A new Royal Baby is born!!

spaminator

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BBC radio personality fired over royal baby chimpanzee tweet
Associated Press
Published:
May 9, 2019
Updated:
May 9, 2019 12:01 PM EDT
In this May 13, 2013 file photo, Danny Baker poses for a photo in London.Yui Mok / AP
LONDON — A BBC DJ was fired Thursday after using a picture of a chimpanzee in a tweet about the royal baby born to Meghan the Duchess of Sussex and her husband Prince Harry.
Danny Baker, who had a weekly show on BBC Radio 5 Live, tweeted Thursday that he has been fired after posting an image of a couple holding hands with a chimpanzee dressed in clothes and the caption: “Royal baby leaves hospital.”
The tweet came on Wednesday, the same day Harry and Meghan posed for photos with their first child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor. The tweet was seen as a racist reference to baby Archie’s heritage. His grandmother Doria Ragland is African American.
Baker, 61, said the posting had been meant as a gag, tweeting late Wednesday that it was “supposed to be (a) joke about royals vs circus animals in posh clothes but interpreted as about monkeys & race.” The post has since been deleted.
“Enormous mistake, for sure. Grotesque. Anyway, here’s to ya Archie, Sorry mate,” he tweeted.
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BBC Radio 5 Live controller Jonathan Wall said in an email to staff that Baker had shown poor judgment.
“This was a serious error of judgment and goes against the values we as a station aim to embody. Danny’s a brilliant broadcaster but will no longer be presenting a weekly show with us,” Wall said.
On Thursday, Baker insisted he is not racist and attacked the BBC for its handling of the situation. He said the call to fire him “was a masterclass of pompous faux-gravity.”
When Harry was first dating Meghan, his office released a scathing letter in which he complained about sexist and racist coverage of Meghan, who at the time was starring in the TV show “Suits.”
The flap over Baker’s tweet came as Harry took a break from parental duties to travel to the Netherlands to promote the 2020 Invictus Games, an international competition he founded for injured service personnel and veterans.
Harry grinned and made funny faces for the cameras as he held up a tiny baby outfit given to him by Prince Margriet of the Netherlands.
Baby Archie was introduced to his great-grandparents, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Wednesday.
Royal baby Archie’s wool wrap suggests Harry and Meghan won’t stray from tradition
Prince Harry, Meghan announce baby’s name
Princess Di would have been ‘thrilled to bits’ by Harry’s baby
http://torontosun.com/life/royals/bbc-radio-personality-fired-over-royal-baby-chimpanzee-tweet
 

Curious Cdn

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You didn't notice that until I pointed it out.
Actually, I noticed it the first time that I heard it but I'm having difficulty convincing my wife that it doesn't come from somewhere else. Sometimes, it's right in front of your face ...
 

Blackleaf

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It is thought that Archie has been named after Major Tom "Archie" Archer-Burton, Prince Harry's hero and mentor in the army who also travelled with Harry through Africa on a charity expedition.
 

Curious Cdn

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It is thought that Archie has been named after Major Tom "Archie" Archer-Burton, Prince Harry's hero and mentor in the army who also travelled with Harry through Africa on a charity expedition.
Puzzles the hell out of the Yanks.

http://www.cnn.com/2019/05/08/world/archie-royal-name-pop-culture-trnd/index.html

You will never see women's names like "Jemima" "Maisie" "Dinah" being used in the US either. They are considered to be "slave names" and the gaping wound of slavery has never gone away, there.
 

Blackleaf

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Puzzles the hell out of the Yanks.
http://www.cnn.com/2019/05/08/world/archie-royal-name-pop-culture-trnd/index.html
You will never see women's names like "Jemima" "Maisie" "Dinah" being used in the US either. They are considered to be "slave names" and the gaping wound of slavery has never gone away, there.

Archie is quite popular here.

I was expecting this half-American kid to be given a common American name that is rare in Britain - Chad, Bud or Chuck.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Archie is quite popular here.
I was expecting this half-American kid to be given a common American name that is rare in Britain - Chad, Bud or Chuck.
Not used at all, here ... zero, zip, nada. Nor is Julian, Giles or for that matter, you don't see a lot of "Harry's" either.

Yeah ...Yank names you don't see here, either ... Biff, Scooter, Billy-Bob, Chad, Chuck, Bud (I've known one each of the last two in my whole life time)
 

Blackleaf

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Not used at all, here ... zero, zip, nada. Nor is Julian, Giles or for that matter, you don't see a lot of "Harry's" either.

Yeah ...Yank names you don't see here, either ... Biff, Scooter, Billy-Bob, Chad, Chuck, Bud (I've known one each of the last two in my whole life time)

There are many ancient native British names hardly used in America but are common in Britain: Arwen, Owain, Lowri, Bryn, Ffion, Laith.

Other British names rate in North America: Isobel, Jemima, Lottie, Angus, Archibald, Barnie, Baxter, Barnaby, Clayton, Bailey, Edwin, Harvey, Fergus, Kit, Rupert, Percy.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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There are many ancient native British names hardly used in America but are common in Britain: Arwen, Owain, Lowri, Bryn, Ffion, Laith.
Other British names rate in North America: Isobel, Jemima, Lottie, Angus, Archibald, Barnie, Baxter, Barnaby, Clayton, Bailey, Edwin, Harvey, Fergus, Kit, Rupert, Percy.
My son has an ancient Gaelic name and my daughter has an ancient Briton (Cymru) name, as per our ethnic heritage (not from the list above, though).

Cedric is also unknown here as is Nigel, Dinsdale and dozens of others.

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/lifestyle...al-fondness-for-archie-experts-say/ar-AABfWoG
 

Blackleaf

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"Nigel" comes from the Latin "Nigellus", which means "Champion" which, coincidentally, is what Farage is going to be on 24th May.
 

Blackleaf

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"Farange" looks French, to me.

The name Farage is either of French Huguenot origin - lots of them fled to England - or it derives from the English name Farridge.

Nigel himself is of German, and possibly French Huguenot, ancestry.

Nikolaus Schrod, Mr Farage’s great-great grandfather, was a young cabinet-maker in Frankfurt. He married his sweetheart Bina at 21, but before starting a family he decided his shaky prospects would be much improved by moving to England, which he did so in the 1850s.

Nikolaus Schrod made the cases for the pianos, upright and grand, which were becoming a must-have status symbol in every fashionable drawing-room, while Bina brought in extra money as a needlewoman and dressmaker.

They lived in rented rooms in the teeming tenements close to London's heart – close enough to the rich who employed them, but a world away.

Nicholas and Bina's only child, Carl, left school at 14 to become a telegraph messenger with the General Post Office. Carl later changed his name to Charles and married an English girl, Ellen Abbott. They lived on London's Tottenham Court Road.

The Anglicisation of the family was completed in the next generation when their daughter Gladys married a young stockbroker’s clerk, Harry Farage.
 

Curious Cdn

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I have Huguenot ancestry myself ... Secord ... which is a famous name in Canadian history. As per most pioneering families, it enters my family repeatedly over the generations!
 

Blackleaf

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I have Huguenot ancestry myself ... Secord ... which is a famous name in Canadian history. As per most pioneering families, it enters my family repeatedly over the generations!

The Secords were Loyalists during the American War of Independence.
 

Curious Cdn

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The Secords were Loyalists during the American War of Independence.
They were also that. I can brag that my Secord ancestor fought for there public during the War of Independence but fought for the King during the War of 1812, after he could see that the Revolution was going sideways.