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Sunday, September 23, 2007

HDNet hires strategic consultant

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Cable executive Sue Ann R. Hamilton is joining HDNet as a strategic consultant. She began her career in the cable industry in 1993 as an assistant director with Tele-Communications, Inc., where she also served as VP Programming. Most recently, she was executive VP Programming for Charter Communications, Inc.

Is there a generalization to be made about people who go out of their way to use their middle initials? Doesn't it seem inherently stuffy? Like the person throwing out the middle initial is attempting to give themselves added gravitas? What's especially-weird about this middle initial is that it follows the odd choice of "Sue Ann." If someone named Sue Ann wanted to sound more respectable, wouldn't they just call themselves "Susan"? Or even better, "Sue"? Sue Hamilton, that's crisp, efficient, executive-y. "Sue Ann" = "five kids and no husband in a trailer park". Or else "someone who wears oversized jewelry and too much makeup". All I'm saying is that there's some mixed messages going on with this name.

Source: HDNet


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Scott Doyle Verified

Sometimes peeps have their reasons.

For instance, my email signature at work has my middle initial b/c the setup of our email address is first initial of first name + last name...however there was already an sdoyle, so my middle initial is thrown in (sldoyle) and I help people make the connection by displaying it in my sig.

Just sayin'.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Rick Yost Verified

Interesting subject. I've always thought it funny that some women will use their maiden-or last married name as a middle name. Such as Hillary Rodham Clinton. I guess this is an attempt to avoid being confused with the other Hillary Clinton. I've never understood it myself. I guess it's a girl thing.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Teresa Gubbins Staff

rick yost, i don't think it's a girl thing; most of the middle-initial people i've observed (and it's a special obsession of mine) have been male

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

kirk Anonymous

Yes, T.G. Mostly WASP males, at that. People who use two initials instead of first and middle name tend to be engineers.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Rawlins Gilliland Verified

Clearly, a lot of people here and elsewhere either have no middle name or hate theirs. Otherwise~~~As a man raised by feminist activists, let me earn my stripes here:

I'm almost sure that if men had traditionally been expected to drop their last name...the name of the father's family.... for that of his wife, they would have used either their 'maiden' name as thier middle initial, or double name (like Rodham Clinton...which she has since dropped).

In my case, I sometimes use my middle initial...'H'...which stands for Harrison... because it is part of my name, and there was a reason I was given it. I was almost Harrison Rawlins instead of Rawlins Harrison. It was a coin toss, and my mother's family name lost. But lost completely and forever over a flipped nickel?

Beyond that; Why does someone eat celery? Because they want to.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

DC Anonymous

Well, she should have some strategy.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Rick Yost Verified

Rawlins Gilliland- Using middle initials isn't a big deal, I use Richard B. Yost for legal stuff. It was the whole last name thing I was wondering about.
And I actually agree- women shouldn't just automatically have to give up their names. And you're right about the Celery.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Teresa Gubbins Staff

celery is good roughage

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

April Powell Staff

Well, as someone who kept her own name after marriage and occasionally even dares to use the middle initial her parents gave her (believe me, I'd rather be April N. Powell than the April R. Powell I keep getting collection calls for, so that one little letter does sometimes make a difference) -- I'd like to speak in defense of Sue Ann R. Hamilton.

Are none of you people originally from the south? I grew up surrounded by Jo Beths and Jim Bobs and Jo Anns and Mary Beths and J.D.'s. Some of them didn't even live in trailers. It's not that unusual, people.

I'll take an honest Sue Ann R. Hamilton any day in business over someone who doctored up her name to sound more "professional." People who change their names for "professional" reasons always make me think they're trying to hide something . . .

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Scott Doyle Verified

I know an Ann Marie. Of course we know Jim Bob and Jean Anne, etc - but I've never see someone who's referenced by both first and middle name to toss in an Initial between the middle and last name. I concur with whoever posted that it's odd, I was just saying more often than not there's a reason someone slaps in their initial.

To me, Sue Ann R. Hamilton is over the top. If you're gonna go by Sue Ann, at least go the distance and spell out all 4 names.

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Billusa99 Anonymous

And sometimes idiots just insert a W so they aren't mistaken for insignificant little shrubs. Or celery....

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

John Meyer Staff

Strictly for the gravitas.

  • John P.E. Meyer

(Yes, I have two middle names - be glad I just use one initial.)

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

Billusa99 Anonymous

Pretty Empressive, John!

WFK

1 year, 2 months ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

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