Duncan and Luke from I Vote You, Mr. Mayor by Isabella Renee
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G’eth Character Name Bank
First Names
Masculine Names
Alfred, Andrew, Arlo, Arthur, Balthazar, Barry, Ben, Benedick, Bernard, Burchard, Cedric, Charibert, Crispin, Cyrill, Daegal, Derek, Digory, Drustan, Duncan, Edmund, Edwin, Elric, Evaine, Frederick, Geffery, George, Godfreed, Gregory, Guy, Harris, Harry, Horsa, Hugh, Humphrey, Iago, Jack, Jeremy, John, Kazamir, Kenric, Lawrence, Leoric, Lorik, Luke, Lynton, Lysander, Madoc, Magnus, Maukolum, Micheal, Miles, Milhouse, Mordred, Mosseus, Ori, Orvyn, Neville, Norbert, Nycolas, Paul, Percival, Randulf, Richard, Robert, Roderick, Stephen, Tennys, Theodoric, Thomas, Tristan, Tybalt, Victor, Vincent, Vortimer, Willcock, Willian, Wymond
Feminine Names
Adelin, Alice, Amelia, Beatrix, Beryl, Bogdana, Branwyne, Brigida, Catalina, Catherine, Claudia, Crystina, Deanna, Desdemona, Elaine, Elinora, Eliza, Enide, Eva, Ferelith, Fiora, Freya, Gertrude, Gregoria, Gueanor, Gwen, Gwendolyn, Hannah, Hegelina, Helen, Helga, Heloise, Henrietta, Igraine, Imogen, Jacquelyn, Jane, Jean, Jenny, Jill, Juliana, Juliet, Katie, Leela, Lettice, Lilibet, Lilith, Lucy, Luthera, Luz, Lyra, Malyna, Margherita, Marion, Meryl, Millie, Miranda, Molle, Morgana, Morgause, Nezetta, Nina, Novella, Olwen, Oriana, Oriolda, Osanna, Pamela, Petra, Philippa, Revna, Rohez, Rosalind, Rose, Sallie, Sarra, Serphina, Sif, Simona, Sophie, Thomasine, Tiffany, Ursula, Viola, Winifred, Yrsa, Ysabella, Yvaine, Zelda, Zillah
Gender-Neutral/Unisex Names
Adrian, Alex, Aiden, Arden, Ariel, Auden, Avery, Bailey, Blaire, Blake, Brett, Breslin, Caelan, Cadain, Cameron, Charlie, Dagon, Dana, Darby, Darra, Devon, Drew, Dylan, Evan, Felize, Fenix, Fernley, Finley, Glenn, Gavyn, Haskell, Hayden, Hunter, Jace, Jaime, Jesse, Jo, Kai, Kane, Karter, Kieran, Kylin, Landon, Leslie, Mallory, Marin, Meritt, Morgan, Nell, Noel, Oakley, Otzar, Paris, Peregrine, Quant, Quyn, Reagan, Remy, Robin, Rowan, Ryan, Sam, Samar, Sasha, Sloan, Stace, Tatum, Teegan, Terrin, Urbain, Vahn, Valo, Vick, Wallace, Waverly, Whitney, Yardley, Yarden, Zasha
Surnames
Surnames, Patrilineal - First Name (Patrilineal Surname)
Ace, Allaire, Appel, Arrow, Baker, Bamford, Barnard, Beckett, Berryann, Blakewood, Blanning, Bigge, Binns, Bisby, Brewer, Brickenden, Brooker, Browne, Buller, Carey, Carpenter, Carter, Cheeseman, Clarke, Cooper, Ead, Elwood, Emory, Farmer, Fish, Fisher, Fitzroy, Fletcher, Foreman, Foster, Fuller, Galahad, Gerard, Graves, Grover, Harlow, Hawkins, Hayward, Hill, Holley, Holt, Hunter, Jester, Kerr, Kirk, Leigh, MacGuffin, Maddock, Mason, Maynard, Mercer, Miller, Nash, Paige, Payne, Pernelle, Raleigh, Ryder, Scroggs, Seller, Shepard, Shore, Slater, Smith, Tanner, Taylor, Thatcher, Thorn, Tilly, Turner, Underwood, Vaughan, Walter, Webb, Wilde, Wood, Wren, Wyatt, Wynne
Surnames, Townships in G’eth - First Name of (Location)
Abelforth, Argent Keep, Barrow Springs, Barrowmere, Bedford, Brunhelm, Bumble, Casterfalls, Dunbridge, Falmore Forest, Folk’s Bounty, Frostmaid, Fulstad, Heller’s Crossing, Hertfordshire, Humberdale, Inkwater, Little Avery, Marrowton, Mistfall, Mistmire, Morcow, Necropolis-on-Sea, Otherway, Parsendale, Piddlehinton, Port Fairwind, Redcastle, Ransom, Rutherglen, Saint Crois, Tanner’s Folly, Tavern’s Point, Wilmington
Surnames, Geographical Locations in G’eth - First Name of the (Location)
Cove of Calamity, Deep Woods of Falmore, Eastern Isles, Eastern Mountains, Foothills, Frozen Peak, Lakes, Maegor Cobblestones, Northern Mountains, Southern Isle, Tangle, West Coast, Wild Wild Woods, Woods of Angarad
Surnames, Nickname - First Name the (Something)
Bald, Bastard, Bear, Bearded, Big, Bird, Bold, Brave, Broken, Butcher, Bruiser, Careless, Caring, Charitable, Clever, Clumsy, Cold, Confessor, Coward, Crow, Cyclops, Devious, Devoted, Dog, Dragonheart, Dreamer, Elder, Faithful, Fearless, Fey, Fool, Friend, Generous, Giant, Goldheart, Goldfang, Gouty, Gracious, Great, Hag, Handsome, Hawk, Honest, Huge, Humble, Hungry, Hunter, Innocent, Ironfist, Ironside, Keeper, Kind, Lesser, Liar, Lionheart, Little, Loyal, Magical, Mercenary, Merchant, Messenger, Old, Orphan, Pale, Polite, Poet, Poor, Prodigy, Prophet, Proud, Reliable, Romantic, Rude, Selfish, Sellsword, Scab, Scholar, Shield, Shy, Singer, Sirrah, Slayer, Slug, Small, Stoneheart, Swift, Tadde, Talented, Tart, Tenacious, Timid, Tiny, Tough, Traveller, Trusted, Truthful, Viper, Wizard, Wolf, Wyrm
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Ok I’m now fully convinced on making this into an actual AU so I made this just to clarify who’s who.
Owen >> Mark
Noah >> Cesar
Duncan >> Adam
Trent >> Jonah
Courtney >> Sarah
Gwen >> Evelin
Brick >> Thatcher
Jo >> Ruth
Chris McLean >> “Gabriel” (lol)
Alejandro >> “Cesar”
Intruder >> Either Chef or Ezekiel
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An American Christmas Carol - ABC - December 16, 1979
Christmas Drama / Fantasy
Running Time: 97 minutes
Stars:
Henry Winkler as Benedict Slade
Dorian Harewood as Matt Reeves
Susan Hogan as Helen Brewster
Cec Linder as Auctioneer
R.H. Thomson as Thatcher
David Wayne as Merrivale
Michael Wincott as Choir Leader
William Bermender as Orphan
Brett Matthew Davidson as Orphan
Tammy Bourne as Sarah Thatcher
Chris Cragg as Jonathan Thatcher
James B. Douglas as Sam Perkins
Arlene Duncan as Jennie Reeves
Linda Goranson as Mrs. Doris Thatcher
Gerard Parkes as Jessup
Mary Pirie as Mrs. Brewster
Kenneth Pogue as Jack Latham
Sammy Snyders as Young Slade
Chris Wiggins as Mr. Brewster
Alexander Galant as Orphan (uncredited)
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Here is the bracket! Polls will be up shortly and will be linked below
Group 1:
Victoria Grieve vs Keladry of Mindelan
Black Knight vs Batman
Fright Knight vs Karkat Vantas
Undyne vs Ballister Blackheart
Lan Madragoran vs Ambrosius Goldenloin
Duncan the Tall vs Gideon Nav
Haurchefant Greystone vs Blue Knight
Link vs Morpho Knight
Group 2:
Meta Knight vs Jenkins/Galahad
Brienne of Tarth vs Kris Dreemurr
Joan of Arc vs Elton John
Jane vs Ogrim
WelsKnight vs Fierce Dryya
Kaladin Stormblessed vs The Knights Who Say Ni
Galavant vs Shovel Knight
Prideknights vs Emma Swan
Group 3:
Galacta Knight vs Shallan Davar
Davos Seaworth vs Terry Pratchett
Damien vs Orym
Shrek vs Sonic
Gillion Tidestrider vs Dave Strider
Jasnah Kholin vs Modeus
Lancelot vs Ceruledge
Caroline vs Ian Chesterton
Group 4:
Fredrick vs Alanna
Gawain vs Knight Cookie
Jaime Lannister vs Jean
Dalinar Kholin vs Solaire of Astora
Geralt of Rivia vs Utena
Artoria Pendragon vs Obi-Wan Kenobi
Pearl vs William Thatcher
Papyrus vs The Knight
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Rewatched 'The Six Thatchers'. Like with 'The Blind Banker', it is an unpopular episode which I rate very highly. Mark Gatiss balanced the story perfectly: he made room both for the 'canonical' detective details and for the personal drama, and this combination looks very natural. His characters are real people who have their day-to-day routine, and it helps the viewer to feel engaged in the story. The supporting actors are quite remarkable in this episode: Lindsay Duncan and Simon Kunz are very convincing as Mycroft's colleagues, Charles Edwards and Amanda Root have an interesting cameo, and the antagonists of this episode, played by Sacha Dhawan (one of the favourite Gatiss' actors) and Marcia Warren, fit very well into the atmosphere of the story. London is also not forgotten this time, and the scenes in Turkey give a bright color to the whole narrative. Personally I also love this episode because Stella Hopkins is featured here. Eleanor Matsuura brings fresh air into the story, and I also am a strong Greg/Stella shipper (which probably makes me the third - and last - supporter of this ship after Gatiss and Moffat - not such a bad company after all). But the most important thing comes in the end. It is always very difficult to write a death of a character, and Gatiss faced this challenge beautifully. Martin Freeman and Amanda Abbington had at that time a very difficult period in their lives, and they met it with such professionalism that they really deserved a huge respect. All in all, 'The Six Thatchers' is one of the best episodes of the show, which sets the tone for the coming-of-age - both of the show's creators and of its main character.
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There is, it turns out, one phrase that perfectly captures modern Britain. When economist Duncan Weldon wrote a history of the country’s finances two years ago, it was called Two Hundred Years of Muddling Through. When, 23 years before that, politician and historian Peter Hennessy published a collection of his writing on politics in postwar Britain, it was titled Muddling Through. No racing ahead, please, we’re British.
In Steve Richards’s latest book, Turning Points: Crisis and Change in Modern Britain, From 1945 to Truss, the British journalist tries to identify the tidal shifts of the past eight decades in U.K. politics. Still, even he admits in his conclusion that “on the whole, turning points are reached, passed and the UK muddles on with the old familiar patterns still in place.”
He should know: Now mostly a TV presenter and columnist, Richards first became a political journalist in 1990. Since then, he has worked for several newspapers, radio stations, and TV stations, and was, for a time, political editor of left-leaning magazine the New Statesman. He’s not quite seen it all, but he has certainly witnessed a lot of it.
Frustratingly, he never quite takes his thesis to its logical conclusion. That Britain keeps failing to turn is a worthwhile observation, but why is entropy stronger there than elsewhere? The clues are strewn across the book, but he never quite picks up on them. Instead, he looks to the usual explanations: short institutional memories and the conservative nature of the political class.
Yet, page after page, Richards mentions the all-powerful British press, menacingly glaring at the political class from Fleet Street. In the book, prime ministers often do not do things because they fear the Daily Mail’s ire, and ministers are pushed to do things they’d rather avoid because they want to keep the Sun on their side.
British newspapers are especially ideological and more likely to stick to their political guns—low taxes, less regulation, social conservatism, Euroscepticism—than politicians themselves. Couldn’t this explain why things never quite change, and why Britain forever remains a small “c” conservative country? It’s the theory Richards accidentally puts forward, without ever reaching it himself.
Even today, former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher still looms large in Westminster. All of Richards’s chapter titles are descriptive, but the one about Thatcher’s years in power is simply named “1979.” Everyone knows what happened then. She took a postwar consensus that favored or tolerated a strong union movement, reasonably high taxes, nationalized industries, and a healthy welfare state, and she tore it to pieces. She wasn’t afraid of unemployment or the occasionally cruel hand of the markets. She went to war against Argentina, and she won. She took on the miners, and she won. She fought three elections, and she won, and won, and won.
Thatcher’s real victory came years after her premiership. Once asked about her greatest achievement, she named “Tony Blair and New Labour”—the government that came into power in 1997, after 18 years of electoral failure. “We forced our opponents to change their minds,” she said. She was right: In order to win, Blair had to give up on many of Labour’s once-flagship policies. He embraced privatization and the promise of lower taxes, because the rules of the game had been changed for good.
As Richards points out, these rules are still in place. When current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak gave his first speech to the Conservatives’ annual conference last year, he praised the “party of the grocer’s daughter and the pharmacist’s son.” Sunak’s mother was a pharmacist. There are no prizes for guessing who was raised by a grocer.
None of this feels especially revelatory. Anyone with a passing knowledge of British history could tell you that Thatcher was influential. They could probably also tell you, as Richards does, that the Suez Crisis and the Iraq War were disquieting to the British psyche, as they revealed that the country never quite knew where it stood in the postwar world. A medium-sized power with grand ambitions and an illustrious past, always uncomfortably stuck between Europe and America, yadda yadda. We all followed the Brexit vote and the chaos it unleashed. We’re aware.
Still, Turning Points doesn’t merely identify those watershed moments. It also seeks to understand why Britain may turn, and why it often doesn’t. This is where things get interesting, but perhaps not in the way Richards intended.
Take Thatcher, again. As Richards points out, much of her success cannot solely be attributed to her political genius. The Social Democratic Party (SDP) was formed in 1981 and, for two elections after that, split the center and left vote. In both 1983 and 1987, “more voters in total backed Labour and the SDP/Liberal Alliance … than Thatcher’s Conservative party.”
Why, then, was Thatcher allowed to cement such a legacy? Richards offers some clues: “With much of the media fully on board with the Thatcher revolution…”; “In the Conservative newspapers, the constant demand was for more tax cuts to be financed by spending cuts”; “Much of the media and quite a lot of voters were by then with the change-maker.”
It doesn’t stop there. Why did Blair so successfully manage to reshape the image of the Labour Party? “The media broadly accepted Tony Blair’s narrative that he led ‘New Labour’”; “He managed to persuade many columnists who might be otherwise sceptical that New Labour’s break with the past was an act of breathtaking radicalism in itself.”
Why, once elected, did Blair manage to instigate peace in Northern Ireland, something all his predecessors had failed to do? “Although highly complex … the process was safe in the sense that this was not an area where The Sun newspaper would erupt.” How did he, a few years later, successfully bring more investment into the national health service? “[E]ven the Daily Mail had started campaigning for higher pay for nurses.”
As for the Iraq War, what made Blair decide to side with the United States? “Blair wanted at some point to win a referendum on the euro so it was important as far as he was concerned to show that he was pro-American in order to build up credit with Rupert Murdoch and his newspapers.”
On and on it goes, all the way to Brexit, which was backed by a majority of newspapers, and to Liz Truss’s disastrous 44-day premiership, which nevertheless found many cheerleaders in the British press.
Amazingly, these newspapers do not feature in the book’s conclusion. They are mentioned at every juncture, in every chapter, yet their presence and influence are never meaningfully acknowledged. The media may well be a natural phenomenon like the weather, present but only ever in the background.
It isn’t really Richards’s fault: He has, after all, been a journalist in Britain for more than three decades. You could hardly give a fish a voice and complain that it doesn’t end up mentioning the water.
The British press campaigns for and against things and revels in its own power, bragging about turning certain politicians into rising stars and condemning others to obscurity. Most famous is perhaps “It’s The Sun Wot Won It,” the headline on the front page of the Sun after the Conservatives’ shock election victory in 1992.
These newspapers’ owners are, for the most part, Conservative and conservative. The Daily Mirror, a left-wing tabloid, was influential for a while, but it stood alone. Among the broadsheet newspapers, political opinions have always been somewhat more balanced, with the Independent and the Guardian respectively representing the center and the left, but their readership figures could never quite compete with the remarkably popular “red tops.”
As journalist Adrian Addison writes in Mail Men, the Daily Mail’s voice “does carry far beyond its loyal readers; it howls through Westminster corridors befuddling politicians … before whistling on through the nation’s newsrooms to help define the media agenda for the day.” In Stick It Up Your Punter!, journalists Chris Horrie and Peter Chippindale note that “the Sun had made Rupert Murdoch a political power in Britain,” and that it “was widely believed that Murdoch had an effective veto on any policy that might negatively affect his business empire.”
This isn’t hyperbole: In Where Power Lies, Lance Price described the way Blair and his senior advisor Alastair Campbell had to work with the media magnate. “If Murdoch were left to pursue his business interests in peace he would give Labour a fair wind,” he writes. The deal was never committed to paper, but it was there, and honored by both parties.
By merely noting newspapers’ influence instead of delving into how they became so influential, Richards never quite gets to the crux of the issue: Why did those big bad hacks manage to get away with it for so long?
Again, hints can be found in Turning Points. When discussing the energy crisis sparked by the war in Ukraine, Richards notes that “[c]ontingency planning was not part of the UK’s political culture with its focus on the short term and in its wariness of planning ahead.”
Some decades earlier, Richards explains, Thatcher’s drastic reforms could happen because “there was no grown-up conversation in the UK … about whether a modern state might have an important role to play and what form it should take.” Elsewhere, he laments the fact that Britons keep stubbornly refusing to learn from political events.
This is, or ought to be, the real thesis of Turning Points: Britain keeps muddling through, largely unchanged, because it cannot escape from the vicious circle governing it. The political class isn’t especially interested in the past and the lessons it can hold. It finds the idea of thinking deeply and precisely about the future to be a waste of time. Anything that happens today might just about be of interest, though it will probably be forgotten tomorrow.
The press, on the other hand, is opinionated and has a fierce memory. It doesn’t forgive or forget, and it is clear in its aims. More than inform its readers, it seeks to reshape the country in their image. Speaking of former Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre, journalist Peter Oborne once said that “he articulates the dreams, fears and hopes of socially insecure members of the suburban middle class.” In practice, this can look like support for “traditional” families, an inherent suspicion of local authorities, mistrusting anything that feels “foreign,” sneering at feminists, stoking anti-immigration sentiment, and fighting for good, honest, British values, whatever they are. These days, hatred of anything deemed “woke” is likely to feature in tabloid pages.
It’s a marriage made in heaven: Media owners and editors can—often rightly—feel like they are making the weather, and politicians get to absolve themselves of real responsibility.
But the landscape is beginning to change. British people do not read newspapers like they once did. Even the tabloids, once feared by all, are now shadows of their former selves. Richards’s argument is that the shape of the country’s political class has prevented it from ever being too swayed by events. His real conclusion, hiding in plain sight, is that the political class spent just under a century shackled to a press that distrusted any and all change, Thatcherism aside. The shackles are now coming loose. In the coming decades, Westminster will have to realize that it no longer needs to look behind its shoulder to check that Fleet Street is on board.
If Richards’s headline thesis is right, little will change. Memories will remain short, and lessons will remain unlearnt. Britain will keep muddling through. But if the press is indeed the culprit, Britain may finally be entering an era in which politicians no longer operate inside the unhelpful feedback loop they have been stuck in for a lifetime. Might some real turning points be just around the corner?
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Wallace & Gromit's Grand Adventures Villagers Ranked
Yeah I've been watching rtgame's W&G playthrough and I can't stand most of the NPCs but I thought I'd do a ranking anyway. This ranking does include the caveat that all of these characters would arguably vote tory and I'd fight them all.
Mr Paneer - litchrally the best character. Done nothing wrong. Just wants to run his shop, and sometimes make sandcastles. Only in-universe flaw is liking golf (but so does every guy here). Outside the universe itself, he's clearly a very poorly-written Asian character, but he's the most reasonable and normal villager in the game.
Mrs Gabberly - took an episode or two to warm up to, but she seems really nice. She even looked after Duncan when he was attacked, despite him being awful to her and took in the three whippets. I feel bad for her home life. She's clearly stuck in a toxic marriage and I think a divorce would do her a lot of good.
Major Crum - This is where the disliking characters starts. I mean, he's an army man and blatantly xenophobic. Episode three started - ever so slightly - warming me up to him. He just wants to go on the fairground ride and pretend to be in the RAF. I also like his and Gromit's relationship, with him treating Gromit like a human soldier, and Gromit going along with it.
Constable Dibbins - Was fairly inoffensive for the first three episodes, despite being a policeman. Episode 4 proved he was a massive prick. He doesn't get a country club membership (for now) and he goes all petty and vindictive and try to get it shut down. Jesus, man, there are only so many villagers, you'll get in the country club eventually.
Miss Flitt - 100% a Tory. Probably worships Thatcher. Her and Wallace's relationship is kinda interesting, from her dislike and dismissal of him to him winning her over through being brave and saving the day to losing all attraction to him because he's a dumbass. Shame I have no respect for anyone who is attracted to Wallace, no matter how briefly.
Mr Gabberly - A prick. His only redeeming quality is his love of birds. All he does is shout at his wife. Fuck that guy.
Duncan McBiscuit - Irredeemable prick. A knock-off groundskeeper Willie, without the comedy and charm. All he does is bully the other characters, especially if they talk to Miss Flitt. Is also unnecessarily bossy with Miss Flitt and tries to order her around, and fatphobic to Mrs Gabberly, the female character he's not attracted to. The only thing I will say in his favour is he might've just snapped from the English characters being assholes to him for being Scottish. IN ADDITION, I'm watching episode four now and he's trying to demolish the town to build a golf course??? At the very least, he does make an effort and change his behaviour for Miss Flitt by the end. He can still get tae fuck, though.
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if you don’t mind me asking, who were some honorable mentions who almost made it in but didn’t?
hi thank you so much I have a list
The Justice Lords, Mark Temple, 2nd dimension doof, the mirror universe (star trek), Adam Murray, Kevin Levin, Rachel Duncan, Mr. L,
Andas Kastor, Okamura Twins, Cognitive Akechi, Melanie Puckett, Antisepticeye, Darkiplier, Robot Milo, Lumine, Han Sooyoung, Evil Clara, Surge + Kit, Grim + Gnarly, Sam + Cain, blurryface, Chitter, Xornoth, Dark Cave Johnson, Cosmic Clone, Grima, Every Clone Pokemon (all of them), Georgie's doppelgänger, Cornelius Hickey, Captain Quad, Paper Jam Dipper, Caine Soren, The Flynn Robots, Mukuro, Retep, Secretive Plotter, Donatello, Thaddeus,
Raistlin Majere, Alternate Thatcher, Alternate Gabriel, lil Hal, the twins from korra that scared anon so much, NPC Grian, and Ianthe + Coronabeth! (they are so evil i could not figure out which was the good one)
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Happy Birthday actress Lindsay Duncan born in Edinburgh November 7th 1950.
Lindsay’s father had served in the army for 21 years before becoming a civil servant. Her parents moved to Leeds while she was still a child.
After studying drama in London she began working on Eighties TV productions such as Dead Head and Traffik.
She was awarded a Laurence Olivier award for best actress in a new play in 1987 for her portrayal as La Marquise de Merteuil in an RSC production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, and from there her career went from strength to strength.
My favourite roles from Lindsay are playing the girlfriend in the excellent ITV series Travelling man opposite Leigh Lawson, and the bitchy Barbara Douglas in Alan Bleasdale’s GBH. In 2009 Lindsay played Margaret Thatcher in the BBC feature length drama Margaret, at the time she commented about the former prime minister that she loathed everything the former Thatcher stood for.
Other TV appearances included, A year in Provence, Reilly, Ace of Spies, Spooks, Doctor Who and more recently Churchill’s Secret, all quality dramas. Her only role I know of with a Scottish accent was the 2003 film Afterlife which also starred Kevin McKidd and Isla Blair.
Fans of Benedict Cumberbatch in Sherlock might remember her as Lady Smallwood, she was also in the recent series A Discovery of Witches on Sky in 2018, appearing in 5 of the 8 episodes.
Lindsay cut her teeth in theatre and has always supported this genre with stage roles all through her career as well as starring in several films ranging from Star Wars: Episode I to Mansfield Park. Her latest roles have been in Inside No. 9,, a British black comedy anthology TV show and in the film A Banquet, a British horror film directed by Scottish filmmaker and writer Ruth Paxton
Next up for Lindsay is Doctor Jekyll, yet another re-imagining of the infamous Dr. Jekyll from Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 novella The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Eddie Izzard has been cast as Jekyll. She has recently been touring theatres in The Dance of Death.
Lindsay is married to fellow Scottish actor Hilton McRae, and the couple have a son, Cal, born in 1991.
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Celtic Women #650
We’re highlighting some of the amazing women in Celtic music on this Irish & Celtic Music Podcast #650.
Eimear Arkins, Mary - Kate Spring Lee, Sassenach, Bonhomme Setter, Vicki Swan & Jonny Dyer, Mary Beth Carty, Matt & Shannon Heaton, Rover's Way, Hanneke Cassel, Celtic Woman, Katherine Nagy, Kathryn Tickell & The Darkening, Derina Harvey Band, Mànran
GET CELTIC MUSIC NEWS IN YOUR INBOX
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VOTE IN THE CELTIC TOP 20 FOR 2024
This is our way of finding the best songs and artists each year. You can vote for as many songs and tunes that inspire you in each episode. Your vote helps me create next year's Best Celtic music of 2024 episode. You have just three weeks to vote this year. Vote Now!
You can follow our playlist on Spotify to listen to those top voted tracks as they are added every 2 - 3 weeks. It also makes it easier for you to add these artists to your own playlists. You can also check out our Irish & Celtic Music Videos
THIS WEEK IN CELTIC MUSIC
0:02 - Intro: Debby Regan
0:18 - Eimear Arkins "She's At It Again / Tune For Tom (Jigs)" from Here & There
Eimear Arkins: fiddle
4:00 - WELCOME
6:15 - Mary - Kate Spring Lee "Kusnacht/St.Brigid's Day" from Tunes in the Morning
Mary - Kate Spring Lee: harp
12:18 - Sassenach "Siúbhán Ní Dhuibhir" from Passages
Jane Critchlow: lead and harmony vocals, bodhrán, percussion
Susan Palmer: harp, harmony vocals
Laurence Beaudry: violin, viola, harmony vocals
Marie - Claude Simard: cello, harmony vocals
15:29 - Bonhomme Setter "Slide From Grace" from Colors of Time
SYLVAIN LABEGE | flute . whistle
MARIE - NOËLLE HARVEY | violin . viola
20:08 - Vicki Swan & Jonny Dyer "John Lover" from Twelve Months & A Day
Vicki Swan: nyckelharpa, background vocals
24:37 - FEEDBACK
27:43 - Mary Beth Carty "Voilà le printemps" from Crossing the Causeway
Mary Beth Carty: accordion, guitar, bass, jaw harp, bones, triangle, shakers, tambourine, cow - bells, and washboard, vocals
31:36 - Matt & Shannon Heaton "Last Days of Fourth Grade/Against the Grain/Jig for Tim (waltz and jigs)" from Whirring Wings
Shannon Heaton: flute
36:45 - Rover's Way "The Journey" from The Journey
Keira Young: Penny whistle, bodhran, vocals
39:19 - Hanneke Cassel "Religulous / Patience" from Dot the Dragon's Eyes
Hanneke Cassel: fiddle
44:08 - Olivia Bradley “Molly Malone” from Misty Morning Shore
46:44 - THANKS
50:15 - Celtic Woman "A Stór Mo Chroí" from 20th Anniversary
Tara McNeil: violin, harp, vocals
Mairéad Carlin: vocals
Muirgen O’Mahony: vocals
Emma Warren: vocals
55:12 - Katherine Nagy "Jimmy's Dance" from Single
Katherine Nagy: guitar, vocals
58:45 - Kathryn Tickell & The Darkening "Just Stop & Eat The Roses" from Cloud Horizons
Kathryn Tickell (Northumbrian smallpipes, fiddle, vocals)
Amy Thatcher (accordion, synth, clogs, vocals),
Josie Duncan from the Isle of Lewis (vocals, clarsach).
1:02:34 - Derina Harvey Band "Stopped or Gone" from Waves of Home
Derina Harvey: guitar, vocals
Jess Blenis (violin)
1:05:33 - CLOSING
1:07:50 - Mànran "Briogais" from Ùrar
Kim Carnie: vocals
1:10:39 - CREDITS
The Irish & Celtic Music Podcast was produced by Marc Gunn, The Celtfather and our Patrons on Patreon. The show was edited by Mitchell Petersen with Graphics by Miranda Nelson Designs. Visit our website to follow the show. You’ll find links to all of the artists played in this episode.
Todd Wiley is the editor of the Celtic Music Magazine. Subscribe to get 34 Celtic MP3s for Free. Plus, you’ll get 7 weekly news items about what’s happening with Celtic music and culture online. Best of all, you will connect with your Celtic heritage.
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WELCOME THE IRISH & CELTIC MUSIC PODCAST
* Helping you celebrate Celtic culture through music. I am Marc Gunn.
This podcast is here to build a diverse Celtic community and help the incredible artists who so generously share their music with you. If you hear music you love, please email artists to let them know you heard them on the Irish and Celtic Music Podcast. Musicians depend on your generosity to keep making music. So please find a way to support them. Buy a CD, Album Pin, Shirt, Digital Download, or join their communities on Patreon.
You can find a link to all of the artists in the shownotes, along with show times, when you visit our website at celticmusicpodcast.com.
If you are a Celtic musician or in a Celtic band, then please submit your band to be played on the podcast. You don’t have to send in music or an EPK. You will get a free eBook called Celtic Musicians Guide to Digital Music and learn how to follow the podcast. It’s 100% free. Just email Email follow@bestcelticmusic and of course, listeners can learn how to subscribe to the podcast and get a free music - only episode.
THANK YOU PATRONS OF THE PODCAST!
You are amazing. It is because of your generosity that you get to hear so much great Celtic music each and every week.
Your kindness pays for our engineer, graphic designer, Celtic Music Magazine editor, promotion of the podcast, and allows me to buy the music I play here. It also pays for my time creating the show each and every week.
As a patron, you get music - only episodes before regular listeners, vote in the Celtic Top 20, stand - alone stories, and you get a private feed to listen to the show. All that for as little as $1 per episode.
A special thanks to our new and continued Celtic Legends: Bill Mandeville, Marti Meyers, Brenda, Karen DM Harris, Emma Bartholomew, Dan mcDade, Carol Baril, Miranda Nelson, Nancie Barnett, Kevin Long, Gary R Hook, Lynda MacNeil, Kelly Garrod, Annie Lorkowski, Shawn Cali
HERE IS YOUR THREE STEP PLAN TO SUPPORT THE PODCAST
Go to our Patreon page.
Decide how much you want to pledge every week, $1, $5, $25. Make sure to cap how much you want to spend per month.
Keep listening to the Irish & Celtic Music Podcast to celebrate Celtic culture through music.
You can become a generous Patron of the Podcast on Patreon at SongHenge.com.
TRAVEL WITH CELTIC INVASION VACATIONS
Every year, I take a small group of Celtic music fans on the relaxing adventure of a lifetime. We don't see everything. Instead, we stay in one area. We get to know the region through its culture, history, and legends. You can join us with an auditory and visual adventure through podcasts and videos. Learn more about the invasion at http://celticinvasion.com/
#celticmusic #irishmusic #celticmusicpodcast
I WANT YOUR FEEDBACK
What are you doing today while listening to the podcast? Please email me. I’d love to see a picture of what you're doing while listening or of a band that you saw recently.
Email me at follow@bestcelticmusic.
Dan Vaughn emailed some photos: "Hello! My name is Dan Vaughn, I am 1 of 3 members of the band Sorcha and I'm reaching out to you to try to make an appearance on your podcast! We are about to launch our new EP next week titled Stomp the Floor and we're very very excited about it. I'm going to attach the tracks to this email along with some pictures. Hope to hear from you soon!"
Steve Bradley emailed a photo: "Hi Marc, Greetings from Atlanta! Love the podcast, and like to listen while walking my dog, Augie. Here's a pic of him today as we were listening to episode #648! My favorite artist is of course my daughter, Olivia Bradley, and we're heading up to Calhoun tonight to hear her perform with Celtic Angels at the GEM Theatre. Thanks for all you do in highlighting great music each week and supporting the artists who produce it!"
Check out this episode!
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Below the cut is a list of all my original characters, from every fandom, organized by such. I figured I would go ahead and put this up, as well as a canon muse one, for my oc and canon starters so that way it's easier for y'all to see who is included without going to every separate muse list.
The Vampire Diaries
Elizabeth Haven Mikaelson
Roman Ryker Mikaelson
Erik Flynn Mikaelson
Kareena Dawn Mikaelson
Thyra Selene Mikaelson
Karsyn Devyn Mikaelson
Mateo Maxwell Mikaelson
Serenity Faye Mikaelson
Sawyer Finch Mikaelson
Aurelia Nova Mikaelson
Felix Ares Mikaelson
Willow Luna Mikaelson
Tobias Floyd Mikaelson
Zephyr Raven Parker
Zariyah Dove Parker
Kennedy Taylor Parker
Myles Zane Parker
Mariana Joy Parker
Paisley Juniper Parker
Braeden Talia Salvatore
Holden Atlas Salvatore
Ezra Grant Salvatore
Liberty Faye Salvatore
Jensen Graham Gilbert
Easton Reed Gilbert
Jesse Jonathan Gilbert
Elias Rhodes Gilbert
Jazmyn Sophia Gilbert
Atlas Rowan Petrova
Titus Izaiah Petrova
Kamen Maverick Pierce
Natalie Adrianna Pierce
Eleanor Marie Bennett
Salem Elijah Bennett
Gabriel Graham Gustin
Belladonna Sharie Bennett
Seraphina Rose Ward
Theodore Joseph Brickenden
Kaia Asherah Halloran
Carter William Forbes
Cameron Myles Lawrence
Jameson Tyler Rosza
Tatum Jaxson Lockwood
Tatiana Jade Lockwood
Taylor Jacob Lockwood
Axel Madden Hughes
Ashton Malik Hughes
Sebastian Sawyer Sharpe
Niall Nash Novak
Montgomery Felix Langston
Ophelia Esme Lovell
Sapphire Lee McGuire
Rami Calder McGuire
Warren Jaxon Kingsley
Jeremiah Michael Kenner
Cecilia Jaklyn Labonair
Rosemary Belle Whitlock
Hadley Kamryn Fuller
Kamryn Avery Marshall
Lorella Diane St. John
Andrew Kolton Rogers
Blair Lilith Walsh
Zachariah Cole Norwood
Matthias Lucien Delacour
Matias Camilo Garcia
Cyrus Boyd Mikaelson (spn to tvdu)
Harmony Iris Johnson (tw to tvdu)
Chandler Matthew Rawlins (tw to tvdu)
Containment
Jubilee Fawn Ellison
Carson Elijah Mayes
Maddox Rhett Lancaster
Malia Rayne Lancaster
Makai Reid Lancaster
Delilah Anne Malone
Austin Blake Coleman
Damian James Taylor
Teen Wolf
Aspen Bella Stilinski
Adrian Archer Argent
Addison Athena Argent
Lyla Sage Martin
Amaia Tala Alexander
Malik Elias Hale
Madelaine Emery Hale
Isaiah Parker Lahey
Amadora Constance Sharpe
Callum Tate Raeken
Dawson Cole Reynolds
Jared Taylor Parrish
Stephen Ezekiel Hemming
Supernatural
Amelia Mae Allen
Melody Athena Hayes
Lucilla Marie Nightstar
Eden Faith Cruz
Elijah Luke Cruz
Valentina Rosalie Hart
Adaliah Ember Darhk
Alexandria Skye Earp
Lillian Dahlia Campbell
Adriel Xavier Grant
Talon Colt Ashford
Silas Kai Parker
Josephina Jazmyn Walker
Elyza Alice Pierson (tvdu to spn)
DC Comics
Kiera Jaylin Davis
Marvel
Kailee Elizabeth Holtz (hero and villain verse)
Kaiden Edward Holtz (villain and hero verse)
Camelia Waverly Maximoff
Kaleb Jonas Barnes
Maxine Josephine Rogers
Melody Elizabeth Young
Anastasia Sloane Lenkov
Wren Nika Volkov
Wynter Nadia Volkov
Cordelia Ara Odinsdottir
Amora Delphine Brantley
Celeste Juliet Livingston
Nikolai Nathaniel Novak (tvdu to mcu)
Charmeine Ayla Hanlon (spn to mcu)
Stranger Things
Stella Blake Russell
Scarlet Ember Ward
Valerie Mae Henderson
Mitchell Elliot Mayfield
Meredith Eleanor Mayfield
Misc
Ambrosia Nyx Tartarus
Acacius Nile Tartarus
Duncan David Dalveron
Damien Dawson Dalveron
Brantley Cole Kline
Rosalie Grace Anderson
Rowena Greyson Andrews
Ryker Grant Andrews
Aviana Summer Archer
Dylan Bryce Thatcher
Sterling Atlas Ward
9-1-1
Evelyn June Buckley
Ethan Jace Buckley
Hazel Jayne Walker
Hayes Jesse Walker
Izaiah Edison Hendrix
Waverly Chloe Hendrix
Matilda Iris Monroe
Fallon Pierce Richards
Book Babes
Cyra Lux Vespara
Wilder Blaze Hawthorne
Dion Ignis Vanserra
Pyralis Jax Vanserra
Warren Forrest Hayward
Solana Aruna Meridian
Anatole Cyrus Solari
Althea Zaria Cadlawon
Tynan Kerrell Visita
Kirsi Gwyneira Nieves
Lyall Colden Whittaker
Caspian Calder Conway
Maribelle Aelia Sommer
Zodiacs
Wyatt Keegan aka Aries
Kianni Phoenix aka Sagittarius
Leon Cyrus aka Leo
River Mira aka Cancer
Dylan Lucas aka Pisces
Josephine Nova aka Scorpio
Conrad Atlas aka Taurus
Kailynn Amelia aka Capricorn
Taron Sage aka Virgo
Alice Skye aka Libra
Aaron Micah aka Aquarius
Adelaide June aka Gemini
Arianna Rose aka Gemini
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sob o olhar atento dos deuses, saudamos os novos semideuses que chegam ao acampamento meio-sangue! solicitamos que suas contas sejam enviadas aos cuidados de dionísio dentro de 24 horas. bem-vindes ao lugar onde os filhos dos deuses descobrem seu verdadeiro potencial!
VAGAS OCUPADAS NOS CHALÉS: Niké (1/5); Hermes (5/5); Atena (2/5); Apolo (1/5)
LIDERANÇA: arco e flecha equipe azul; escalada equipe vermelha;
EQUIPES: Estrategista (2/3); Curandeiros (2/3)
INSTRUTORES: — Instrutor de Combate Corpo a Corpo (2/2);
TALIA RYDER? Não! É apenas STEVIE ROWE, ela é filha de NIKÉ do chalé DEZESSETE e tem VINTE E UM ANOS. A TV Hefesto informa no guia de programação que ela está no NÍVEL II por estar no Acampamento há QUATRO ANOS, sabia? E se lá estiver certo, STEVIE é bastante CARISMÁTICA mas também dizem que ela é COMPETITIVA. Mas você sabe como Hefesto é, sempre inventando fake news pra atrair audiência.
FIVEL STEWART? Não! É apenas DUNCAN ROCKBELL, ela é filha de HERMES do chalé ONZE e tem VINTE E SEIS ANOS. A TV Hefesto informa no guia de programação que ela está no NÍVEL III por estar no Acampamento há DEZOITO ANOS, sabia? E se lá estiver certo, DUNCAN é bastante LEAL mas também dizem que ela é APREENSIVA. Mas você sabe como Hefesto é, sempre inventando fake news pra atrair audiência.
MIRAY DANER? não! é apenas YASEMIN GÜVEN, ela é filha de ATENA do chalé 06 e tem 25 ANOS. a tv hefesto informa no guia de programação que ela está no NÍVEL III por estar no acampamento há 12 ANOS, sabia? e se lá estiver certo, YAS é bastante DECIDIDA mas também dizem que ela é EGOCÊNTRICA, mas você sabe como hefesto é, sempre inventando fake news pra atrair audiência.
SOPHIE THATCHER? não! é apenas VIOLET WALKER, ela é filha de APOLO do chalé SETE e tem VINTE E TRÊS anos. a tv hefesto informa no guia de programação que ela está no NÍVEL III por estar no acampamento há ONZE ANOS, sabia? e se lá estiver certo, VI é bastante ALTRUÍSTA mas também dizem que ela é PETULANTE. mas você sabe como hefesto é, sempre inventando fake news pra atrair audiência.
BOOBOO STEWART? não! é apenas GILBERT ROCKBEL, ele é filho de HERMES do chalé ONZE e tem VINTE E SEIS anos. a tv hefesto informa no guia de programação que ele está no NÍVEL III por estar no acampamento há DEZOITO ANOS, sabia? e se lá estiver certo, GIL é bastante ESPIRITUOSO mas também dizem que ele é TRAPACEIRO. mas você sabe como hefesto é, sempre inventando fake news pra atrair audiência.
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September 17, 2022
Part 4 - The Third Way
John Major somehow managed to hold on after the 1992 general election, one of the baffling wins, although it was probably due to goodwill on Major and Kinnock being seen as old and out of touch. Whatever it was, Major did not have a strong majority, and he was still dealing with a recession, but he was thankful saved by a crisis. Back then, the UK was kind of fixed to the Deutschmark in a thing called Exchange Rate Mechanism, and well, Germany was reunified so their economy was running hot… and that was not good for anyone else, and UK was forced to leave the arrangement, which finally made Britain breathe a bit, and made for a period of relative prosperity until the Great Recession in 2008.
During that relative prosperity, Major privatized coal and the railways (something even Thatcher thought was horrible), basically started the British version of War on Crime, and dressed it up with circuses like the National Heritage and the National Lottery. Of course, Major was socially liberal and he helped with the Northern Ireland peace process. And the press was starting to disfavor the Conservatives, and started reporting on sleazes like Arms for Iraq and Cash for Questions. There were more pertinent things plaguing him, such as the growing rift regarding European Integration, and of course the Bosnian war.
By 1997, it was clear that the long 4 term reign of Conservatives was over. But who replaces Major? It was not John Smith, who replaced Neil Kinnock, because again… he died unexpectedly, and so it was Tony Blair who would go on and take on the role.
John Major - C+
Tony Blair famously replaced Clause IV, which was Labour’s commitment to nationalization, into more of a social democratic approach, which was started by Kinnock. He was a young one, the youngest since 1812, and he did… okay. He finished what his predecessor built and got the Good Friday Agreement. He made the go ahead for another devolution referendum, which was successful in both accounts. There was the Freedom of Information Act, and relative equality of Homosexuality and Transgender people. It’s a mishmash of policies - National Minimum Wage, tuition fees, identity card legislation and increase in police powers.
It’s hard to know what Tony Blair was doing because he was doing anything to hold onto power. That had some good effects, Blair shifted welfare around as to increase benefits, but it also had a more nasty effect, like the main theme of the second term. The 2001 election was basically the same exact sweeping results for Blair as William Hague did not step up to the challenge.
Therefore Blair continued to do whatever, well until 9/11, where his staunch and steadfast ally really showed up in his push to join the Afghan and the Iraq War. That was really the big sticking point for Blair in his second term, as he trusted Bush and perhaps America and its regal presidency a bit too much, methinks. This is carried on by people like Macron…
The problem was that Conservatives couldn’t find themselves a leader. After Hague was kicked out, Duncan Ian Smith was put in, but he was deemed ‘unfit’, and put in Michael Howard, who didn’t work either. Labour won the 2005 election, with less of a majority, but still great.
Third term also started out with a tragedy, all Blair terms starts out like that, how bizarre, with the 2005 London Bombings. Blair responded with even more stringent laws, which was this time mostly thrown down. There was a shuffle in 2006 after a poor showing in the elections and soon Blair resigned in 2007, giving Gordon Brown the job before leaving.
Tony Blair - C
Gordon Brown continued many of Blair’s policies, well, more like tempered them. He sought to remove some of the more unpopular policies like the increase in policing. But Gordon Brown was seen as more of the same and of course the Great Recession happened and so that meant Brown was on the way out, with threats from him coming in daily.
Gordon Brown - C-
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119: Cowboy Diplomats
How Star Trek’s leaders reflect our own.
Young, charismatic, and a bit of a ladies’ man, Captain James T. Kirk was cast in the mould of President John F. Kennedy, the beloved US leader who had been killed just three years before Star Trek debuted. But over the course of more than half a century, Star Trek’s captains have often echoed the great politicians of the day; and sometimes they may even have paved the way for political careers in the real world.
In this episode of Primitive Culture, originally released as an installment of The Sanctuary, Tony Black speaks to guest Mac Boyle about the parallels between Star Trek’s leaders and our own. Where do the likes of former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, former US President Donald Trump, and current US President Joe Biden find their counterparts in the Star Trek universe? And what kind of characters can we expect in the future to take their cues from Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky? With Star Trek: Discovery’s Federation President Laira Rillak taking an ongoing role, has Trek finally managed to marry the military ethos of Starfleet with the business of intergalactic politics?
Chapters
Intro (00:00:00)
Assignment: Earth (00:03:25)
The Maquis (00:16:30)
Strange New Worlds (00:48:30)
Hosts
Duncan Barrett and Tony Black
Guest
Mac Boyle
Production
Tony Black (Editor) Duncan Barrett (Producer) C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer)
New podcast episode!
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Masculine Names
Aaron Abdul Abe Abel Abraham Abram Ace Achilles Adair Adam Adonis Adrian Adriel Ahmed Ajax Ajay Aiden Alan Albert Alejandro Alex Alexander Alfonso Alfred Alistair Alister Allen Alonzo Amadeo Amadeus Amani Amari Ambrose Amir Anders Anderson Andre Andreas Andrew Andy Angel Angelo Angus Ansel Anson Anthony Antonio Apollo Aries Archer Archie Aristotle Arlo Arnaldo Arnold Arsenio Arthur Arturo Arwin Asa Asher Aslan Atlas Atticus Aubrey August Augustin Augustine Augustus Aurelio Aurelius Austin Axel Aziz
Balthazar Bane Barnabas Barnaby Barney Baron Barrett Basil Bastian Bear Beau Beck Ben Benjamin Benji Bentley Bernard Bertram Bertrand Blake Blaze Blue Bobby Bodhi Booker Boris Boston Bowie Boyd Brad Bradford Bradley Bram Bramwell Bran Brandon Brandt Braxton Braylen Brayden Brendon Brent Brett Brian Briar Brick Bridge Bridger Brock Brody Brogan Bronx Brook Brooks Bruce Bruno Brutus Bryce Bryson Buck Bud Buddha Buddy Buck Burt Burton Buster Buzz Byron
Cade Caden Cain Cairo Caius Calder Caleb Callum Calvin Cam Cameron Camillo Campbell Carl Carlisle Carlito Carlo Carlos Carlton Carmine Carson Carter Casper Caspian Cassian Cassias Cato Cecil Cedar Cedric Cesar Chad Chadwick Chance Charles Charlton Chase Chauncey Chester Chidi Chip Christoff Christoph Christopher Christian Chuck Cian Cillian Clarence Clark Claud Clay Clayton Cliff Clifford Clint Clinton Clyde Coby Cody Colby Cole Collin Colt Colton Conan Connor Conrad Constantine Cooper Copper Corbin Cornelius Cory Cosmo Cosmos Costas Craig Crispin Cruz Curt Curtis Cyrus
Dale Dallas Dalton Damien Damon Dan Dane Daniel Dante Darius Darrel Darren Dash Dashiell Davey David Dawson Dax Daxton Deacon Dean DeAndre Declan Demetrius Denali Dennis Denny Denzel Derek Derrick Des Desmond Dewey Dex Dexter Diego Diesel Dion Dirk Dixon Dmitri Dominic Donatello Donovan Dorian Doug Douglas Draco Drew Duke Duncan Dustin Dusty Dwayne Dwight Dylan Dyson
Earl Easton Edgar Edmund Eduardo Edward Edwin Egon Eli Elijah Elias Elliott Ellis Elroy Elton Emanuel Emeric Emerson Emery Emil Emiliano Emmett Emrys Enrique Enzo Eric Ernest Ernesto Ernie Esteban Ethan Eugene Eustace Euvan Evan Evander Everett Ezekiel Ezra
Fabian Fabio Falcon Faustus Felix Ferdinand Fergus Ferguson Fernando Fidel Fido Finbar Findlay Finn Finnley Fionn Fisher Fitz Fletcher Flint Florence Florian Ford Forrest Fort Foster Fowler Fox Francesco Francis Francisco Franco Frank Frankie Franklin Fred Freddy Fredrick Frederico
Gabe Gabriel Gael Gage Gale Galen Garfield Garrett Gaston Gatsby Gavin Geoffrey Geordie George Gerald Gerard Gideon Gil Gilbert Gilberto Giovanni Glenn Gordon Gordy Grady Graham Grant Gray Grayson Gregg Gregory Grey Griffin Griffith Grover Gunner Gunther Gus Gustavo Guy
Hades Hal Hamilton Hank Hans Harley Harrison Harry Hawk Hayden Hayes Heath Hector Henrik Hendrix Henry Herb Herbert Herbie Hercules Hermes Hershel Hiram Holden Howard Howie Hudson Hugo Humphrey Hunter Hux Huxley
Ian Igor Iker Irvin Isaac Isaiah Ivan
Jace Jack Jackson Jacob Jaques Jaden Jake Jalen Jamal James Jameson Jared Jason Jax Jay Jed Jedidiah Jefferson Jeffrey Jeremiah Jeremy Jerome Jerry Jesus Jethro Jett Jim Jimmy Joe Joel Johan Johannes John Johnny Jonah Jonas Jonathan Jones Jordan Jose Joseph Joshua Josiah Juan Juanito Judah Judas Judd Jude Jules Julian Julien Julio Julius Junior Jupiter Jurgen Justice Justin Justus
Kaden Kai Kaiser Kale Kaleb Kane Keane Keanu Keaton Keegan Keenan Keith Kellen Kenan Kendrick Kenneth Kenzo Keoni Kevin Khalid Kian Kieran Kiernan Kingsley Kingston Killian Kip Kwan Kyle
Lachlan Lake Lamar Lance Lancelot Landon Lane Larkin Larry Lars Laurence Laurent Lawrence Lawson Lazlo Legend Leif Leith Leland Leo Leon Leonardo Leopold Leroy Levi Liam Lincoln Linden Logan Loki London Lonnie Lonny Lorcan Lorenzo Lou Louie Louis Luc Luca Lucas Lucian Lucky Luke Lupe Luther
Maddox Maksim Malachi Malachy Malakai Malcolm Malik Manfred Manny Marcel Marcello Marcellus Marcio Marcius Marco Marcos Marcus Marian Marino Mario Marius Mark Marlin Marlon Marmaduke Marques Mars Marshall Martin Marty Marvel Marvin Massimo Mason Matt Matteo Matthew Maurice Maverick Max Maximilian Maximus Maxwell Melvin Mercury Meredith Merritt Micah Michael Miguel Miles Milo Mitchell Moe Monte Montgomery Murdoch Murphy Murray Murtagh Murtaugh Myles
Nathan Nathaniel Ned Nelson Nemo Neo Neon Neptune Neville Newt Newton Nick Nicky Nicola Nicolai Nicholas Niko Noah Noel Nolan Norm Norman Novak
Obadiah Octavio Octavius Odin Olaf Oleg Oliver Olivier Omar Orion Orlando Orville Osborn Oscar Oso Osvaldo Oswald Ottis Otto Owen Oz Ozzy
Pablo Palmer Panther Parker Pascal Patrick Paul Paxton Pedro Penn Percival Percy Perseus Peter Peyton Phil Philip Phineas Phoenix Pier Pierce Pierre Pilot Pluto Porter Poseidon Preston Prince Prosper
Qadir Quincy Quinn Quinton
Raiden Ralph Ramone Ramses Randall Randolph Randy Raphael Ravi Ray Raymond Red Reece Reggie Reginald Regis Reid Remington Reuben Rex Reynald Reynaldo Reynard Rhett Rhys Ricardo Richard Richie Richmond Rick Ricky Rico Ridge Riley Rio Riordan River Robert Roberto Robbie Rocco Rocky Rodney Rodrigo Roger Ricky Riley Rod Rodrick Roger Roland Roman Romeo Ross Rowan Rudy Rufus Russell Ryder Ryker Rylan Ryland
Salem Salvador Salvator Sam Samir Sampson Samson Samuel Sander Sandford Sanjay Santiago Saul Sawyer Scott Sean Sebastian Septimus Serge Sergio Seth Seus Seymour Shane Shawn Shayne Sheldon Shepherd Sherlock Sherman Shin Sidney Sigmund Silas Silver Silvester Simon Sinclair Sinjin Sirius Slade Slate Sol Solomon Sonny Sparrow Spartacus Spencer Spike Soren Stan Stanford Stanley Steele Stephen Steven Stevie Stone Sven Summit Sullivan Sully Sylvester
Tad Tag Talon Tanner Tate Ted Teddy Teo Teodor Teodoro Terence Terrell Terry Tex Thad Thaddeus Thane Thatcher Theo Theoden Theodore Thomas Thor Thorn Tiberius Tiger Tito Titus Timothy Titus Tobias Toby Tommy Tony Topher Trace Travis Trent Trenton Trev Trevor Trey Tristan Troy Truman Tucker Tudor Tullio Tullius Tully Tycho Tyler Tyrell Tyrese Tyrone Tyson
Uberto Ulric Ulrich Ulysses Uriah Urban Urijah Uriel
Van Vance Vaugn Victor Vince Vincenco Vincent Vinny Virgil Vlad Vladimir
Wade Walden Waldo Walker Wallace Wally Walt Walter Warner Warren Watson Waylon Wayne Wendall Wesley Westley Weston Wilbert Wilbur Wilder Wiley Wilfred Will William Winston Wolf Wolfe Wolfgang Woodrow Wyatt
Xander Xavier Xavion Xenon
Yael Yahir York Yosef Yousef Yusef
Zac Zach Zachariah Zacharias Zachary Zack Zander Zane Zayden Zeke Zeus Ziggy Zion Zoltan
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