; Ivorie brand cowlick
*Hamilton - Security; large “bouncer”; strongest; Ivorie brand cowlick
*Faust - Security; large “bouncer”; dumbest; Ivorie brand cowlick
Roberts
Wolfram
Carmichael - Judged diving competition in “Fairly Oddlympics”
Lee
Wright
Fisher
Brown
Middleton
Ward
Lloyd
Shaw
Cox
Powell
Chapman
Walsh
Dalton
Jones
Taylor
Matthews
Thomson 
Miller
O'Neil
Walton
Burns
Perry
Hayes
Baxter
Johnson
Atkins
Colby
Higgins
Bates
Skinner
Marconi - Works on Sanderson’s floor (��Terrible Timing”)
Ford 
Wilkes
Hanson
Devlin
Rawlings
Lovell
Heaton
Collier
Stanton
Bowman
Carey
Aldred
Cummings
Beaumont
*Herman Jardine - Gardener; likes Batman
Hirschi - Born under elephant statue at the golf course
Wainwright
Devine
Conway
Edmonds
Hackett
Fielding
Knott
Manson
McKay
Duckley
Plume
Calvert
Hale
Dowling
Pike
Beck
Millburn
Ryans
Pemberton
York
Westing
Redmond
Proctor
Squires
Penn
Sahlberg
Moore
Humphrey
McAdams
Jensen
Webber
Brooks
Iyer
Kinsley
Martel
Craven
Polluck
Rothwell
Booth
Candless
Hobson
Oldfield
Gallowey
Dougal
*Jackie Cresswell - Pixie/Anti-Pixie relations; gyne
Haddock
Alderson
Windsor
Clough
Ohara
Jackson
Keane
Lewin
Crowley
Marr
Benfield
Stanford
Wale
Emmerson
Prescott
Montague
Kipling
Howe
Milford
Foulkes
Clifton
O'Donell
Tipping
Saville
Sherry
Ashby
Lawther
Carnegie
Purnell
Dover
*Rudyard Chidlow - Pixie-Human relations; gyne
Kilmurry
Fallon
Thomas
Dallas
Merrick
Oak
Yardley
Levett
Cahill
Beckett
Peake
Haker
Patchett
Ellerby - Demoed preening with Longwood in Frayed Knots
Hartshorn
Cawley
Wilmot
Vale
Henley
Astley
Cunliffe
Walling
Hatsfield
Parkins
O'Halloran
Craddock
Rogan
McFarlene
Southam
Wilkshire
Marland
Colebrook
Kimber
Starnes
Cobb
Rackham
Enright
McAlpine
Dunne
Draper
Mansell
Monroe
Cowan - Marketing (“Solo”)
Larson - Thematic maps of magic usage (“Solo”)
Woolley
Preece
Glenn - Got H.P.’s coffee wrong once so H.P. pretends he’s dead
Dickinson
Steadmon
Dawe
McDaniel - Appears in the Origin chapter “Mother’s Touch”
Lomas
Thatcher
Hutchings
Adamson
Wilkes
Lenninger
Meadows
Dalby
Birch
Travers
Tierney
Driscoll
Stamp
Ingram
Winters
Cottrell
O'Leary
Sampson
Royle
Whitaker
Caton
Laycock
Steel
Ricci
Carter
Pierce
Harris
Feldman
Brunet
Rush
Hinckley
Partington
Gillett
Hyde
Stretton
Darter
Banner
Orchad
Xanders
Haywood
Shipley
Chalmers
Groves
Milward
Ansell
Boulton
Quikley
Lockwood
Keating
Marlowe
Samuels
Cowdery
Orme
Leith
Lander
Court
Foley
Rixon
Toland
Lomax
McCall
Chatton
Wakefield
Tyrer
Mistry
Ricketts
Bower
Peck
Hartman
Swales
Woodford
Blakey
Grant
Kimball
Raeburn
Tailor
Holt
Rowlinson
O'Dell
Benson
Coburn
Rutherford
Winstanley
Lancer - Lancer and above are taller than Sanderson as of “Name”
Torres - Sanderson is taller than Torres and below as of “Name”
Pinnock
Bristow
Lilley
*Flint Spicer - Gyne
Worrall
Archer
Oates
Matheson
Fairburne
Rutter
Nicholls
Shand
Mallinson
Harker
Farnsworth
Mears
Tweddle
Falconer
Milett
Stout
Rasborne
Alpert
O'Malley
Baldwin
Featherstone
Bloom
Whitway
Bensigner
Fitton
Shackleton - Last pixie born before the War of the Angels
Kingston - Born during the War of the Angels
Sterling - Born during the War of the Angels
Sweeny - Born during the War of the Angels
Andrews - Born during the War of the Angels
Gilbey - Born during the War of the Angels
Markham - Born during the War of the Angels
*Weskar - Deceased
*Dayflower Commelina - Flower child
Burton
Kerridge
Otten
Pattel
Bleeker
Norcross
Jake
Newberry
Hemming
Oxley
Dodds
Nelms
Steward
Hatton
Sunley
Imsodon
Noidees
Trying
Hartford
Klever
Ness
Hayles
Spoons
Kettel
Avery
Brookfeld
Keywood
Highridge
Skene
Elliston
Orritt
Lincoln
Sheldon
Lovett
Conrad
Killock
*Nathaniel Lambton - Gyne
Fernley
Sellers
Aherne
Tidmarsh
Stammers
Briggon
Harrows
Gammon
Knowler
Ketley
Rodwell
Beresford
Sorrell
Handcock
Geary
Kinch
Ainsworth
Lendon
Houlton
Danby
Chaser
Applebee
Blushden
Kerby
Patton
Locke
Gann
Somerville
Jericho
Markwell
Porter
Penham
Linley
Quinton
Jasper
Langford
Dolan
Underwood
Cunningham
Littlefield
Klein
Lifsey
Jeffreys
Dell
Sewell
*Mullins - Tolbert’s older twin
*Tolbert - Mullins’ younger twin
Lake
Rivers
Carey
Docker
Collinson
Shepherd
Drew
Ianson
Lindstrom
Dunmore
Wellman
Calderwood
Kinnison
Dyerson
Burrow
Chance
Downey
Carlile
Sumner
Willetts
Shuttleworth
Lendon
Castel
Slattery
Godwin
Buckland
Shannon
Leeding
Dowler
Wheatcroft
Birkett
Stokes
Briden
Crossan
Varley
Leeson
Percival
Dimmock
Milton
Sawden
Lillfell
Davy
Elphick
Peterson
Michaels - Born under elephant statue at the golf course
Reid
Marland
Everton
Winfer
Simmons
Norgate
Kysel
Richter
Truman
Walsh
Branting
Derrien
Swanson
Burlinson
*Melvin Kettingham - Gyne
Teal
Kress
Pendleton
Roper
Brace
Showell
Dymott
McKeller
Strauss
Roman
Marshfield
Scammell
Cortes
Swatton
Green
Morse
Spearing
Steeper
Grayson
Cane
Sherwin - Last pixie mentioned in Origin of the Pixies
Stockdale - Born post-Origin of the Pixies
Zachman
Bell
Cooper
Carson
Putnam
William Snow - Scored 10/10/9 in gymnastics (“Make You Proud”)
*Addison Rosencrantz - Local screw-up
Marcus Verona - Skilled for his age and smug about it
*Gavin Finley - Poof’s, Foop’s, and Sammy’s roommate; gyne; tomte
Jordan Southmark - H.P. babies him since he’s his youngest
.
Click HERE for my Fairly OddParents worldbuilding masterpost
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nsula · 6 years
Text
Spring 2018 Honor Roll
NATCHITOCHES –  One thousand and ten students were named to the Spring 2018 Honor Roll at Northwestern State University. Students on the Honor Roll earned a grade point average of between 3.0 and 3.49. Those named to the Honor Roll listed by hometown are as follows.
 Abbeville -- Kyle Baudoin;
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland -- Adrian Borel;
Atlanta -- Jamie Wagley;
Alexandria -- Raven Adams, Iris Barrera, Samantha Bergeron, Ariyanna Bonton, John, Jasmine Brown, Kayla Busby, Keana Byone, Joshua Cain, Alyssa Carpenter, Brandy Danzy, Josyf Das Neves, Anne David, Joshua Dorsey, Tai Fletcher, Bailey Gaspard, Mallory Halford, Adrienne Jett, Jasmine Johnson, Tadriel Jones, Leslie Katz, Dean Mayeux, Claudine McGlory, Olivia Mosley, Deasheneire Payne, Kellie Pebbles, Madeline Pharis, Ragan Richey, Imani Ricks, Kenya Sariale, Nadage Scott, Taijha Silas, Carlos Sykes, Payton Tassin, Alexander Trotter, Hailey Urena, William Welch, Tashiana Whitehead, Elaina Williams;
Anacoco -- Ryan Blanton, Alysia Copen, Shelby Mcelveen, Jason Ortiz, Ireland Slocum, Tyler Stephens, Erica Wade, Cameron, Emily Williams;
Arabi -- Cursten Smith;
Arnaudville -- Ariana Broussard, Bailey Dautreuil;
Athens -- Ryan Carroway;
Atlanta, Georgia -- Tremayne Flagler;
Atlanta -- Jackson Teal, Kara Teddlie;
Ball -- Brittany Breland, Katherine Cohenour, TyKiera Fikes, Kaitlyn Humphries, Will Salinas;
Barksdale AFB -- Aleigh Rosenberry, Kimberly Ventura Gonzalez;
Bastrop -- Kayla Bonner, Haleigh Irby;
Baton Rouge -- Aubrey Barrett, Rosa Campbell, Coe Castello, Marquise Foster, Cameron Hooper, Ethan Johnson, Syera Lane, Daniel Midyett, Rachel Monsour, Victoria Simmons, Julia Soileau, Jordan Williams;
Beaumont, Texas -- Christian Bluiett;
Belcher -- Jessica Herbert;
Belle Chasse -- Hayley Barbazon, Denim Reeves;
Belmont -- Ashley Hill;
Ben Wheeler, Texas -- Cheyenne Brown;
Bentley -- Joshua Ellis, Heather Jones;
Benton -- Ali Hedgepeth, Elizabeth Jones, Abigail Lauterbach, Jackson Mathews, Blaine Reeder, Maegan Ross, Hannah Schott, Audrey Trujillo;
Berwick -- Brittany Vidos;
Bethany -- Emily Lafitte;
Blanchard -- Carrie Johnson;
Blue Ridge, Texas -- Amber Bishop;
Bogalusa -- Brittany Galloway;
Bossier City -- Austin Averitt, Adriana Avie, Colton Bailey, Ashley Bennett, Leah Benoit, Jontil Benson, Mickayla Blue, Alexandra Borrmann, Kayli Brewer, Alexander Brooks, Courtney Brooks, Takeynea Brown, Mckay Crews, Karla Cruz, Marda David, Jordan Davis, Kasey Dice, Kelly Flores, Courtney Giddens, Sydney Gootee, Jacob Hammons, Adrianne Hampton, Asylynn Henderson, Angelo Hurtado, Haley Joncas, Emily Larosee, Mikayla Lehane, Savannah Lewwe, Rance Mason, Claire McMillan, Michelle Moline, Brittany Morris, Reondrick Owens, Michael Phelps, Khayla Pugh, Nigmeh Rahman, Sierra Richard, Johnathon Schluter, Sydney Shannon, Allisyn Steele, Crystal Tuggle, Tomaya Turner, Jacory Williams;
Boutte -- Jose Del Rio;
Boyce -- Hannah Aslin, Seth Baggett, Brooklynn Basco, Devin Hilliard, Amanda Land, Lizabeth Lee, Eli Maffioli, Alexandra Morgan;
Breaux Bridge -- Braylon Daigle;
Brookland, Texas -- Paige West;
Brownsboro, Texas -- Brice Borgeson;
Brusly -- Dominique Bennett, Emma Wallace;
Bunkie -- Kelsey Coulon, Haley Laprairie;
Bush -- Serena Bonnette;
Calhoun -- Marissa Barentine;
Callisburg, Texas -- Maycy English;
Calvin -- Erin Price;
Campti -- Zachary Friday, Dalton Parker, Donta' Turner;
Carencro -- Jhonae Thibodeaux, Harold Williams;
Cartagena, Bolivar, Colombia -- Sebastian Alfaro Fontalvo, Edwin Castro Frias, Valeria Correa Meza, Victor Lopez Ramos, Jair Morelos Castilla, Cristian Paez Geney, Alejandro Restrepo Cardozo, Alejandro Dager Carrasquilla, Veronica Perez Espinosa;
Carthage, Illinois -- Nicole Clark;
Carville -- Megan Tallo;
Castor -- Loxlie Dodd, Hogan Nealy, Kaycee Collinsworth;
Central -- Hayley Tarver;
Cheneyville -- Laiken Haggart;
Chesapeake, Virginia -- Chandler Monk;
Choudrant -- Krislyn Mardis;
Church Point -- Meghan Bearb, Hayden Bourgeois, Kristian Burrow;
Clarence -- Jalicia Small;
Clifton -- Alaina Smith;
Cloutierville -- LaKrisha Burrell;
Colfax -- Mikayla Richardson;
Colleyville, Texas -- David Fry;
Columbus, Georgia -- Jonathan Williams;
Columbus, Mississippi -- William Taylor;
Conroe, Texas – Zachary Krolczyk;
Converse -- Corey Dixon, Kimberly Dobbs, Victoria Gasper, Jared Jagneaux, Noah Sepulvado, Delia Smith, Triston Waldon;
Copperas Cove, Texas -- Patrick Murphy;
Corsicana, Texas -- Sasha Ballard;
Cotton Valley -- Nicholas Smith;
Cottonport -- Shelie Canoe, Brikeysha Duskin;
Coushatta -- Kori Allen, Elizabeth Cummins, William Jordan, William Lee, Aston Lester, Amey Sepulvado, Mikailah Smith;
Covington -- Rachelle Baham, Kayla Keys, Marissa Rogers, Alina Smith, Crystal Tucker;
Dallas, Texas -- Tiffany Calhoun, Blayne Fugere, Amy Renteria;
DeBerry, Texas -- Jonathan Morris;
Delhi -- Ashley May, Saniah Parker, Jasmine Poe;
Denham Springs -- Ross Dougherty, Lenni Kunert, Brandi Robertson;
DeQuincy -- Hayden Robertson;
DeRidder -- Samantha Barr, Breanne Brauer, Sheridan Douglas, Bobby Guichet, Genna Higginbotham, Mckynzi Hill, Kenyon Johnson, Christa Mccormick, Jessica McManus, Ashley Miller, Julie Ramos, Shynikia Roberson, Shynikia Roberson, Scott Stearns, Emma-Leigh Webster, Mandy Wilson, Ashley Wisthoff, Tyler Wright;
Deville -- Joni Burlew, Kayla Dewilde, Colton Johnson, Ashtyn Knapp, Jordan Paul, Marcia Rogers, Haley Spilker, Destiny Zito;
Dobson -- Melanie Thomas;
Downsville -- Abby Fordham;
Dry Prong -- Cobi Bolen, William Bordelon, Ariana Christopher, Taylor Kight, Ethan Lewis, Jared Price, Lindsey Weatherford;
Duson -- Desmond Prejean;
Effie -- Hailee Kyrou;
Elizabeth -- Sadie Perkins;
Elm Grove -- Jacob Dunn;
Elmer -- Garrett Holt, Brennan Mays;
Elton -- Maia Lacomb;
Erath -- Elizabeth Touchet;
Evans -- Lakin Smith;
Evergreen -- Miracle Oby;
Farmerville -- Julia Legrande;
Flatwoods -- Jennifer Desselle, Jasmine George, Lindsey Willis, Stephanie Willis;
Florien -- Hillary Charles, Jennifer Cotten, Cullen Hopkins, Tyler Johnson, Elizabeth Squillini, Jordan Weldon;
Folsom-- Alma Diaz, Shaylee Laird;
Forest Hill -- Rachel Humphries, Claudia Marie Musgrove;
Forrest City, Arkansas -- Michael Mcgruder;
Fort Belvoir, Virginia -- Quindarrius Thompson;
Fort Polk -- Jamie Curtis, Amanda Dhondt, Laura Gee, Amanda Kuhn, Jennifer Lara, Donna Mareeh Milsap, Stephanie Reid, Desirah Ritchie, Genesis Rondon Torres, Jeffrey Ruiz, Jenna Silvius;
Forth Worth, Texas -- Jessica Sharp;
Franklin -- Zabreana Daniels, Jalena Kelly;
Franklinton -- Aron Stephens;
Fresno, Texas -- Shalandrea Martin;
Friendswood, Texas -- Malik Sonnier;
Frierson -- Austin Barnes, Nicholas Parham;
Gadsden, Alabama -- Damian Thompson;
Garland, Texas -- Adriana Velarde;
Geismer -- Brenna LeGlue;
Georgetown, Indiana -- Ellisa Rof;
Gibsland -- Madison Shidiskis;
Glenmora -- Eric Baker, Tiara Baker, Bailey Johnson;
Gloster -- Jennifer Simmons;
Gonzales -- Jennifer Enloe, Courtney LeJeune, Corley Payne;
Grand Cane -- Kayden Booker, Brittney Cross, Brittany Davies, Ciana Mcintyre, Brittany Miller, Emily Miller;
Grand Prairie, Texas -- Charles Harris, Kori Levingston;
Granite City Illinois -- Megan Obrien;
Gray -- Triston Johnson, Austin Pierre;
Greenwood -- Rachel Hermes;
Gretna -- Brandi Bealer, MyDung Hoang, Trinity Velazquez;
Guston, Kentucky -- Shelbie Jantzen;
Hahnville -- Imani Butler;
Halifax, Virginia -- Kyle Lacks;
Hall Summit -- Ashley-Kate McNatt;
Hammond – Raqual Cockerham, Laura Sharp, William Woodworth;
Harvey -- Jesse Coats, Tyrone Johnson;
Haughton -- Kelsy Baker, Bailey Boyd, Darius Brock, Arneshia Brooks, Payton Curry, Haylee Douglass, Makayla Feibel, Shelby Grubbs, Daniel Langen, Alyssia Mobley, Angie Nguyen, Hannah Robertson, Hunter Woods,
Haynesville -- Destiny Burns, Trenton Franklin;
Heflin -- Kendall Brunson, Haley Shepherd, Rachael Vickers;
Henderson, Texas -- Christina Marie Colley;
Hessmer -- Ryan Armand, Daren Dauzat;
Hineston -- Victoria Carroll;
Homer -- Amberly Banks, Shannon Rhodes, Lakota Smith,
Hornbeck -- Erin Gentry, Joshua Hughes, Logan Hughes, Haley Killian, Megan Martelle, Ariel Rodgers,
Hosston -- Kylie Moore;
Houma -- Gavin Bergeron, Courtney Chancellor, Kyle Siddle;
Houston, Texas -- Alexander Allen, Bruce Beth, Julio Galvan, Rashuad Powell, Crystal Turner;
Ida -- Genesis Thomas;
Jamestown -- Ieshia Thomas;
Jeanerette -- Kennedi Boutte, Mary Rochon;
Jefferson -- Emily Ricalde;
Jena -- Braegan Burlew, Candace Decker, Erica Hebert, Lakerielle Kittlin;
Jennings -- Ashton St. Germain;
Jonesboro -- JaVonna Lawrence, Tia Moore;
Jonesville -- Julie Odom, Erin Wiley;
Kalaupapa, Hawaii -- Kamamalu Nishihira-Asuncion;
Keithville -- Laurilyn Crossland, Mary-Kathryn Fuller, Taylor Hughes, Latavein Kennedy, Jerry Parks, Taylor Rose;
Kenner -- Shannon Drake;
Kerens, Texas -- Cody James;
Kilgore, Texas -- Jonathan Hubbard;
Kinder -- Kelsey Frank, Katharyn Hebert, Nicholas Moldovsky;
Kingwood, Texas -- Alexandria Bailey;
Klamath Falls, Oregon -- Bradley Baker;
Labadieville -- Logan Simoneaux;
Lacombe -- Casey Casler;
Lafayette -- Hayley Aymond, Luther Brooks, Sasskia Chassion, Oliver Conday, Adele Hebert, Tyler Jones, Hudson Laborde, Robert Middleton, Josef Raines, Dhaija Smith, Stuart Suffern, Hannah Travis;
Lake Charles -- Jennifer Arabie, Landon Dore, Anna Eaglin, Daryan Gibson, Brandi Hansard, Kateen Hilliard, Maysen Linscomb, Savanah Moses, Michael Thomas, Destany Washington, Laura Wilkins;
Lake Providence -- Lakarven Pitts;
Laplace -- Melvin Bates, Darian Cline;
Larose -- Peyton Guidry;
League City, Texas -- Lacee Savage;
Leander -- Karissa Boswell;
Lecompte -- Ikeia Johnson, Hannah McCann;
Leesville -- Heather Alexander, Jebediah Barrett, Katrina Brinson, Damion Brown, Rachal Brown, Jonathan Bruce, Victoria Carbaugh, Jacob Cart, Brandon Fredieu, Beatrice Green, Robert Green, Cheyenne Grigg, Morgan Hall, Brianna Harperhoward, Britney Harvey, Taylor Helton, Angelica Hilton, Meghan Jones, Lane Koury, Constance McManus, Stephanie Miller, Miranda Mize, Taylor Newman, Brittany Paris, Pete Rodriguez, Cesar Santos, Brandy Sherman, Marissa Skursky, Joseph Slaughter, Payton Soto, Britnie Stroud, Marissa Weldon, Lana West, Chyla Winslow, Cheyene Wise, Jacqueline Young, Michael Zschach;
Lena -- Kamryn Glenn, Justin Williams;
Lettsworth -- Landon Benton;
Libuse -- Alysia Hawthorne;
Lillie – Jesikah Ford;
Little Elm, Texas -- Hunter Gagnon, Kaitlyn McCullough;
Livingston -- Cody Cambre, Chase Crane;
Lockport -- Malaina Falgout;
Logansport -- Charles McClintock, Jessica Thompson;
Lone Oak, Texas -- Kaylee Isenburg;
Longview, Texas -- Deja Moore, Travis Pope;
Loreauville -- Tiffany Trahan;
Luling -- Macie Barrios;
Machesney Park, Illinois -- Alicia Teran;
Madisonville -- Zoe Almaraz, Sarahjane Ladut;
Mandeville -- Maci Burt, Anthony Pastorello, Hunter Swent;
Mansfield -- Rowdy Burleson, DeAsia Maxie, James Sowell, Markeit Steverson, Devin Vanwinkle, Stanley Woodley;
Mansura -- Beau Barbry, Cori Hayes, Magen Hegger, Adrienne Prevost;
Many -- Chancee Branam, Salvador Cruz Montellano, Destinee Dowden, Kelsi Horn, Clayton Kelley, Ashley Lafitte, Mayci Lewis, Chase Manning, Adina Manshack, Johnathan Medine, Chelsea Parrie, Andrew Penfield, Anna Porterfield, Lisa Scott, Hannah Webb;
Marksville -- Regan Balius, Javoanta Batiste, Aaron Bergeron, Leah Dupuy, April Gaspard, Olivia Johnson, Makayla Laborde, Sara Lambert, Shelby Lemoine, Victoria Lucas, Jessie Negrotto, Paulette Thomas;
Marrero -- Tara Brown, Lorena Martin;
Marshall, Texas -- Alexis Balbuena, Matayzsha Dorsey, Abagale Godfrey, Khari Jenkins, Michelle Sarubbi, Sydney Swilley;  
Marthaville -- Dylan Daniels, Erica James, Thomas Lirette, Kendrick Moore;
Maurice -- Adele Vincent;
McKinney, Texas -- Jasmine Dansby, Tyler Gatewood;
Melville -- Alexis Barker;
Mer Rouge -- Tequilla Winston;
Meridian, Mississippi -- Reed Michel;
Merryville -- Kyleah Franks;
Mesquite, Texas -- Kaleb Fletcher;
Midland, Texas -- Channing Burleson;
Midlothian, Illinois -- Daniel Hlad;
Minden -- Peyton Gray, Chelsey Harper, Lauren Holland, Donna Law, Jerryca Law, Rakeem Moore, Jesse Seymore, Lamonica Smith;
Monroe -- Caroline Aydelott, Trinity Butcher, PetraAnne Carpenter, Ty'Esha Coleman, Jaquita Davis, Taylor Edwards, Breonna Gibson, Parron Jones, Ashley Murphy, Tia Smith, Skylar Sorrell, Treniya Wadley, Ronnie Wells, Asia West, TaMya Williams, Gail Wilson;
Montegut -- Nicole Cohen, Megan Pellegrin;
Montgomery -- Miranda Bartlett, Morgan Bartlett, Tyler Cotten, Logan Lambert, Morgan McManus, Hannah Vercher;
Mooringsport -- Jo Anna Fisher;
Moreauville -- Reginea Alexander;
Murrieta, California -- Brittany Caserma;
Natchez -- Shaneda Armstrong, Brandi Carpenter, Jackson Carroll, Deshon Ficklin, James Rougeou, Brittany Slaughter;
Natchez, Mississippi -- Henry Cooley;
Natchitoches -- Shelton Adams, Ariel Adkins, Austin Aldredge, Daniella Angulo Martinez, Kayla Arnold, Abbie Atwood, Thomas Balthazar, James Bankston, Ramon Barralaga, Jacob Bartels, Terrius Bell, Allison Berry, Megan Berry, Christopher Billiot, Janieya Bobb, Keaton Booker, Andrew Boyd, Samantha Broughton, Keyana Brown, Morgan Burris, Kezia Butler, Thomas Celles, Halley Chapa, Kaleb Chesser, Lane Clevenger, Jacob Dahoff, Kenneth Darcy, Ajeahnell Dempsey, Chasity Dupree, Eric Fredieu, Matthew Gallien, Jasmine Hall, Rodney Harrison, Tyler Henry, Saul Hernandez, Jared Hulsey, Maina Ibn Mohammed,  Retsel Jackson, Michael James, Anthony Jones, Casey Jones, Hannah Jones, Haley LaCaze, Cristofer Larcarte, Tarah Lott, Alyssa Martin, Madelyn Matt, Andrew McAlister, Melonia McDaniel, Amanda Metoyer, Jasmine Milsap, Joshua Minor, Samantha Muncey, Donovan Ohnoutka, Chaka Palm, Zachary Parker, Kenneth Penrod, Meredith Phelps, Michael Raymond,  RaeGan Rogers, Paula Sanchez Luna, Emily Sitarz, Athena Smith, Rachel Smith, Shannon Smith, Skyler Speer, Hollie Spillman, Cierra Stephens, Blake Teekell, Alexander Thibodeau, Rebecca Thomisee, Angelo Vergara Otero, Garrett Vienne, Huey Virece, Naloni Walker, Brianna Watermolen, Anna Waxley, Leah Wilkins, John Williams, Lanae Wilson,  Laurence Wynder, Ashtin Youngblood;
Navasota, Texas -- Shelton Eppler;
New Iberia -- Courtney Cotone, Shania Dauterive, Madison Romero, Kira Tobias, Madison Willett;
New Llano -- Undrea Beasley, Deja Castille, Tristan Thorman, Alyssa Turner;
New Orleans – Nyasha Brown, Maya Dolliole, Felicia Franklin, Taylor Gibbs, Karrington Johnson, Trevor Morgan, Jonae Skinner, Rishard Winford;
New Roads -- Landry Davis;
Newllton -- Chasity Glasspoole,
Noble -- Joshua Ray, Thomas Rivers,
North Richland Hills, Texas -- Cody Germany,
Oak Grove -- Tonya Creech;
Oak Hill, West Virginia -- Jessica Limer;
Oakdale -- Clayton Ashworth, Tia Dixon, James Obrien;
Oberlin -- Morgan Gradney;
Oil City -- Chaddrick Thomas;
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma -- Jasmine Juarez;
Olympia, Washington -- Kimberly Delatorre;
Opelousas -- Caleb Allen, Keylee Boone, Matthew Collins, Kelsey Gallow, Haley George, Kayla Pitre, Sydney Stewart;
Orange Beach, Alabama -- Elizabeth Gilliam;  
Otis -- Joshua Poston;
Oxnard, California -- Kateen Starman;
Paincourtville -- Hannah Brister;
Palmetto -- Destiny Celestine;
Panama City, Florida -- Adam Normand;
Paradis -- Kaitlyn Dunn;
Parma -- Tracy Hromadka;
Pearl River -- Joseph Lagreco;
Pineville -- Emily Bordelon, Victoria Bordelon, Latasha Cain, Jasmine, KataraRiana Clark, Payten Collins, LaShundra Duncan-Williams, Selena Ferguson, Katelan Gossett, Trey Joseph, Cedrick Lott, Sonya McClellan, Shaqunda Peters, Victoria Peterson, Bonni Rayburn, Glynn Sillavan, Courtney Squyres, Micah StAndre, Emily Wiley;
Pioneer -- Kayla Rockett;
Pitkin -- Preston Brown, Braydon Doyle, Jayce Doyle;
Plain Dealing -- Ja'Mela Williams;
Plaucheville -- Hailey Brouillette, Rachael Martin, Philip Pepiton, Brittany Taylor;
Pleasant Hill -- Montana Binning, Makenzi Patrick;
Pollock -- Allie Frost, Whitney Jenkins, Kari Taffi;
Port Allen -- Evan Daigle;  
Port Barre -- Skylar Guidroz;
Prairieville -- Hannah Beason, Otha Nelson, Jacob Townsend, Mikayla Tudor;
Princeton -- Keeleigh Bennett, Chelsea Morris, Katelyn Nattin, Ty Shilling;
Princeton, New Jersey – Hannah Bradley;
Prosper -- Gabriella Gamboa;
Provencal – Carson Custis, Katlynn French, Jamie Litton, Taylor Trichel;
Rayne -- Mary Peltier;
Reno, Nevada -- Olivia Marazzo;
Richfield, Minnesota -- Leah Barnes;
Ringgold -- Joseph Hays, Kylee Love;
River Ridge -- Rachel Chimeno, Toni Hebert;
Robbinsdale, Minnesota -- Rachel Stoks;
Robeline -- Arica Ammons, Jonathan Comeaux, Willie Garcia, Patricia Goodwin, Hannah Hennigan, Kristal Lachney, Mallary Lester, Alyssa Maley, Megan Maley, Courtney Rachal, Madelyn Rachal, Morgan Rachal, Fawn Slaughter;
Rock Falls, Illinois -- Cody Donoho;
Rosepine -- Emilee Johnson, Jamie Nelson;
Ruston -- Stormy Dickey, Phynecha Richard, Lara Schales;  
Saint Amant -- Kylie Nix;
Saint Cloud, Florida -- Sage Leffew;
Saint Francisville -- Ryan Reed;
Saint Martinville -- Emily Guidry, Chaselyn Lewis;
Saline -- Makayla Jackson, Aaron Savell;
San Pedro Sula, Cortes, Honduras -- Jose Bustillo Aguero;
Sarepta -- Katie Ingle;
Savannah Georgia -- Larry Johnson;
Shreveport -- Tiara Anderson, Keyln Andrews, James Baldwin, ShyMiracle Ball, Desean Britton, Rachael Bryant, Breonnica Collins, Madison Connella, Audrey Copeland, Daniel Crews, Hannah Crnkovic, Taylor Davis, Kevin Denks, Zandria Douglas, Chenara Dredden, Lauren Edwards, Keiauna Evans, Meghan Fry, Lauren Gabour, Tyler Gardner, Cassidy Giddens, Rebecca Gilcrease, Savon Gipson, Andrell Green, Ricci Haltom, Jaimee Henderson, Monica Holloway, Kimberly Housley, Meghan Jelks, Drake Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Ainsley Johnson-Braden,  Bethany Jones, Quanese Jones-Young, Haley Joyner, Luis Juneau, Colton Kennedy, Tradeya King, Mallory LaLena, Princess Lane, Shermaria Lewis, Rukiya Lewis, Katherine Lind, Jakobi Malone, Alexis Mason, Kristen Massinburg, Mozell Mcduffy, Janna Mclellan, Samantha Metoyer, Alison Mitchell, Myles Mitchell, Dylan Molenhour, Shanautica Montgomery,  Terrye Moore, Maria Moreno Ponte, Ellison Mullen, Hillary Nicholls, Karina Pena Morla, Elizabeth Peterson, Patrick Pierce, Dalton Randolph, Nahjee Reid, Mollie Reynolds, Carribean Richardson, Jasmine Roberts, Savonya Robinson, Chekayah Samuel, Jasmin Samuels, Zachary Sanders, Fredricka Seawood, Latrice Smith, Chaniqua Smith, Vincent Spinks, Asia Stevens,  Keyaunta Stewart, Jordan Taylor, Shakari Taylor, Rodnisha Terry, Angela Thomas, Gabrielle Thomas, Ashlea Trosclair, Rhiannon Venable, Isabella Vines, Earnestine Walker, Gia-Caroline Weber, Kristin Welch, Charity Wesley, Victoria Whaley, Crystal Williams, Destiney Williams, Lajayda Williams, Shamolia Williams, Tre'Darius Williams, DeShaun Wilson, Ansonia Wisner;
Sibley -- Madison Mouser;
Sicily Island -- Jalisa Johnson;
Sieper -- Alexis Williams;
Silsbee, Texas -- Carson Fuller;
Simmesport -- Olivia Draper, Elise Normand;
Simpson -- Christina Snider, Carleigh Standifer;
Slidell -- Juliana Garcia, Whitney Legier, Cameron May;
Spring, Texas -- Madelyne Mangum;
Springfield -- Brian Pickett, Tyler Pigott;
St. Martinville -- Asi Gachassin, Maleik White,
Starks -- Melina Royer;
Stephenville, Texas -- Natalie Damron;
Stonewall -- Alexandria Cole, Emma Delafield, Mallory McConathy, Stephanie Parker, Heather Schiller, Spencer Tatum;
Sugartown -- Madison Budnik;
Sulphur -- Madeline Fortenberry, Trevor Molitor, Shelby Sullivan;
Tallulah -- Christian Cobb;
Tatum, Texas -- LeAndrea Allison;
Terrytown -- Katlynn Klein;
Texarkana, Texas -- Sydney Cowgill, Miles Powell;
Thibodaux -- Gabrielle Dantoni, Cierra Winch;
Tioga -- Lorali Hebert;
Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania -- Brianna Morosco;
Tomball, Texas -- Cylandria Clemons;
Tool, Texas -- Kimberly Kidney;
Trout -- Harley Lisenby, Andrea Walters, Garett Walters;
Vidalia -- Evandria King;
Ville Platte -- Tre Fontenot;
Vinton -- Autumn Hanks, Madison Zaunbrecher;
Washington -- Kyeishia Evans, I Ambrieanna Lazard;
Waskom, Texas -- Mary Alexander, Colton McCracken, Jonas Richardson;
Waynesboro, Mississippi -- David Hodo;
Welsh -- Alisha Ledoux, Katherine Salassi;
West Monroe – Taylor Cox, Aubrey Gamble, Bailey Hargrove, Tyler Hortman, Rachel Simpson, Melissa Taylor, Christopher Wynn;
White Castle -- Kiosha Elzy;
Winnfield -- Mia County, LaTerrion Green, Saquan Jenkins, Brooklyn Johnson, Morgan Martinez, George Parish, Trakita Rainwater, Chinna Thompson;
Winnsboro -- Samira Wiley;
Wisner -- Jordan Price;
Woodworth -- Ashley Ortiz;
Yigo, GU -- Mary Szabo;                                                
Youngsville -- Devin Forestier, Lorin Prejean;
Zachary -- Darryl Anderson, Alyse Quebedeaux, Alaijha Trim;
Zwolle -- Kamryn Bedsole, Dayton Craig, Cheyanne Ebarb, Addison Garcie, Emmalee Lewing, Ethan Morgan, Deidre Rivers, Chyna Sepulvado, Rylea Sepulvado.
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morsemarten · 7 years
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Name List
List of first names of Civil War generals, with a few others
Alvin, Ambrose, Abner, Adelbert, Absalom, Augustus, Abram, Amos, Alonzo, Albion, August, Americus, Albin, Adin, Amiel, Alpheus, Adley, Archibald, Allison, Anthony, Asa, Albemarle, Amasa, Azariah, Allyne, Anson, Alvred, Ario, Alvan, Alanson, Adoniram, Ansell, Aquila
Brayton, Braxton, Byron, Barnard, Basil, Birkett, Bushrod, Beverly, Barton, Beroth, Bernard, Benezet, Bennett
Clifton, Creighton, Catharnius, Cyrus, Cassius, Clement, Clinmton, Cluvier, Conrad, Calvin, Carl, Cadwallader, Cullen, Collett, Camille, Carnot, Claudius, Carter, Cadmus, Cleaveland, Cecil, Caspar, Cary, Caldwell, Chester, Chauncey, Carr
Datus, Douglas, Douglass, Darius, Dudley, Danville, Dabney, Dandridge, De Witt, Delavan, Dwight, Delos, Duncan
Edwin, Egbert, Eugene, Elias, Eli, Ebenezer, Elon, Erasmus, Edmund, Emerson, Elazar, Elliott, Eliakim, Elihu, Erastus, Elkanah, Eppa, Evander, Elisha, Ezra, Everell, Enrico, Ellsworth, Emory, Ephraim, Embury, Elwell, Ernest, Eliphalet
Francis, Frederick, Fitz, Friend, Franz, Ferdinand, Fitzhugh, Felix, Ferris, Fielder
George, Gustave, Gustavus, Grenville, Gilman, Gershom, Gabriel, Galusha, Green, Giles, Griffin, Gouverneur, Godfrey, Goode, Gideon, Gilbert, Greely, Guy, Granville, Greenbury, Grover
Hugh, Hiram, Herman, Halbert, Hector, Horatio, Hamilton, Hylan, Humphrey, Harrison, Hartman, Harvey, Hasbrouck, Hannibal, Heber, Harris, Hollon, Hazard
Isaac, Isham, Irvin, Innis, Israel, Ira
James, Jubal, Jeremiah, Justus, Jasper, Julius, Junius, Johnson, Josiah, Jeptha, Judson, Jairus, Joab
Klaus, Kirby, Kenner, Kenton
Leonidas, Lothario, Lewis, Louis, Lafayette, Luther, Lawrence, Lysander, Lucius, Leonard, Lovell, Lorenzo, Lunsford, Lloyd, Leroy, Levin, Leander, Langdon, Lewellyn, Llewellyn, Loren, Lionel, Langhorne, Levi
Morgan, Merriweather, Mason, Marcellus, Manning, Milo, Mortimer, Mahlon, Montgomery, Marsena, Melancthon, Milledge, Maxcy, Micah, Mansfield, Moses, Mendal, Milton, Marcus, Mellen, Miles, Minor, Maxwell
Nathan, Napoleon, Newton, Nelson, Nicholas, Norton, Nirom, Newell, Noah
Ormsby, Oliver, Orris, Orrin, Orland, Orlando, Otho, Orville, Orion, Osborn, Otto, Orson, Oscar, Obediah, Orlow, Orpheus
Preston, Phillip, Pierre, Powell, Patrick, Pleasant, Pickney, Pennock, Pitcairn, Phineas
Quincy
Robert, Romeyn, Rufus, René, Rutherford, Ranald, Randolph, Raleigh, Randall, Roswell, Reuben, Russell, Rollin, Roeliff, Rush, Rue, Roscius, Rankin, Raynsford
Silas, Sylvester, Selden, Speed, Schuyler, Solomon, Sullivan, Sylvanus, Stewart, Strong, States, St. John, St. Clair, Sterling, Stand, Sidney, Smith, Sumner, Salmon, Seymour
Thomas, Thornton, Theophilus, Truman, Turner, Tyree
Ulysses, Uri
Victor, Van, Verplanck
Winfield, William, Washington, Willis, Wladimir, Wesley, Wager, Wade, Wilburn, Wilmot, Willoughby, Winsor, Wilhelm, Wells, Wlodzimierz, Warren
Xavier
Ziggy, Zealous, Zachariah, Zebulon
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coghive · 2 years
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Singer/Actress Gia Wyre Debut Ep “Meant to Be” (Out Now)
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MIAMI, FLORIDA An award-winning singer and noted actress Gia Wyre releases her long-awaited debut EP MEANT TO BE today on all digital music retail platforms. The 6 track EP is fueled by her current radio single “It’s On The Way,” which is co-written by Gia Wyre, J. Tyrone Hilton, and Angela Moss Poole. Produced by Poole and Raymond Darius Jackson, the song is currently trending in the Top 20 on the Billboard Gospel Indicator chart. “It’s On The Way” is the follow-up to her rendition of Donny Hathaway’s “This Christmas” (2020), on which she collaborated along with her son TP Mill. Gia released her debut single “Better Plan” in 2018. A native of Miami, Florida, Gia began her professional career at the age of 10 when she performed at the prestigious Carnegie Hall in New York. Known across the nation as the “Songbird” Gia ventured into acting in the year 2000-2003, with the stage play touring production “If These Hips Could Talk” starring alongside Billie D. Williams and Tichina Arnold. She then worked alongside Kim Fields and Aaron Hall in “I’ll Always Love My Momma,” co-starred with Clifton Powell, Demetria McKinney, Robin Givens, and Angela Winbush in “Church Girl” (2010), and the gospel stage play “Psycwhard” (2012) alongside Terrell Carter. She makes her motion picture film debut this year in the movie “The Couples Trip.” With over 30 years serving in ministry as a minister of music, Gia has shared the stage with many gospel greats including BeBe & CeCe Winans, Kirk Franklin, and Fred Hammond to name a few. She’s been featured in Gospel Today magazine, and Sister 2 Sister magazine and also performed for former President Bill Clinton. Described as uplifting, funny, soul-stirring, and anointed, Gia’s sultry style of singing has touched hearts around the country. Download or stream MEANT TO BE here: https://rmglinks.com/meanttobe https://open.spotify.com/album/5K9AcmYfbCW0GwX79TDgeb?si=86da09bf15e3422f Read the full article
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tabbiecattt · 5 years
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What if you could pick the judge that presides over a case, or the person who passes local legislation? These are the seats up for election on Tuesday: County comptroller: Darius Shahinfar, Susan Rizzo County judge: Holly Trexler, Andra Ackerman Family Court judge: Sherri Brooks, Margaret Tabak, David J. Levy, Amy Joyce, Michael S. Barone, Jennifer Corona, William P. Andrews Legislature District 1: Carolyn McLaughlin, Lucille McKnight, Carmen Rau, Ira Bethea District 4: Norma Chapman, Clifton Dixon District 6: Samuel Fein, James Bouldin Jr. District 7: Douglas Bullock, Beroro Efekoro District 8: Lynna Lekakis, Brian Scavo District 10: Gary Domalewicz, William Harrington District 14: Alison McLean Lane, Daniela Weiss District 17: John Frainier, Bill L. Ricard District 30: Dustin Reidy, Steve Wickham District 32: Michael Cleary, Paul Miller District 34: Joanne Cunningham, George Harder District 35: Jeffrey Kuhn, Sean Raleigh District 36: Matthew J. Miller, Marc Gronich Albany City judge: Lavonda S. Collins, William G. Kelly, and Jessica R. Wilcox Polling location - http://app.albanycounty.com/boe/voterinfo/ https://www.instagram.com/p/By-fRFsh-2aymALjQNhQd0TtP9PrUt8i32v4fk0/?igshid=1i1da2qp79bi3
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