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Thread started 09/13/05 9:31pm

sirnozedevoido
funk

avatar

Is this..racist....?

I was at a movie theater with my husband and behind me I hear a college caucasian guy said, "I'm glad SHANIQUA is leaving the theater because she is loud.."
Does everybody do this? It was just something I wish I didnt hear sad
i will never dance
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Reply #1 posted 09/13/05 9:33pm

SammiJ

just ignorance

and a stupid fuckfacenoballs that thinks he's funny...
he wasn't, and prolly won't get any action because of his fault

smile s'all good.



fuckfacenoballs edit.
[Edited 9/13/05 21:33pm]
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Reply #2 posted 09/13/05 9:35pm

lilgish

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Who's SHANIQUA?
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Reply #3 posted 09/13/05 9:36pm

SammiJ

lilgish said:

Who's SHANIQUA?

i think he prolly called a random black girl that because that's the stereotypical thing 2 do...


disbelief like i said before...he's a fuckfacenoballs...
[Edited 9/13/05 21:36pm]
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Reply #4 posted 09/13/05 9:38pm

lilgish

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Well if you heard him, he musta been louder than SHANIQUA. So Opie shoulda got the steppin' to. shrug
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Reply #5 posted 09/13/05 9:40pm

SammiJ

lilgish said:

Well if you heard him, he musta been louder than SHANIQUA. So Opie shoulda got the steppin' to. shrug

falloff
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Reply #6 posted 09/14/05 12:58am

susannah

Why Shaniqua though? Is that some sort of commmon stereotypical insult?
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Reply #7 posted 09/14/05 1:47am

hellomoto

i doubt its racist. very rude, but racist is taking it a bit too far. but no one can tell of course, unless they know the guy, and if he has past history of being racist, but yeh, what he said doesnt sound racist to me, just a stereotype joke. not saying stereotype jokes are ok.
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Reply #8 posted 09/14/05 1:54am

PREDOMINANT

avatar

Does seem a bit random, but then if I was sat behind the Jock that insulted you, I probably say something like "I'm glad that Brad/Chad/Troy has left cus he is a twat"

Steriotypes, funny only if you think so.
Happy is he who finds out the causes for things.Virgil (70-19 BC). Virgil was such a lying bastard!
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Reply #9 posted 09/14/05 4:50am

Soulofmysoul

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I hate when people are loud in theaters, though. I didn't pay $8.50 to hear YOUR dumb ass.
Inside the Fleshofmyflesh is the Soulofmysoul
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Reply #10 posted 09/14/05 4:55am

ThreadBare

That was ignorant, if he was being random and stereotypical.


But, gosh, sometimes Shaniqua and her man, Ray-Ray, appear to have chosen the theater as the opportune place to talk to fuss at each other or call up their crew. mobile Let's be real. hmm

But, College Guy also is known for doing the same when out with his friends, along with his, like, girlfriend Becca and her girls, who keep remarking how fat the leading actress has gotten and how her hair's all wrong...

And, don't even get me started on his old, Baby Boomer parents, Glen and Kate, who think the writing in "Closer" should have gotten more critical acclaim than that of "Million Dollar Baby" and its cruel twist.

Or College Boy's grandmother Maude -- who almost totally ruined "Being Julia" for me, with her incessant, squawking din:

"What?? Why did she do that??? I SAID, "WHY DID SHE DO THAT?" THAT ANNETTE BENING SURE ISN'T A SPRING CHICKEN. SHE MARRIED WARREN WHAT'S-HIS-NAME. HAROLD! ARE YOU LISTENING TO ME? IS YOUR HEARING AID OFF AGAIN???"
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Reply #11 posted 09/14/05 4:59am

Soulofmysoul

avatar

ThreadBare said:

That was ignorant, if he was being random and stereotypical.


But, gosh, sometimes Shaniqua and her man, Ray-Ray, appear to have chosen the theater as the opportune place to talk to fuss at each other or call up their crew. mobile Let's be real. hmm

But, College Guy also is known for doing the same when out with his friends, along with his, like, girlfriend Becca and her girls, who keep remarking how fat the leading actress has gotten and how her hair's all wrong...

And, don't even get me started on his old, Baby Boomer parents, Glen and Kate, who think the writing in "Closer" should have gotten more critical acclaim than that of "Million Dollar Baby" and its cruel twist.

Or College Boy's grandmother Maude -- who almost totally ruined "Being Julia" for me, with her incessant, squawking din:

"What?? Why did she do that??? I SAID, "WHY DID SHE DO THAT?" THAT ANNETTE BENING SURE ISN'T A SPRING CHICKEN. SHE MARRIED WARREN WHAT'S-HIS-NAME. HAROLD! ARE YOU LISTENING TO ME? IS YOUR HEARING AID OFF AGAIN???"


Careful...they're not real big on this here at the ORG. You know, dealing with real differences between Black and White people - even inconsequential stuff like movie theater etiquette.
Inside the Fleshofmyflesh is the Soulofmysoul
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Reply #12 posted 09/14/05 4:59am

Rhondab

lilgish said:

Well if you heard him, he musta been louder than SHANIQUA. So Opie shoulda got the steppin' to. shrug



lol lol
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Reply #13 posted 09/14/05 5:05am

GlitterStream

avatar

sirnozedevoidofunk said:

I was at a movie theater with my husband and behind me I hear a college caucasian guy said, "I'm glad SHANIQUA is leaving the theater because she is loud.."
Does everybody do this? It was just something I wish I didnt hear sad


falloff you know what's funny to me? that he called some random black chick Shaniqua. I would've said the same shit. Black, White, or whatever. Get your loud ass out the theater Shaniqua, Becky, or Jocelyn.
Who's gonna stop 200 Balloons?
YO MAMA!!
LET'S DO IT!!!
(funky geetaw solo)
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Reply #14 posted 09/14/05 5:45am

andykeen

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Fuckfacenoballs falloff

SammiJ Ur so wise
lol

Keenmeister
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Reply #15 posted 09/14/05 6:07am

JediMaster

avatar

Sounds like a racist slur to me. Using a stereotypical name to refer to a black woman.
jedi

Do not hurry yourself in your spirit to become offended, for the taking of offense is what rests in the bosom of the stupid ones. (Ecclesiastes 7:9)
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Reply #16 posted 09/14/05 6:14am

MikeMatronik

who's slaniqua???
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Reply #17 posted 09/14/05 7:14am

Anxiety

PREDOMINANT said:

Does seem a bit random, but then if I was sat behind the Jock that insulted you, I probably say something like "I'm glad that Brad/Chad/Troy has left cus he is a twat"

Steriotypes, funny only if you think so.


Pardon me for saying so, but I think the way you just stereotyped "jocks" is WAY off base.













































Everyone knows you call them "Biff" or "Chip". razz
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Reply #18 posted 09/14/05 7:26am

Rhondab

but what if her name was really "shaniqua"


eek
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Reply #19 posted 09/14/05 7:30am

abierman

Rhondab said:

but what if her name was really "shaniqua"


eek



her name was LaFawnduh.....she was my date, damnit! mad
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Reply #20 posted 09/14/05 7:31am

abierman

can we close this thread now????
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Reply #21 posted 09/14/05 7:32am

LleeLlee

Rhondab said:

but what if her name was really "shaniqua"


eek



eek

lol

He sounds like an ignoramus.
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Reply #22 posted 09/14/05 7:54am

mltijchr

avatar

susannah said:

Why Shaniqua though? Is that some sort of commmon stereotypical insult?

there are several sun women (=most say 'african-american') who give their daughters "non-traditional" names that are or appear to have roots in Africa :

Latisha
Shaniqua
Shatiqua
Shanene
Tyisha

as you can see, these names typically have 3 syllables, & sometimes the phonetic combinations are "unusual" to pronounce.. & they very often end with the letter "a"..


while looking for some "real black girl names" I came across a very interesting article on this, & within this article is a link to a whole study focused on this..

here is the article, from the Pittsburg Post-Gazette :



Studies find that Afrocentric names often incur a bias

Tuesday, November 25, 2003

By L.A. Johnson, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


When T.J. and Anika Flannigan gaze into the smooth, sweet, cinnamon-colored face of their 14-month-old daughter, they see the promise of all she'll become.

They expect her to grow into an intelligent woman who fearlessly faces life's challenges and perseveres, and they selected her name to reflect these characteristics.

Assata Akili Flannigan.

Assata means warlike or she who struggles, and Akili, which is Tanzanian, means bright and smart.

"It's like willing it to be true," says Anika Flannigan, 24, of Wilkinsburg.

The name is meant to define her -- not diminish her in others' eyes or expose her to undue discrimination.

However, a recent paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research indicates that some employers discriminate against job applicants based on the Afrocentric or black-sounding names on their resumes, regardless of their education, job experience or qualifications.

In the research paper "Are Emily and Greg More Employable than Lakisha and Jamal?" University of Chicago economics professor Marianne Ber-trand and Massachusetts Institute of Technology economics professor Sendhil Mullaina-than sent out close to 5,000 fictitious resumes in response to more than 1,300 help-wanted ads in The Boston Globe and the Chicago Tribune.

Resumes were randomly assigned a variety of very black-sounding names, such as Lakisha Washington and Jamal Jones, or very white-sounding names, such as Emily Walsh or Greg Baker.

Two higher-quality and two lower-quality resumes were sent out in response to each ad. Black-sounding names were randomly assigned to one of the higher-quality resumes and one of the lower-quality resumes.

The resumes with white-sounding names received 50 percent more call-backs for interviews than those with black-sounding names. Resumes with white-sounding names received one call-back per 10 resumes, while those with black-sounding names received one call-back per 15 resumes.

"Both my colleague and I were immensely surprised at the results," Mullainathan says.

Before they started their research for the paper, they informally asked human resource managers, academics and others involved in hiring what they thought the research would reveal.

"A lot of people said we would find reverse discrimination, and a lot of people who felt there would be some discrimination thought we'd find a small gap," he said.

However, the 50 percent difference in responses is a far larger gap than anyone anticipated and is evidence that discrimination is alive and well, the researchers said.

"Part of what I like about these types of studies is it doesn't matter what you expect," Mullainathan says. "The data is going to show what the data is going to show, and you can't manipulate it, consciously or subconsciously."

Higher-quality resumes, listing more skills and experience, yielded 30 percent more call-backs for whites but only 9 percent more for blacks.

"That, to me, was the most depressing part," Mullaina-than says. "When you show you have skills, you should get a huge return, and [blacks] didn't."

Bertrand and Mullainathan found the amount of racial discrimination uniform across the industries represented -- which included sales, administrative support, clerical and customer service jobs. Equal-opportunity employers were found to discriminate as much as other employers.

"It doesn't make me angry because I've basically decided that's how this society is, and I've not even put myself in the position to where I need to be accepted," says Anika Flannigan, who runs a catering business from home and plans to home-school her daughter, Assata. "I know I'm different."

People shouldn't worry about their child being discriminated against because of his or her name, she says.

"They're going to be discriminated against anyway," Flannigan says. "I don't think we should be trying to fit in; we should be trying to build our own businesses and support each other."

Aki Jamal Durham and his fiancee, Aliya Farrish, already have decided against giving their children Afrocentric or black-sounding names.

"It's not that we don't have a sense of pride in our African-American heritage, but sometimes you have to avoid these blatant and obvious pitfalls," says Durham, 31, of the Hill District. "We have agreed to give our children more conservative-sounding names so that they may not have to deal with that type of discrimination."

Their children will be raised knowing and being proud of their black culture, but they won't need Afrocentric or black-sounding names to do that, they say.

"If I demonstrate that I can compete on an equal playing field, it shouldn't matter what my name is," says Farrish, 28, of Point Breeze. "But because of the way society is, as a black person, you don't always have or want to put all of who you are on your sleeve."

In a 1995 University of Pittsburgh study titled "Preschool Children's Selection of Race-Related Personal Names," associate professor Jerlean E. Daniel, Ph.D., and professor Jack L. Daniel, Ph.D., asked 182 black and white 4- and 5-year-old children in Head Start nine questions related to positive and negative behaviors and character traits. The "Guess Who Game" asked the children to assume they had moved to a new neighborhood where they didn't know anyone.

In your new neighborhood, guess who is the smartest person in school: (a) Kyle or (b) Malik? (With girls they used the names (a) Sarah or (b) Shaniqua.)

In your new neighborhood, guess who is lazy: (a) Lashonda or (b) Victoria? (With boys they used the names (a) Jerome or (b) Dylan.)

In your new neighborhood, guess who looks the nicest: (a) Desiree or (b) Rachel? (With boys they used the names (a) Tyrone or (b) Tyler.)

In your new neighborhood, someone punched someone. Guess who did it: (a) Tiara or (b) Rebecca. (With boys they used the names (a) Andre or (b) Matthew.)

The researchers used some of the names most frequently given to white and black children in Pennsylvania between 1990 and 1993, with each name statistically being strongly identified and much more common with one race or the other.

They found that white children selected black names significantly more often for negative than for positive behaviors. White children also selected black names more often when the questions involved girls, indicating that stereotyping may be greater for black female names.

"They don't come out of the womb thinking that," says Durham, stressing that media and parents shape children's opinions and understanding of the world.

For positive character situations, the children, regardless of race or gender, selected black girls' names significantly less often than boys' names.

"It's real typical," T.J. Flannigan says of the findings of both studies. "As long as you have TV in the world, it's going to be that way. Of course you're going to start to stereotype like that."

In the final question, where children were asked who looked most like them, 86 percent of the white children chose white names, as did 58 percent of the African-American children. This finding echoed the landmark 1939 Clark and Clark doll study in which black and white children indicated preferences for white dolls.

"How does an African-American child say he looks like a Kyle when there are [at least in the early 1990s] no black Kyles?" says Jack L. Daniel, the University of Pittsburgh's vice provost for undergraduate studies and dean of students. "It could be they're picking the higher-prestige name and they assign the name that is affiliated with white as the high-prestige name."

For example, Kristen vs. Keisha or Todd vs. Tremayne.

"Nothing could be further from the truth than to say, 'Sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me,' " says Daniel, also a professor in the communications department. "Names will hurt you."

Words often become euphemisms for concepts, and people have all types of associations with names.

"Marilyn represented beauty just like Britney and Beyonce represent things about sexuality and beauty today," says Daniel, who is scheduled to discuss his research on ABC-TV's 20/20 early next year.

Durham believes his black-sounding name has prevented him from getting some call-backs for jobs. And since Sept. 11, 2001, he's felt even more acute discrimination from some prospective employers who think he is Muslim because of his Arabic first name, Aki, which means "my brother."

Names that suggest a foreign heritage, in fact, also may prove problematic for applicants. Former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, jobless upon graduation from law school though tied for first in his class, was advised by his law school dean to change his name. He considered adopting the moniker Mark Conrad but eventually landed a prestigious clerkship at the New York State Court of Appeals under his given name.

Since his survey results were released in May, Mullainathan has been talking to human resource managers and others involved in hiring who are as surprised as anyone at the findings of discrimination.

They aren't doing this intentionally," he says. "Firms and HR managers and the people who do the hiring are really keen on trying to fix the problem."

Mullainathan is optimistic that correcting the problem may not be as difficult as people think.

"They make a decision about most [resumes] in 10 to 15 seconds," says Mullainathan, who is studying how human resource managers read resumes. "It's hard not to let your implicit biases kick in, no matter how good-hearted you are, and these quick impressions are prone to mistakes."

Simply spending more time going through resumes might reduce the call-back gap, he says.

Some also differentiate between names derived from a foreign country, language or culture and those that parents have created.

"I really don't like the made-up names like LeMichael," says Farrish, an administrator for a small nonprofit.

"When you give a child a name like Cristal or Mercedes, you almost put them in a box, and every day they're reminded of these materialistic values," says Durham, who works in marketing and promotions.

"That speaks to values and what you want your child to grow up being associated with -- an expensive champagne or a virtuous moral?" says Farrish, whose first name, Aliya, means "exalted" in Swahili. "When they're given these bastardized names, they have to defend them and I think that's an unfair burden to put on a child."

In a National Bureau of Economic Research paper titled "The Causes and Consequences of Distinctively Black Names," NBER's Roland Fryer and the University of Chicago's Steven Levitt found in studying California birth data that in the past 20 years, distinctively black names may be indicative of being born into a lower economic class, but that they have no bearing on how successful people with such names end up in life.

Daniel, speaking in defense of Afrocentric and unique black-sounding names, says such names are all part of black creativity.

"No different than jazz, blues, soul or rap," Daniel says. "Everything we touch, we add creativity to it."

Some parents want to create a unique identity for their child.

"You take the young African-American parent who wants to imbue dignity in her child. She uses her creativity and comes up with Latifah, Lashonda," he says. "Even with names such as Lexus, parents want their child to have the highest aspirations and be the best, just as Lexus is the best of its kind."

T.J. Flannigan knows firsthand that having a white-sounding name isn't necessarily an advantage in ultimately getting a job, though it has helped him get his foot in the door.

When searching for an electrician's job in Ohio, he always received a warm reception over the telephone. However, when Thomas Jefferson Flannigan showed up for the personal interview, jaws dropped and brows furrowed because he wasn't the Irish lad they had expected.

"You could see a definite shock and sort of reaction, like I'm-going-to-have-to-go-through-with-this-now-that-he's-here kind of look," says Flannigan, who works as a barber and hopes to turn his hobby of producing and writing music into a career.

He believes parents should name their children as they wish but that they should make sure the name has meaning.

"Take time to really name your child and investigate it," he says. "Every time you call their name, its meaning will be in their subconscious."
I'll see you tonight..
in ALL MY DREAMS..
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Reply #23 posted 09/14/05 8:00am

Ahnold

avatar

a loht of peohple fohget to sahy the 'R' when they sahy ma nahme..... sad
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Reply #24 posted 09/14/05 8:35am

susannah

Thats really interesting stuff!!
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Reply #25 posted 09/14/05 8:50am

mltijchr

avatar

susannah said:

Thats really interesting stuff!!

interesting, & DEEP.
I'll see you tonight..
in ALL MY DREAMS..
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Reply #26 posted 09/14/05 8:58am

DorothyParkerW
asCool

sirnozedevoidofunk said:

I was at a movie theater with my husband and behind me I hear a college caucasian guy said, "I'm glad SHANIQUA is leaving the theater because she is loud.."
Does everybody do this? It was just something I wish I didnt hear sad


Was that Bill Cosby?
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Reply #27 posted 09/14/05 9:06am

Rhondab

That is really interesting because I have cousins that I know are the kings and queens of trifling living and their names are Myron, Veronica and Holly..... eek


Myron has been in jail since he was 16, he's now 24. Holly never went to high school, got pregnant at 13, had her baby at 14 and is now a grandmother at 30. Veronica is just dumb....I love them all but damn...I'm not even going to start with their parents who are the Bobby and Whitney of our family.....

neutral


lol@ DPWC


we know Bill thinks Enice is normal confused
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Reply #28 posted 09/14/05 9:36am

JediMaster

avatar

mltijchr said:

susannah said:

Why Shaniqua though? Is that some sort of commmon stereotypical insult?

there are several sun women (=most say 'african-american') who give their daughters "non-traditional" names that are or appear to have roots in Africa :

Latisha
Shaniqua
Shatiqua
Shanene
Tyisha

as you can see, these names typically have 3 syllables, & sometimes the phonetic combinations are "unusual" to pronounce.. & they very often end with the letter "a"..


while looking for some "real black girl names" I came across a very interesting article on this, & within this article is a link to a whole study focused on this..

here is the article, from the Pittsburg Post-Gazette :



Studies find that Afrocentric names often incur a bias

Tuesday, November 25, 2003

By L.A. Johnson, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


When T.J. and Anika Flannigan gaze into the smooth, sweet, cinnamon-colored face of their 14-month-old daughter, they see the promise of all she'll become.

They expect her to grow into an intelligent woman who fearlessly faces life's challenges and perseveres, and they selected her name to reflect these characteristics.

Assata Akili Flannigan.

Assata means warlike or she who struggles, and Akili, which is Tanzanian, means bright and smart.

"It's like willing it to be true," says Anika Flannigan, 24, of Wilkinsburg.

The name is meant to define her -- not diminish her in others' eyes or expose her to undue discrimination.

However, a recent paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research indicates that some employers discriminate against job applicants based on the Afrocentric or black-sounding names on their resumes, regardless of their education, job experience or qualifications.

In the research paper "Are Emily and Greg More Employable than Lakisha and Jamal?" University of Chicago economics professor Marianne Ber-trand and Massachusetts Institute of Technology economics professor Sendhil Mullaina-than sent out close to 5,000 fictitious resumes in response to more than 1,300 help-wanted ads in The Boston Globe and the Chicago Tribune.

Resumes were randomly assigned a variety of very black-sounding names, such as Lakisha Washington and Jamal Jones, or very white-sounding names, such as Emily Walsh or Greg Baker.

Two higher-quality and two lower-quality resumes were sent out in response to each ad. Black-sounding names were randomly assigned to one of the higher-quality resumes and one of the lower-quality resumes.

The resumes with white-sounding names received 50 percent more call-backs for interviews than those with black-sounding names. Resumes with white-sounding names received one call-back per 10 resumes, while those with black-sounding names received one call-back per 15 resumes.

"Both my colleague and I were immensely surprised at the results," Mullainathan says.

Before they started their research for the paper, they informally asked human resource managers, academics and others involved in hiring what they thought the research would reveal.

"A lot of people said we would find reverse discrimination, and a lot of people who felt there would be some discrimination thought we'd find a small gap," he said.

However, the 50 percent difference in responses is a far larger gap than anyone anticipated and is evidence that discrimination is alive and well, the researchers said.

"Part of what I like about these types of studies is it doesn't matter what you expect," Mullainathan says. "The data is going to show what the data is going to show, and you can't manipulate it, consciously or subconsciously."

Higher-quality resumes, listing more skills and experience, yielded 30 percent more call-backs for whites but only 9 percent more for blacks.

"That, to me, was the most depressing part," Mullaina-than says. "When you show you have skills, you should get a huge return, and [blacks] didn't."

Bertrand and Mullainathan found the amount of racial discrimination uniform across the industries represented -- which included sales, administrative support, clerical and customer service jobs. Equal-opportunity employers were found to discriminate as much as other employers.

"It doesn't make me angry because I've basically decided that's how this society is, and I've not even put myself in the position to where I need to be accepted," says Anika Flannigan, who runs a catering business from home and plans to home-school her daughter, Assata. "I know I'm different."

People shouldn't worry about their child being discriminated against because of his or her name, she says.

"They're going to be discriminated against anyway," Flannigan says. "I don't think we should be trying to fit in; we should be trying to build our own businesses and support each other."

Aki Jamal Durham and his fiancee, Aliya Farrish, already have decided against giving their children Afrocentric or black-sounding names.

"It's not that we don't have a sense of pride in our African-American heritage, but sometimes you have to avoid these blatant and obvious pitfalls," says Durham, 31, of the Hill District. "We have agreed to give our children more conservative-sounding names so that they may not have to deal with that type of discrimination."

Their children will be raised knowing and being proud of their black culture, but they won't need Afrocentric or black-sounding names to do that, they say.

"If I demonstrate that I can compete on an equal playing field, it shouldn't matter what my name is," says Farrish, 28, of Point Breeze. "But because of the way society is, as a black person, you don't always have or want to put all of who you are on your sleeve."

In a 1995 University of Pittsburgh study titled "Preschool Children's Selection of Race-Related Personal Names," associate professor Jerlean E. Daniel, Ph.D., and professor Jack L. Daniel, Ph.D., asked 182 black and white 4- and 5-year-old children in Head Start nine questions related to positive and negative behaviors and character traits. The "Guess Who Game" asked the children to assume they had moved to a new neighborhood where they didn't know anyone.

In your new neighborhood, guess who is the smartest person in school: (a) Kyle or (b) Malik? (With girls they used the names (a) Sarah or (b) Shaniqua.)

In your new neighborhood, guess who is lazy: (a) Lashonda or (b) Victoria? (With boys they used the names (a) Jerome or (b) Dylan.)

In your new neighborhood, guess who looks the nicest: (a) Desiree or (b) Rachel? (With boys they used the names (a) Tyrone or (b) Tyler.)

In your new neighborhood, someone punched someone. Guess who did it: (a) Tiara or (b) Rebecca. (With boys they used the names (a) Andre or (b) Matthew.)

The researchers used some of the names most frequently given to white and black children in Pennsylvania between 1990 and 1993, with each name statistically being strongly identified and much more common with one race or the other.

They found that white children selected black names significantly more often for negative than for positive behaviors. White children also selected black names more often when the questions involved girls, indicating that stereotyping may be greater for black female names.

"They don't come out of the womb thinking that," says Durham, stressing that media and parents shape children's opinions and understanding of the world.

For positive character situations, the children, regardless of race or gender, selected black girls' names significantly less often than boys' names.

"It's real typical," T.J. Flannigan says of the findings of both studies. "As long as you have TV in the world, it's going to be that way. Of course you're going to start to stereotype like that."

In the final question, where children were asked who looked most like them, 86 percent of the white children chose white names, as did 58 percent of the African-American children. This finding echoed the landmark 1939 Clark and Clark doll study in which black and white children indicated preferences for white dolls.

"How does an African-American child say he looks like a Kyle when there are [at least in the early 1990s] no black Kyles?" says Jack L. Daniel, the University of Pittsburgh's vice provost for undergraduate studies and dean of students. "It could be they're picking the higher-prestige name and they assign the name that is affiliated with white as the high-prestige name."

For example, Kristen vs. Keisha or Todd vs. Tremayne.

"Nothing could be further from the truth than to say, 'Sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me,' " says Daniel, also a professor in the communications department. "Names will hurt you."

Words often become euphemisms for concepts, and people have all types of associations with names.

"Marilyn represented beauty just like Britney and Beyonce represent things about sexuality and beauty today," says Daniel, who is scheduled to discuss his research on ABC-TV's 20/20 early next year.

Durham believes his black-sounding name has prevented him from getting some call-backs for jobs. And since Sept. 11, 2001, he's felt even more acute discrimination from some prospective employers who think he is Muslim because of his Arabic first name, Aki, which means "my brother."

Names that suggest a foreign heritage, in fact, also may prove problematic for applicants. Former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, jobless upon graduation from law school though tied for first in his class, was advised by his law school dean to change his name. He considered adopting the moniker Mark Conrad but eventually landed a prestigious clerkship at the New York State Court of Appeals under his given name.

Since his survey results were released in May, Mullainathan has been talking to human resource managers and others involved in hiring who are as surprised as anyone at the findings of discrimination.

They aren't doing this intentionally," he says. "Firms and HR managers and the people who do the hiring are really keen on trying to fix the problem."

Mullainathan is optimistic that correcting the problem may not be as difficult as people think.

"They make a decision about most [resumes] in 10 to 15 seconds," says Mullainathan, who is studying how human resource managers read resumes. "It's hard not to let your implicit biases kick in, no matter how good-hearted you are, and these quick impressions are prone to mistakes."

Simply spending more time going through resumes might reduce the call-back gap, he says.

Some also differentiate between names derived from a foreign country, language or culture and those that parents have created.

"I really don't like the made-up names like LeMichael," says Farrish, an administrator for a small nonprofit.

"When you give a child a name like Cristal or Mercedes, you almost put them in a box, and every day they're reminded of these materialistic values," says Durham, who works in marketing and promotions.

"That speaks to values and what you want your child to grow up being associated with -- an expensive champagne or a virtuous moral?" says Farrish, whose first name, Aliya, means "exalted" in Swahili. "When they're given these bastardized names, they have to defend them and I think that's an unfair burden to put on a child."

In a National Bureau of Economic Research paper titled "The Causes and Consequences of Distinctively Black Names," NBER's Roland Fryer and the University of Chicago's Steven Levitt found in studying California birth data that in the past 20 years, distinctively black names may be indicative of being born into a lower economic class, but that they have no bearing on how successful people with such names end up in life.

Daniel, speaking in defense of Afrocentric and unique black-sounding names, says such names are all part of black creativity.

"No different than jazz, blues, soul or rap," Daniel says. "Everything we touch, we add creativity to it."

Some parents want to create a unique identity for their child.

"You take the young African-American parent who wants to imbue dignity in her child. She uses her creativity and comes up with Latifah, Lashonda," he says. "Even with names such as Lexus, parents want their child to have the highest aspirations and be the best, just as Lexus is the best of its kind."

T.J. Flannigan knows firsthand that having a white-sounding name isn't necessarily an advantage in ultimately getting a job, though it has helped him get his foot in the door.

When searching for an electrician's job in Ohio, he always received a warm reception over the telephone. However, when Thomas Jefferson Flannigan showed up for the personal interview, jaws dropped and brows furrowed because he wasn't the Irish lad they had expected.

"You could see a definite shock and sort of reaction, like I'm-going-to-have-to-go-through-with-this-now-that-he's-here kind of look," says Flannigan, who works as a barber and hopes to turn his hobby of producing and writing music into a career.

He believes parents should name their children as they wish but that they should make sure the name has meaning.

"Take time to really name your child and investigate it," he says. "Every time you call their name, its meaning will be in their subconscious."


VERY interesting.

One point this article doesn't address, and I think should, is whether or not it is a "racial" issue, or if unusual names in general get less responses. If they had used not-so-common names from other cultures, even if they are "white", would they have gotten fewer responses as well? If they had used a Celtic name such as "Rhiannon" or a French name like "Salvatore", would the response have been equally sparse? I would like to see the study expanded to include this.
jedi

Do not hurry yourself in your spirit to become offended, for the taking of offense is what rests in the bosom of the stupid ones. (Ecclesiastes 7:9)
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Reply #29 posted 09/14/05 9:47am

TheCrucialExpe
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Of course it was racist. Only a misled fool would not see it that way. Too bad I wasn't there, I woulda bashed him in his dome and then kicked him in the mouth as he lay on the floor. Papa don't play that shit.
"But what of black women? . . . I most sincerely doubt if any other race of women could have brought its fineness up through so devilish a fire." -- W.E.B. Du Bois --
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