Australian journalist's attempt to test rules on baby names backfires
The Guardian|September 20, 2023
A journalist in Australia decided to put the country's rules on baby names to the test by conducting an experiment with her newborn child, only to discover that the laws weren't as strict as she may have hoped.
Jordyn Beazley
Australian journalist's attempt to test rules on baby names backfires

When Kirsten Drysdale, who works at the public broadcaster ABC gave birth to her third son in July, she submitted his given name to the New South Wales Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages as Methamphetamine Rules, thinking it would be too controversial a name to be approved.

But when the application sailed through unchecked, she was left with a story as well as a strangely named child. "We thought we would submit the most outrageous name we could think of, assuming it would be rejected," she said.

"But it didn't turn out that way - unfortunately Methamphetamine Rules slipped through the cracks."

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