Author

Ivy Hung
Data Journalist
Based in Arizona, USA
Ivy is a data journalist based in Arizona, United States. A business school graduate now working her way into tech, she spent her early career in product marketing, project management, and marketing strategy — roles where reading a name the same way you read a brand became second nature.
She joined NamesPop because the name datasets sit at exactly the intersection she cares about: consumer behaviour, cultural identity, and what numbers tell us about decisions families make quietly, one at a time. Her writing leans on SSA and municipal pet registries the way a marketer reads a segmentation report — looking for the audiences hiding inside the aggregate.
Cross-cultural naming is her main beat, with a particular interest in how Hispanic, Asian-American, and bicultural families navigate the tension between heritage and assimilation in the American Southwest.
2,409
Total pieces
140
Articles
1,119
Baby commentary
1,150
Pet commentary
Ivy Hung's contributions
- Articleopinion
Ocean and Agnes: How Twin Naming Became a Public Statement
Amber Heard introduced her twins on Mother's Day. Ocean and Agnes frame modern twin-naming poles: hippie-coastal versus vintage-grandmother. The choice signals values.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Rihanna's Third Pregnancy Will Run the Kardashian Playbook With One Letter Changed
RZA, Riot, and now a third R-name. Rihanna is using pattern naming the way the Kardashians used K. Random celebrity baby naming is over.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Charlotte Has Been the Royal Name. American Parents Mostly Deny Knowing.
Princess Charlotte turns 10 on May 2. Charlotte has been a top-10 American girls' name for nearly her whole life. Most parents who chose it deny royal influence.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Papal Succession Is the Largest Synchronous Naming Event in the World
Pope Francis died on Easter Monday. Leo XIV was elected May 8. The papal name change shifts the cultural register for 1.4 billion Catholics and adjacent naming pools.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Bridgerton Is Trying to Bump a Name That Has No Screen Time. The Result Is the Industry's Test Case.
Shondaland announced a Bridgerton S4 character through in-universe Whistledown. Elliot has no screen time. If the name bumps, IP-only naming opens a new gate.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Bluey Is Quietly the Most Powerful Pet-Naming Show of the 2020s
Bluey-coded names are up across pet licensing data. The show works for pet naming the way Friends worked for baby naming: stable cast, safe permission.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Y2K Nostalgia Is Selective. Some 1990s Names Will Not Be Welcomed Back.
Madison and Mason are coming back. Britney and Tiffany are not. Millennial nostalgia rewrites which 1990s names are safe to revive.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Old Money Names Are Saturated. Watch the Reversal Through 2030.
Margot, Beatrice, Adelaide: the quiet-luxury wave has hit saturation. Lieberson's pendulum is about to swing back toward unpolished.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Mikey Madison Won Best Actress. The Boy-Nickname-for-Girls Trend Just Got Another Decade.
Mikey Madison's Oscar win for Anora extends the androgynous-feminine naming pattern that was supposed to fade after 2015. The cycle has more legs than predicted.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Catholic Names Are Climbing Faster Than Catholic Practice. The Decoupling Has Been Underway for Decades.
Pope Francis is hospitalized. American Catholic-coded names have grown faster than evangelical names through the 2010s and 2020s. The names work without the practice.
·7 min read
- Articleopinion
Blue Ivy Is 13. Celebrity Baby Names Are Aging Better Than Their Critics Predicted.
Blue Ivy, North, Stormi, Apple, and the celebrity-baby cohort are growing up. The data shows their names aging better than predicted.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Sundance Is the Best Naming Forecaster Nobody Uses
Sundance breakthrough actors predict SSA shifts two to four years out. The 2025 cohort signals which names will rise through 2027.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
The Wood Snake Year Will Produce a Smaller, More Distinctive American-Asian Cohort
East Asian families plan conceptions around the zodiac. The 2025 wood snake year, historically associated with low birth rates, will compress the Asian-American naming pool.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Olivia and Liam Are Boring. The SSA's Real Story Lives in the Margins.
The 2024 SSA data drops in May. Top ten will look stable. The actual cultural drama is happening in ranks 50 through 300, where names move 50-100 spots per year.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Should a Dog's Adoption Chances Depend on How Its Name Reads on Instagram?
Shelters facing a capacity crisis are turning to viral naming. Diamond Ring gets adopted in days. Generic names sit for months. The ethics deserve a longer look.
·8 min read
- Articleanalysis
Notre Dame's Reopening Will Quiet a Slow Catholic Name Recovery in France
Marie has been recovering in French naming data since the 2019 cathedral fire. The Notre Dame reopening closes one chapter and opens a quieter one.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Spotify Wrapped Showed Sabrina Beat Taylor. The Naming Data Will Confirm It.
Sabrina Carpenter ranked alongside Taylor Swift on Spotify Wrapped 2024. Sabrina is climbing in the SSA. Taylor is not. The reason is structural.
·7 min read
- Articleopinion
The Grandparent-Name Revival Is Not About Style. It Is About Logistics.
The names millennials are choosing for their kids — Arthur, Hazel, Walter, Pearl — track Boomer survival rates. The aesthetic story is incomplete.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
What Names Carry After a Political Loss: A Sociological Note
We have data on names that rise after political wins. We have very little on names that travel with political losses. The category deserves attention.
·7 min read
- Articleanalysis
Quincy Jones Quietly Reshaped Black American Naming. The Data Is Mostly Unwritten.
Quincy Jones died at 91. His name's peak in Black American naming matches his cultural peak almost exactly. Almost no one has written it down.
·8 min read
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