NickyJ
Retired Narrator
I don't give a darn what they call him. I think that there are greater matters in society other than what a dog's name is going to be in a remake of a movie.
I mean, really? Boy, must have been a slow news day.

They should call the dog Afro-American (with caps!!!)
Because that was the dog's real name. I had a cat named Blackie. It was black. This dog was black, and had the Latin name for black. Hooray PC!
Isn't it niger in Latin? And even then, was the dog's master a Theology major or otherwise fluent in Latin?
That's the spelling, but g's are always hard in Latin.Isn't it niger in Latin?
Setting aside the impracticality of that solution, are you not aware that we have people of African descent in these countries also?What they should do is name the dog trigger for the film in the US market and it's real name for the Commonwealth countries.
Setting aside the impracticality of that solution, are you not aware that we have people of African descent in these countries also?![]()
Yeah, my grandma took Latin in high school in Kansas City in the 30s as well. Folks were just better educated back then.Guy Gibson was public school( private boarding school) educated so the chances he took Latin as a subject was high in the thirties.
I wouldn't be offended of they named the dog Cracker or something.
Yeah, my grandma took Latin in high school in Kansas City in the 30s as well. Folks were just better educated back then.
Does Latin really mean that they were better educated? My parents did Latin too, but that was just because they went to a mick school that clung onto these things a bit longer, for obvious reasons.Yeah, my grandma took Latin in high school in Kansas City in the 30s as well. Folks were just better educated back then.