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AlizéeSuperFanFIN
05-06-2021, 05:44 PM
I think this is an interesting topic and probably easy to tell for many!?

I have to admit that my nickname doesn’t necessarily require much explanation... But I definitely wanted to include the name Alizée in it. As well as to express that I am a her big fan and I am from Finland!!! So the result was AlizéeSuperFanFIN.

So I may not get great stories about it for future generations... :hello::w:- But I like it...! :p

But what about the others? What is the history of your nickname... Where does it come from? And what is it based on? How did you come up with it? :dance:

If you want, :D let us know, many are probably interested in... :13:

joebanana
05-07-2021, 12:16 PM
Ok!
There is no particular reason for my nickname.
The first time I heard the name “Joe Banana” was in some joke back in the days, I forgot the joke but the funny name stuck in my memory.
I later learned that this is a character from a movie played by Carlo Pedersoli better known as Bud Spencer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHQARGct32M

I first used a poster from that movie as an avatar, but later changed it to the one I use today due to a potential copyright infringement on my YouTube channel.
My tribute videos aren’t that important but I have a few interviews with Alizee on the channel that I would like to keep.
i love pictures of alizee as an avatar but i don't use it for practical reasons because i want to be easily recognizable on other sites. :)

CleverCowboy
05-07-2021, 02:03 PM
Even though I was born in the upper midwest regions of the US, I moved to Texas as a young adult and spent three decades there. When I decided to move back to the midwest, old and new friends started calling me "cowboy" because everybody knows that if you lived in Texas, you ride a horse instead of driving a car. :rolleyes:

I was out one night with my friends and I said something that one thought was clever, and he said that "I was one clever cowboy". The others laughed and it stuck since.

Scruffydog777
05-07-2021, 11:12 PM
So I'll explain my name and my icon at the same time because they are connected. Scruffydog comes from the fact that Scruffy was one of the four dogs I had when I was married. It was at a low point financially in our lives. I had been working for a regional airline in Florida. We were a feeder for a major airline (Eastern) and when they shut down, we shut down. After a few months of being unemployed, we were living in Florida at the time, I found a job in Savannah, Georgia with Gulfstream, working on their beautiful business jets. We were low on money at that point. We moved into a trailer park and the trailer we had wasn't one you want to write home about. It was in a rural location.

We had 2 dogs at that point. We used to see a "scruffy" looking dog walking down the dirt road every day. We heard from others there was a cemetery down the road that home less dogs used to hang out at. One day my wife heard animal control had picked up the dog. It probably would have been put down if my wife hadn't gone quickly down there and say we wanted the dog.

After getting her home, we found she had a bad case of heartworm and the vet said the treatment to kill them might kill her, but we didn't have a choice but afterwards, we had another addition to our family. Our situation improved very well in Savannah. We got a nice home in a nice area. We also added another stray, to our family.

EDIT: I just remembered that picture of the dogs and the cat, who was also a stray was taken soon after we took Scruffy in. The other dogs wanted nothing to do with her, trying to get as far away from her as they could for this "family" photo. Soon, Scruffy and Jenny, the German shepherd mix would become best buds and accomplices in crime. The cat, we named Kip, who preferred to be called Kip, Kip, kitty, was also a stray.

Now Scruffy was a wallflower. The others would be rough housing, fighting and barking but Scruffy would be sitting next to the wall, smiling, wagging her tail, the perfect angel, but if one of us left the front door open by mistake, Scruffy would be the leader of the pack running out that door with the others in close pursuit. They'd return about an hour later, covered in mud from the local marsh. They came home because they were tired and hungry.

So Scruffy holds a special place in my heart.

As far as the 777. I think you all know I worked for an airline up until I retired about a year ago. One of the airplanes I worked on was a Boeing 777. In fact on my last night of work, I had the simple job of replacing a nav light on one. I also worked on B75,767,737, MD80, A300 and the A320 family while working for this company. In fact, I had worked on the 767 that first flew into the World Trade center on 9/11. That plane flew out of Boston where I work that morning. I'm also sure I had worked on the B757 that flew into the Pentagon. So the 777 and it's connections, has some extra meaning for me. The image on my icon is of the cockpit of a 777.

As far as my own image. That is a picture taken in Paris. I met up with several other Alizée fans including Jenny and RMJ at a time of an autograph session for Psych. We all got together and walked around Paris. This was a group photo, taken near the Eiffel Tower, but I cropped myself for this icon. Unfortunately, because it was someone else's photo, I couldn't find the original, but I'm still looking for it.

3400

RedRafe
05-08-2021, 02:04 AM
Alrighty...

RedRafe...

It's a "hangover", so to speak, from my "military" days, and its down to "call signs" that I was once known as/by...

Depending on the area where I was deployed, I usually had a certain unit comms "callsign". In "Central" areas I was designated as "Red", or "Red 1", "Northern" areas "Wolf" or "Wolf 1", and in "North Eastern" areas, "Bear", or "Bear 1". You get the idea...

Well, most of our NATO allies seemed to have an absurd amount of trouble with pronouncing my name, they used to absolutely "mangle" the pronunciation, so, to simplify matters, everyone called me "Red"...

And it "stuck"...

When I was "up North", similarly, to simplify matters, everyone called me by my particular given "callsign" for the area, which was "Wolf", which was very quickly, and affectionately, changed to "Rafe", which purportedly stems from the Old Norse, Germanic, Saxon, Northern European usage meaning "words/counsel of the wise Wolf", which probably originated from the Old English usage, Raedwolf, as in "rede of the wise old wolf"...

So RedRafe...

Wise old Wolf... :p ;)

It fitted what I was doing at the time, exactly... :) ;)

AlizéeSuperFanFIN
05-08-2021, 04:44 AM
Wow! There are great stories here! :yay:

Maybe a small comments... :)

Ok!
There is no particular reason for my nickname.
The first time I heard the name “Joe Banana” was in some joke back in the days, I forgot the joke but the funny name stuck in my memory.
I later learned that this is a character from a movie played by Carlo Pedersoli better known as Bud Spencer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHQARGct32M

I first used a poster from that movie as an avatar, but later changed it to the one I use today due to a potential copyright infringement on my YouTube channel.
My tribute videos aren’t that important but I have a few interviews with Alizee on the channel that I would like to keep.
i love pictures of alizee as an avatar but i don't use it for practical reasons because i want to be easily recognizable on other sites. :)


I probably hadn’t even heard of it, but Bud Spencer I “knew”...!

Admittedly, I’ve never really watched his movies! :13:

Even though I was born in the upper midwest regions of the US, I moved to Texas as a young adult and spent three decades there. When I decided to move back to the midwest, old and new friends started calling me "cowboy" because everybody knows that if you lived in Texas, you ride a horse instead of driving a car. :rolleyes:

I was out one night with my friends and I said something that one thought was clever, and he said that "I was one clever cowboy". The others laughed and it stuck since.

That part of Cowboys was “easy” to guess in that sense because I like western movies and most of the cowboys are from certain places in the US, of course! :cool:

The rest of the story is a nice and fun unique story!

So I'll explain my name and my icon at the same time because they are connected. Scruffydog comes from the fact that Scruffy was one of the four dogs I had when I was married. It was at a low point financially in our lives. I had been working for a regional airline in Florida. We were a feeder for a major airline (Eastern) and when they shut down, we shut down. After a few months of being unemployed, we were living in Florida at the time, I found a job in Savannah, Georgia with Gulfstream, working on their beautiful business jets. We were low on money at that point. We moved into a trailer park and the trailer we had wasn't one you want to write home about. It was in a rural location.

We had 2 dogs at that point. We used to see a "scruffy" looking dog walking down the dirt road every day. We heard from others there was a cemetery down the road that home less dogs used to hang out at. One day my wife heard animal control had picked up the dog. It probably would have been put down if my wife hadn't gone quickly down there and say we wanted the dog.

After getting her home, we found she had a bad case of heartworm and the vet said the treatment to kill them might kill her, but we didn't have a choice but afterwards, we had another addition to our family. Our situation improved very well in Savannah. We got a nice home in a nice area. We also added another stray, to our family.

EDIT: I just remembered that picture of the dogs and the cat, who was also a stray was taken soon after we took Scruffy in. The other dogs wanted nothing to do with her, trying to get as far away from her as they could for this "family" photo. Soon, Scruffy and Jenny, the German shepherd mix would become best buds and accomplices in crime. The cat, we named Kip, who preferred to be called Kip, Kip, kitty, was also a stray.

Now Scruffy was a wallflower. The others would be rough housing, fighting and barking but Scruffy would be sitting next to the wall, smiling, wagging her tail, the perfect angel, but if one of us left the front door open by mistake, Scruffy would be the leader of the pack running out that door with the others in close pursuit. They'd return about an hour later, covered in mud from the local marsh. They came home because they were tired and hungry.

So Scruffy holds a special place in my heart.

As far as the 777. I think you all know I worked for an airline up until I retired about a year ago. One of the airplanes I worked on was a Boeing 777. In fact on my last night of work, I had the simple job of replacing a nav light on one. I also worked on B75,767,737, MD80, A300 and the A320 family while working for this company. In fact, I had worked on the 767 that first flew into the World Trade center on 9/11. That plane flew out of Boston where I work that morning. I'm also sure I had worked on the B757 that flew into the Pentagon. So the 777 and it's connections, has some extra meaning for me. The image on my icon is of the cockpit of a 777.

As far as my own image. That is a picture taken in Paris. I met up with several other Alizée fans including Jenny and RMJ at a time of an autograph session for Psych. We all got together and walked around Paris. This was a group photo, taken near the Eiffel Tower, but I cropped myself for this icon. Unfortunately, because it was someone else's photo, I couldn't find the original, but I'm still looking for it.

3400

So I thought Scruffy’s story could be long! And so it was. And my guess of how the Scruffy dog was behind the nickname was pretty close, but the story was ultimately very exciting and thankfully happy! Thank you Dave and your wife for rescuing Scruffy!! :thumb:

The image of the aircraft cockpit was difficult to understand at first because the image is small. But now it's clear! And of course the 777 is related to airplanes, even though I hadn’t even had time to think about it much in the past.

Alrighty...

RedRafe...

It's a "hangover", so to speak, from my "military" days, and its down to "call signs" that I was once known as/by...

Depending on the area where I was deployed, I usually had a certain unit comms "callsign". In "Central" areas I was designated as "Red", or "Red 1", "Northern" areas "Wolf" or "Wolf 1", and in "North Eastern" areas, "Bear", or "Bear 1". You get the idea...

Well, most of our NATO allies seemed to have an absurd amount of trouble with pronouncing my name, they used to absolutely "mangle" the pronunciation, so, to simplify matters, everyone called me "Red"...

And it "stuck"...

When I was "up North", similarly, to simplify matters, everyone called me by my particular given "callsign" for the area, which was "Wolf", which was very quickly, and affectionately, changed to "Rafe", which purportedly stems from the Old Norse, Germanic, Saxon, Northern European usage meaning "words/counsel of the wise Wolf", which probably originated from the Old English usage, Raedwolf, as in "rede of the wise old wolf"...

So RedRafe...

Wise old Wolf... :p ;)

It fitted what I was doing at the time, exactly... :) ;)

I remember reading that you have a military background, so someone might conclude that the name comes from there, of course. But I really wouldn’t have directly guessed :D and nice when you told us more!

By the way, I have heard several stories from abroad and also from Finland that soldiers often watch J'en Ai Marre's iconic performance. Do you know in more detail that is whether it quite common in many armies, etc.?

Bamagirl
05-08-2021, 07:50 PM
My family is all from the state of Alabama, in the U.S. My dad was in the military, so I was raised all over. But since all my relatives were from Alabama—and most stayed there—I always thought of it as “home.” So...that’s where the “Bama” part comes in. And the “girl” is kind of self-explanatory!

Edit:

So I'll explain my name and my icon at the same time because they are connected. Scruffydog comes from the fact that Scruffy was one of the four dogs I had when I was married. It was at a low point financially in our lives. I had been working for a regional airline in Florida. We were a feeder for a major airline (Eastern) and when they shut down, we shut down. After a few months of being unemployed, we were living in Florida at the time, I found a job in Savannah, Georgia with Gulfstream, working on their beautiful business jets. We were low on money at that point. We moved into a trailer park and the trailer we had wasn't one you want to write home about. It was in a rural location.

We had 2 dogs at that point. We used to see a "scruffy" looking dog walking down the dirt road every day. We heard from others there was a cemetery down the road that home less dogs used to hang out at. One day my wife heard animal control had picked up the dog. It probably would have been put down if my wife hadn't gone quickly down there and say we wanted the dog.

After getting her home, we found she had a bad case of heartworm and the vet said the treatment to kill them might kill her, but we didn't have a choice but afterwards, we had another addition to our family. Our situation improved very well in Savannah. We got a nice home in a nice area. We also added another stray, to our family.

EDIT: I just remembered that picture of the dogs and the cat, who was also a stray was taken soon after we took Scruffy in. The other dogs wanted nothing to do with her, trying to get as far away from her as they could for this "family" photo. Soon, Scruffy and Jenny, the German shepherd mix would become best buds and accomplices in crime. The cat, we named Kip, who preferred to be called Kip, Kip, kitty, was also a stray.

Now Scruffy was a wallflower. The others would be rough housing, fighting and barking but Scruffy would be sitting next to the wall, smiling, wagging her tail, the perfect angel, but if one of us left the front door open by mistake, Scruffy would be the leader of the pack running out that door with the others in close pursuit. They'd return about an hour later, covered in mud from the local marsh. They came home because they were tired and hungry.

So Scruffy holds a special place in my heart.

As far as the 777. I think you all know I worked for an airline up until I retired about a year ago. One of the airplanes I worked on was a Boeing 777. In fact on my last night of work, I had the simple job of replacing a nav light on one. I also worked on B75,767,737, MD80, A300 and the A320 family while working for this company. In fact, I had worked on the 767 that first flew into the World Trade center on 9/11. That plane flew out of Boston where I work that morning. I'm also sure I had worked on the B757 that flew into the Pentagon. So the 777 and it's connections, has some extra meaning for me. The image on my icon is of the cockpit of a 777.

As far as my own image. That is a picture taken in Paris. I met up with several other Alizée fans including Jenny and RMJ at a time of an autograph session for Psych. We all got together and walked around Paris. This was a group photo, taken near the Eiffel Tower, but I cropped myself for this icon. Unfortunately, because it was someone else's photo, I couldn't find the original, but I'm still looking for it.

3400

Great story about “Scruffy,” Scruffydog! I can almost “see” that sweet little doggy and all her pals!
Your story about the planes is very meaningful. Being there in Boston on 9/11 must’ve been an unspeakable experience.

Elise
06-03-2021, 02:14 PM
I am male and I name myself with the feminine name Elise, after the Japanese biscuit company where Alizée did the advertising video. I thought it has some link with Alizée while not being too obvious. Well I just gave it away now...

Scruffydog777
06-03-2021, 10:42 PM
I think we have over 20 members who start their name with Alizee which is a feminine name so using Elise for it's Japanese (Alizée in Japan that is) roots, is not an issue and that was a great little chapter in her life. It also brings to mind the great Beethoven song "Fur Elise", which makes it even better.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAsDLGjMhFI

AlizéeSuperFanFIN
06-07-2021, 05:59 PM
My family is all from the state of Alabama, in the U.S. My dad was in the military, so I was raised all over. But since all my relatives were from Alabama—and most stayed there—I always thought of it as “home.” So...that’s where the “Bama” part comes in. And the “girl” is kind of self-explanatory!


At first I thought I wouldn’t come up with a background for your nickname, :13: Although I tried to think of it sometimes, but then I read someone’s message that revealed that you’re from Alabama.

1 + 1 = 2 :D

Then I realized almost immediately that it could come from it! :thumb:

I am male and I name myself with the feminine name Elise, after the Japanese biscuit company where Alizée did the advertising video. I thought it has some link with Alizée while not being too obvious. Well I just gave it away now...

At first I thought you might be a woman. :p

Then I thought most of Alizée’s passionate fans are men, and maybe you’re a man after all. :w::13::secret:

But when I thought about it, :)(: I did not remember at all that Elise was that biscuit brand in that ad! Good reminder. :))

Tradewind
06-08-2021, 06:33 AM
Alizee translates to English as "trade wind."

Panzerknacker
08-15-2021, 05:24 PM
My username reflects Me being a die-hard WW2 enthusiast.

I am a WW2 enthusiast since I was 4 years old.

Panzerknacker means "Armour Breaker" in German. It is name of a German WW2 military manual about anti-tank warfare published in 1944 and several German WW2 soldiers earned the nickname "Panzerknacker" for their actions.

https://cdn.globalauctionplatform.com/d87e9e3e-99fa-4a16-ad1f-a5e901347a1c/16a020a6-4920-4012-8cb0-a5e9015d9665/540x360.jpg

It is just my passion for Military, especially during WW2. Non-political.

Scruffydog777
08-15-2021, 06:35 PM
My username reflects Me being a die-hard WW2 enthusiast.

I am a WW2 enthusiast since I was 4 years old.

Panzerknacker means "Armour Breaker" in German. It is name of a German WW2 military manual about anti-tank warfare published in 1944 and several German WW2 soldiers earned the nickname "Panzerknacker" for their actions.

https://cdn.globalauctionplatform.com/d87e9e3e-99fa-4a16-ad1f-a5e901347a1c/16a020a6-4920-4012-8cb0-a5e9015d9665/540x360.jpg

It is just my passion for Military, especially during WW2. Non-political.

Welcome to the forum Panzerknacker. Maybe we have a lot to talk about. I spent 3 years in the army, 2 of which were with the 2nd armored division stationed at Ft Hood Texas where I was a gunner on an M60A1 tank.

We had TDY for about a month in Germany where we ran field exercises.

I too am a big WW1 & 2 history buff. I'm retired now but my job as an aircraft mechanic has allowed me to travel all over Europe. I've visited some of the great armor museums in Bovington, Saumur and Munster.

I would think maybe you're a gamer. BF2?

Panzerknacker
08-15-2021, 07:43 PM
Welcome to the forum Panzerknacker. Maybe we have a lot to talk about. I spent 3 years in the army, 2 of which were with the 2nd armored division stationed at Ft Hood Texas where I was a gunner on an M60A1 tank.

We had TDY for about a month in Germany where we ran field exercises.

I too am a big WW1 & 2 history buff. I'm retired now but my job as an aircraft mechanic has allowed me to travel all over Europe. I've visited some of the great armor museums in Bovington, Saumur and Munster.

I would think maybe you're a gamer. BF2?


Thank you!

Interesting and good to hear. I am really glad when I meet army veterans and listen to their experience. My family has some rich military history too.

I have been to the Panzer museum in Munster too, two times.

Yes, I am a gamer. Some of my favourite games include Hearts of Iron IV, Darkest Hour 44-45, Men of War AS2 and of course yes, you guessed it right the first two Battlefields, especially the 1942 along with its expansion packs which was my first game ever. I did play BF2 a lot too but unfortunately never tried the FH2 mod as I had some problems with the installation.