I love when people in culture show up on fictional TV shows. I don't mind at all being a name from the '90s.
The Eskimos had fifty-two names for snow because it was important to them: there ought to be as many for love.
I changed my name when I was 13. I don't know why but it made sense at the time. I wanted another identity. I wanted to reinvent myself.
I've been acting for a long time now, but as narcissistic as this sounds - and I don't mean it to sound - every time I see my name up there, there is real sense of pride.
The fact that I stay anonymous means I can exhibit wherever I want. No one knows my name, so it's easy for me to travel.
The travel and tourism industry is the lifeblood of many states around the country - including Florida, California, New York and Nevada, to name a few.
The name America has definitely grown on me. I wish there was a big patriotic story behind it, but the truth is that my grandfather was a librarian who knew all sorts of random facts.
Col. Everett Dasher Breed: What's your name, soldier? Pinkley: Number two, Sir!
Nobody: What name were you given at birth, stupid white man?
Neil: So what are you going to do? Charlie? Dalton: Damn it Neil, the name is Nuwanda.
[first lines] Forrest Gump: Hello. My name's Forrest, Forrest Gump. You want a chocolate?
Captain Dudley Smith: Have you a valediction, boyo? Jack Vincennes: [gasping out a name] ... Rollo Tamasi.
Yoyo: Get the fuck out of here! That's like you name your kid "Lampshade."
[first lines] H.I.: [voiceover] My name is H.I. McDonnaugh. Call me Hi.
[last lines] The Old Man: Nice shootin', son. What's your name? RoboCop: Murphy.
Stanley Goodspeed: How, in the name of Zeus's butthole, did you get out of your cell?
Immigration officer: May I take your name, miss? Rose: Dawson. Rose Dawson.
Rouvières: A trench named Bingo Crepuscule? Why not Youppie Tralala?
Paikea: My name is Paikea Apirana, and I come from a long line of chiefs.
We can safely abandon the doctrine of the eighties, namely that the rich were not working because they had too little money, the poor because they had much.
They say the test of literary power is whether a man can write an inscription. I say, 'Can he name a kitten?'