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Maybe he’s related to Harvey Dent then? That’s how given names work, right?
https://youtu.be/v6QF-sRdU9g?si=QnWT9PRyTVrS66j1
SNL nailed his election ad last year
First name related?
Harvey is a common Asian surname.
Are Weinsteins commonly Asian?
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I’m pretty sure Asians are the most common in general, so… maybe.
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Who’s Jeffery?
It’s a pretty common surname. I feel sorry for people who have it.
I recently read the book “Impure Science”, by Steven Epstein (very good philosophy of science book). It always made me slightly uncomfy whenever I saw it cited as (Epstein, 1996), because that surname inevitably makes me think of Jeffrey Epstein. It must suck to have those connotations attached to your name. Makes me glad that my surname is non descript
Why? Nondescript is an extremely unusual surname.
I would legit change my name. Not saying that they should but I couldn’t live with the correlation
Removed by mod
not a lot of Hitlers get elected any more.
Only the one Hitler
Poor soul.
Reminds of the soft-drink brand corona.
Sonuvabitch, you beat me to it.
Yep.
Literal first thing I thought of: how is this person real?
No not the name, the face.
Opposites cancel, making him the least sex pest in the US
Wait… two sexpests aren’t opposites…
I think it’s like magnets, they repel each other.
Perhaps instead of opposites they meant to say it was like two negatives multiply to a positive
I will never reveal my secret
They are if it’s a spit roast.
it becomes neutral. a fusion of 2 sexpests = a normal person.
Why would anyone think he was related to Harvey Weinstein? That’s not how first names work. My father has a friend called George but no one thinks he’s related to the former president.
What about George George George of the jungle?
He is an outlier adn should not have been counted
“First names dont indicate familial relationsh…” sees kanji in username “…oh never mind, carry on”
Ya know what grinds my gears? This American penchant for pronouncing Germanic names incorrectly. Like ‘stein’ as ‘steeeen’. EpstEEN. WeinstEEN (even more frustrating, that last one, as the ‘ei’ is pronounced how it ‘should’ be, but not the second occurrence!).
Even the people with these names often insist themselves on these pronunciations. I mean it’s their right ultimately, it’s their name after all – but why/where/how did this pronunciation take root in the USA?
I was taught in German class that ‘ei’ is always a long ‘i’ – hence ‘schtIne’ not ‘stEEEn’. Hmmph.
Same with Robert ‘Muller’. His name’s spelled Mueller, so by German language rules it would seem it should be pronounced ‘Müller’ (‘ue’ in English being a substitute for the umlauted ‘u’).
I guess it falls out of what appears to be an American myopic view that everyone else has ‘accents’ and they must be purged from American speech since it’s ‘foreign’…
Grumble grumble… OK, I am done my little rant now.
It’s pretty fascinating considering the history of the US that Americans tend to be worse than the English at pronouncing various European languages. You’d think at least some people would cling on to the correct pronounciation of their own name, as the bare minimum.
I don’t really care how Americans pronounce their own names—if anything I think most Europeans are happy to be easily distinguishable from Americans with shared ancestry at this point—but it is a bit striking.
Not necessarily relevant to the people mentioned in this post, but broadly speaking, there were lots of immigrants to the US between 1930 and 1950 that very intentionally changed the spelling or pronunciation of their names to look and sound less German and Italian.
Very good point… it would have been uncomfortable for many to cling to more foreign forms of their surnames during & just after WWII I suppose.
There was also the practice of giving people a new name upon arrival in Ellis Island, establishing pretty early on what kind of names were considered “American”.
I guess it worked wonders, at least if the stereotype is true that they managed to transform the Irish into a bunch of racist cops.
But yeah, you certainly had a lot of German Americans voluntarily backing away from their cultural heritage in the 30s and 40s.
For me, it’s the Bergs. Bööörk.
I mean, I can see where you’re coming from. However, you neglected to mention an equally important problem with the English pronunciation of Weinstein. The w is pronounced as a v. So, vineschtine.
Good catch, yes.
either nor
It’s either either-or or neither-nor. No mixing
I um…
frantically thinks of an excuse
Sorry this isn’t my first language… 🥺👉👈
(technically English isn’t my first language, but its not really an excuse tho lol 😅 since I was learning since 8, but I’m still gonna blame the other languages’ impact on my English language skills xD)
That’s a good excuse. We’ll accept it. Move out, boys.
- I was thinking of writing ,“We’ll except it” because of humor, but there’s always Poe’s Law.









