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October 14, 2008 10:10 PM PDT

Teen shows why you should change your name to Apple.com

Posted by Chris Matyszczyk
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She used to be Jennifer Thornburg. But that name was too ordinary. It didn't sufficiently reflect her belief system.

After all, why should we be lumbered with names our parents thought of on some drunken night out at Taco Bell? So Jennifer, a 19-year-old from Asheville, N.C., decided to grasp the nettle and discard the Thornburg. And the Jennifer.

She became CutOutDissection.com. Legally.

She prefers CutOut for short.

You might be wondering why she would choose such a tender name. Well, CutOut is not happy that your children go to biology lessons at their high school and cut up frogs, toads, rats, mice, or whatever else their teachers provide for their scientific violence.

She was turned off by this seemingly healthy practice when her own teacher asked her to chop up a chicken wing. Jennifer felt queasy. So she named herself after the anti-dissection Web site of PETA (the folks who express their unhappiness when you do something they don't like to or with an animal).

Duane Thornburg, Cutout's dad, told the Asheville Citizen-Times that it will "take me awhile" to get used to the change.

"She's still Jennifer to me," he said. "I understand why she's done it. Believe it or not, I totally respect it."

One will try to believe it. However, Jennifer's touching story surely has wider implications for the business world.

Just as, at the Web's inception, wise people scrambled to buy up any URL that came to mind, CutOut's example offers a stunning opportunity for many wise young people to get through the onrushing, depressing recession.

What if today's enterprising young approached their favorite companies with an offer to change their names to the company's URL? Just think of the number of times that names are used every day.

Do many children find this upsetting? After all, great science is rarely pretty.

(Credit: CC Enlewof)

The companies could pay the teenagers a set fee per month for the benefit of having their URLs promulgated at the heart of Consumerworld. And the teenagers could walk up to people on the street and introduce themselves, quite truthfully, as, for example, Apple.com.

Perhaps the companies would even give these enterprising teenagers a little spiel with which to follow up their branded introduction.

For example: "Hi, I'm Apple.com. Would you like to see my large glass trackpad?"

Or even: "Hullo, I'm Microsoft.com and I'm a PC and there's nothing wrong with me. Really. Really, there isn't. Nothing wrong with me at all. I am all right. Nothing wrong."

I fear that CutOut has unwittingly created a monster the likes of which she herself may one day wish to dissect.

While her initiative is entirely noncommercial--you will be stunned to hear that she is now an intern at PETA--she has surely opened up a well of commercial possibility in which young people may immediately drill, baby, drill.

It has so far proved very difficult to make brand awareness campaigns work online, so why not try to achieve brand awareness of online brands with this ingenious offline method?

And there could surely be no greater example of ingenious offline method than the dear, lovable, brave, and enterprising CutOutDissection.com.

Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 15 comments
by zerohourrct October 14, 2008 10:38 PM PDT
My only dissection in high school biology was an owl pellet (that's owl crap). We took the bones found in the pellets (bones of rodents such as the little bugger pictured above) and tried to piece together a whole skeleton.
The enlarged picture of a rodent is incongruous for an article which seems to focus on company name branding, rather than dissection.
Nowhere in this article did I find a teenager showing why he changed his/her name to apple.com as the title suggests.
Reply to this comment
by canagica October 15, 2008 7:14 AM PDT
FYI an owl pellet isn't owl crap; pellets are regurgitated, and contain the bits that owls can't digest.
by Olftep October 15, 2008 12:15 AM PDT
Calling this girl a "wise young person" is about the most absurd thing I've ever heard. The good news is I doubt that any man will now want to marry CutOut, and thus future generations will not be burdened by her offspring. Personally, I thoroughly enjoyed my dissections in highschool, and they probably significantly contributed to my desire to become a doctor.
Reply to this comment
by ChrisMatyszczyk October 15, 2008 8:07 AM PDT
Oh, Olftep,

I think there are many, many people out there who would love to consort with someone called CutOut. And I am certain she is a delightful young woman. Didn't you do anything a little out there when you were 19? Anything?

Chris
by James7777777 October 15, 2008 5:31 AM PDT
Dissections did help in biology class and if memory serves correctly any student not wanting to participate could do a virtual dissection on a computer. What the big fricken deal. Oh and why does the title have apple.com in it? Does apple pay you extra for each time you mention them?
Reply to this comment
by itbriangy October 15, 2008 7:23 AM PDT
ok nice story. how does apple.com fit into all this? i never liked cnet because their advertisers have the final say in anything they do.
Reply to this comment
by biffhenerson October 15, 2008 7:40 AM PDT
To me, her decision is more disturbing than all dissections combined.
Reply to this comment
by cnet271 October 15, 2008 7:57 AM PDT
This story reminds me of the movie Idiocracy. For those that haven't seen it, it's a Mike Judge comedy set 500 years in the future, where idiocy has been selected for (in the Darwinian sense), and the most popular television show is called "Ow, my balls!" It's obviously meant to be a satirical take on today's seemingly ever-declining intellectual standards, extrapolated to some future state where, among other things, people have come to adopt brands such as Frito, Hormel and Velveeta as their names, quite possibly in in the guise of some kind of sponsorship agreement.

For anyone who thinks this is a good dea, I strongly urge you to read Naomi Klein's "No Logo." And if this is too much of an effort (which is likely to be the case), then please just stop procreating.
Reply to this comment
by ChrisMatyszczyk October 15, 2008 8:09 AM PDT
cnet271,

Thank you. Interesting words and excellent suggestion to watch Idiocracy and read Naomi Klein.

You are very persuasive. You have a future in politics. Go for it. While the people are still listening.

Chris
by les_fortunate October 15, 2008 8:09 AM PDT
A 19 year old girl still in high school in North Carolina. How proud her parents must be.
Reply to this comment
by jeolmeun October 15, 2008 9:23 AM PDT
Are you offended by this girl and her parents?
by les_fortunate October 15, 2008 8:10 AM PDT
A 19 year old girl still in high school in North Carolina. How proud her parents must be.
Reply to this comment
by Rawnchie14 October 15, 2008 8:40 AM PDT
Your standard, run-of-the-mill PETA member. An idiot.
by AndrewRich October 15, 2008 12:08 PM PDT
Was the disgusting dissected animal picture really necessary? NO, it was not. Please don't ever do that again.
Reply to this comment
by UnixGuy October 15, 2008 1:05 PM PDT
She's a typical PETA freak - plump, hirsute and pasty faced with old-school spectacles and oily hair.

http://www.peta2.com/cutoutdissection/cutoutdissection.asp

SHe's made the ultimate mistake - like the guy who wanted to change his name to Heywood Jablowme. and her insignificant act of activism will cause her years of regret.
Reply to this comment
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Chris Matyszczyk brings a fresh and irreverent perspective to the tech world in his CNET blog, Technically Incorrect. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

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