Sunday, December 16, 2018

Top Dog Names Of 2018

Origins Of The Top Dog Names Of 2018: Pop Culture, Brunch, And Baby Names


WYNNE DAVIS & LULU GARCIA-NAVARRO

Dogs of NPR family whose names are included in the top 10 dog names of 2018: From left: Daisy, Bear, Bella, Daisy, Max and Charlie.
Alaa El-Koussaimi, Gail Sullivan, Adam and Amanda Anderson, Stacey Goers, /NPR

Roll over Spot, Buddy and Rover. Say hello to Cardi B, Harry and Groot! These are just some of 2018's popular names for dogs.


Kate Jaffe is a dog name curator for Rover, the dog and cat service provider. She says that this year pop culture dog name names are in.

"We saw the royal wedding surging as inspiration for dog names," she says. "In fact, dogs named Harry and Meghan were both up about 130 percent this year."

Music idols also offered inspiration, with names including Freddie Mercury and Cardi B. Plenty of pups were named after sci-fi characters and superheroes, with names pulled from Guardians of the Galaxy, Rogue One, Wonder Woman and Black Panther.

Villainous names went up 18 percent, according to Rover. The name Pennywise went up 500 percent, Jaffe says. Other popular villain names included Loki, Bane and Syd.

"Since Rover is the world's largest network of pet sitters and dog walkers, we also have one of the largest databases of dog names, so every year we analyze the list to find out what the top names are," Jaffe says.

And the analysis doesn't stop there. Jaffe says the company also looks at trends across the U.S. to see what people are talking about and have cared about in the past year.

"Then we cross reference that with our database to see how those trends are really mirrored in the way people are naming their dogs," Jaffe says. "What we've found is that the things that we care about the most, whether it's the food we're eating or pop culture, are really mirrored in the ways that we're naming our dogs."


Dogs of NPR whose names are included in the Top 10 dog names of 2018: From left: Lola of the Breslow family, as pictured from a rooftop in Brooklyn, N.Y.; Lola, the "doghter' of two NPR employees Matias Blanco and Juana Merlo, and Max the "dogson" of NPR employee Blair Greenbaum.
Ryan Brenizer, Juana Merlo, Blair Greenbaum/NPR

Jaffe says owners named their dogs based on activities they spent a fair amount of time doing, which includes eating.

"We saw a big uptick in brunch names and even more than brunch, we saw booze-themed names trending up about 17 percent year over year," Jaffe says. "Those are names like Whiskey, Porter and Guinness."

In 2018 human names were also rose to the top.

"Increasingly, dogs are really the family you choose and because we have this tight bond with our dogs and they really are a part of our family, it's not surprising to see that the majority of dogs names are human," Jaffe says. "They really reflect that bond."

In fact, she says, many of the top dog names this year were also in the top baby names.

That is a trend that Jaffe expects to continue into 2019.

"As that bond between people and dogs continues to get closer, the way we name them is going to continue to mirror the naming practices we have for our human children," she says.

Top 10 Male Dog Names 2018
  1. Max
  2. Charlie
  3. Cooper
  4. Buddy
  5. Jack
  6. Rocky
  7. Duke
  8. Bear
  9. Tucker
  10. Oliver
Top 10 Female Dog Names 2018
  1. Bella
  2. Lucy
  3. Luna
  4. Daisy
  5. Lola
  6. Sadie
  7. Molly
  8. Bailey
  9. Maggie
  10. Stella

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