TheAffableParanoiac: The page quote proves that someone other than me on this wiki is a Dementia (or at least Luke Ski) fan, I want names
{{Scifantasy}}: Well, me, for one, but I didn't put in that quotation. Also, SteveMB, and I don't know if he did.
FalconPain: Uh, Sci, please note that my comment you just pushed down past a divider was my admitting to putting in the page quote. (I first brought up the idea during the YKTTW.)
{{Scifantasy}}: ...whoops. Thought that one was on a different topic. I think I saw "TheGreatCrash" and figured you were saying how you'd recreated the page.
*hangs head*
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FalconPain: TheGreatCrash must have eaten the YKTTW discussion. Nevertheless, that was my doing.
{{Xander77}}: "The fact that Jack is Hebrew for "God is gracious and merciful" is a complete coincidence. " Say what? No it's not.
{{Clerval}}: Doesn't anyone else think this is NOT fine and roll their eyes the second the hero introduces himself as Jack? Especially since this became a really popular name for boys about twenty years after most of these characters should have been born.
{{Phartman}}: I do, mostly because I've only ever met two guys named Jack in my entire life, and one of them was a nickname. To me, it just shows a stunning lack of creativity on the writer's part. So maybe I'm an exception, and guys named Jack are fairly common. Even so, Hollywood's ratio seems to be 60% ''Jack'', 30% ''John'' and 10% ''other''. ''Helen'' seems to be the female equivalent, not ''Alice'' as this Wiki implies, and I've never met anyone with either of those names (though I've run into enough ''Ashley''s and ''Amanda''s to fill a phone book).
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Lizzie: An advantage of Jack names is the tagline 'Jack is Back'. I think this is relevant but don't know how to phrase it.