In baseball, the name “Bob” has gone from extremely common to a marginal curiosity and nexus of confusion.
There was one active MLB Bob last year, Bobby Abreu, whose given name is “Bob” but goes by “Bobby”. In 2010 there were two - Abreu, and Bob Howry, whose given name is “Bobby” but goes by “Bob”. In 2009 we also had Bob McCrory.
In the future, will “Bob” be as unheard-of for baseball players as “Dick”? Can Bob Stumpo restore glory to this appellation?
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< 1 2Any Chuck and Bob batteries?
Funny that family calls me Voros now as often as anything else. Strange turns life takes...
Me too, rot-13 style!
i personally would go to someplace like MIT or some kind of engineer skool - i mean, pretending i could do any kind of math at all. either that or to some skool with a very high not attractive female percentage. when you are lookin fer love, much better to stand out than just be one of thousands
We're too smart to get involved in politics. Just ask Treder.
-- MWE
I dunno -- I taught at one of those sort of schools for a couple of years. M:F ratio was about 3:1, and the women there seemed pretty unhappy. Too much attention from strange socially awkward males I think.
- what are the most popular names for White boys born 18-25 years ago (besides Zach/Zack)
you notice the fad for all the names starting with the letter J is pretty much gone
we named our twins old fashioned names from the Old Testament - never in the top 100
my gf is having twin girls in a few months and she's naming them brenda and cheryl so they can have unusual and unique names
- were the women socially awkward too?
i wonder why so many males who are good with math are socially awkward...
This...our ECE undergrad enrollment is now below 9% female, and while the plurality of the males are from the US (and, of course, about as white as one can get -- bbc, please, please, please encourage any young AA males you know to focus on math and science!), there are few non-Asian females. By junior year, the non-Asian women are all engaged or "all but ring" (this was our case) on that path. I used to speculate that this was partly a defense mechanism to avoid all the socially awkward males, but it turns out that a rather high percentage graduate, change from graduation robes to wedding dress, then walk down the aisle. (We waited a whole two months! before doing so. Oddly enough, most of the folks we knew who did this are also still married, 18 years later.) A lot of the rest of the women followed this recipe after a Masters degree.
Of course, then we spent time in the northeast where the girls all seemed focused on avoiding any risk of getting married before they were about 35. *Slight* cultural difference!
And, per a friend from Vicksburg, Ole Miss *REDSHIRTS* Miss Americas....
Where is Preserved Fish when we need him?
sorry, but L.A. is so far out in front of anywhere else that its not funny. been here 6 yrs now and the frequency and variety is still astonishing to me ...
- what is ECE?
you mean all females in engineering or all females there?
is it a career thing? i don't get it
i am still wondering about the math/socially awkward thingy. looks like the twins don't have any more math ability than Husband and me, so forget that. not sure about little boy, but he CERTAINLY is not socially awkward...
Well, there is Jaff Decker.
http://insidelacrosse.com/news/2011/12/19/2012-inside-lacrosse-all-name-team-powered-flow-society
and you check out the women's names? KYLE? GABE??? seriously wtf???
and White people think we give our kids funny names????
Not particularly, as far as I could tell. Other than being disproportionately Asian, the female student population there seemed like college students anywhere else. Of course, as a socially awkward male I may not be the best judge of such things...
Likely because they were in their basements studying math all the time instead of being out around others and developing social skills.
wondering why they didn't ask all the other math guys to cmon over to do math stuff in the basement...
seriously
i can see how grrrls who were great at math/engineering were dorx BITGOD because grrrls wasn't supposed to be able to do stuff more difficult that sewing or singing or lifting tea cups or changing diapers/cleaning floors etc, but why are/were males who are engineers/math experts socially awkward?
I guess because math isn't a particularly social activity? I mean I guess you can have friends over and work on some calculus, but I would think it would be mostly silent work. Though science I can see being a bit more social. Everyone works in lab groups and so on.
I think there's also an element of the gender roles you describe effecting girls. Being really good at football or baseball or hockey affords you more opportunity to develop your social skills. Not just because you're on a team, but because if you screw up a social situation you're more likely to get another chance later.
It's probably also an issue of how broad interest is in a subject. If you know a lot about math it's probably the subject you're most comfortable talking about. I'd guess for teenagers the topics with the widest appeal would be music, TV and movies, sports (for guys anyway). My comfort areas for conversation were music (while I was in high school in the late 90s, I was into early 90s rock, so this one was mildly useful within a relatively small group), baseball (in Canada it was a bit of a niche sport, though I did have a few baseball friends) and history (no dice). So I think given my circumstances I turned out a little more socially awkward than one would expect.
It could just be coincidence. The skills necessary to excel at math and science just happen to coincide with characteristics that make socializing difficult.
Which could manifest itself in preferences. When I was a kid my favourite activities were sometimes social - playing basketball or hockey on the street with the other neighbourhood kids,
But often inherently unsocial - digging through atlases to get information for various historical simulation games I was trying to invent. Or drawing the flags of all the nations of the world. Or trying to recreate the Battle of Verdun with lego. Now I suppose there's no reason why these CAN'T be social/group activiities. But when you're a kid you're not really thinking about improving your social skills, the point is just to have fun. And with these kinds of things it was just simpler to do on your own. Too many cooks in the kitchen can ruin a delicately constructed game. Also when you're socially awkward to begin with it can be a relaxing haven to have something you can do all alone.
EDIT: I actually did once hang out with a friend and did calculus with him. He gave me a guitar in return! Best tutoring job ever. (I mean for me. In terms of quality I'm pretty sure I did a terrible job teaching him anything)
Bob Sanders. Also don't forget Bobby Hebert.
If you count Bobbys, Hebert (USFL!) and Hoying appear to be the most recent.
It's a fun name to pronounce. Try and say it. Hebert.
this site gives the most popular baby names for every year going back to 1879
and the loss of Bobs is not a statistical illusion:
popularity of Robert
1930 1st
1940 2nd
1950 2nd
1960 5th
1970 5th
1980 9th
1990 13th
2000 29th
2010 54th
I hear USC is rather whiplash-inducing. And their quarterback is named Matt.
Maybe that's why he's staying. The scenery in Los Angeles >>>> the scenery in Cleveland.
And there is very likely a brain structure linkage between the math/social awkward thing. A whole pile of kids on the autism spectrum love math/engineering. I suspect because it makes sense to them (unlike people, for example). My eldest is "on the spectrum" and very good at math. My youngest though is not and even better at math. I am very good at it, but most of my family can barely calculate percents (seriously I get calls on this asking for help every couple of years).
The brain is a wonderful and complex thing, like most Bobs!
The Rockies' bullpen is awash in Matts. They had 217 game appearances by pitchers named Matt last year, which has to be the record.
You're being bamboozled. To quote the Prophet, "Those silicone parts are made for toys."
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