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What's in a name? Man auctions surname

Evil Eye

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(CNN) -- Some people might give you the shirt off their back for free. Others might give you their last name -- for a fee.



I just saw an opportunity -- my mom is going through a divorce and I don't need this last name anymore, explained 30-year old entrepreneur Jason Sadler, who lives in Jacksonville, Florida. I thought 'How am I going to find a new last name?' well 'Why not just sell it?'



To many, the idea of selling off the family surname might be crazy. Sadler says he wants to reinvest the money he makes into other fun marketing things and give 10% of it to charity.



At the time of the interview, the highest bidder on Sadler's website -- buymylastname.com -- had offered $35,000.



For all of 2013, Sadler will legally assume the new surname decided by the winning bidder and will need to change all official forms of identification.



The legal process may take several weeks, according to the Florida state courts system, and involves submitting fingerprints for a state and national criminal check, the associated cost for processing, a court date to consider the name change request and a judge's final approval.



This is not Sadler's first attempt at a more creative -- if unorthodox -- moneymaking scheme. In 2009, the entrepreneur started wearing the shirts of other companies, serving as a walking ad space for a day. He pulled in more than $66,000 on top of his regular day job that first year. That start-up still operates today at iwearyourshirt.com.



Sadler rejects the idea that he is selling out.



The reason I say that is that I don't want this last name anymore. The name Sadler doesn't mean anything to me anymore. And for me I want to work with a brand. I live in this kind of online marketing world and I'm very passionate about it. If I said I'll take any casino or pornography site -- that would be selling out.



Bidding to give Sadler a new last name ended on December 12. He will reveal his new surname on December 13 but says no one should expect anything too extreme.



I had some legalese written up. If you read the terms and conditions -- nothing political, nothing religious, nothing defaming anybody. There's been a lot of talk on the internet about giving me a dumb last name. It's just not going to happen. I have the last right of refusal.



Beyond 2013, Sadler says he might do it over again and represent someone new or just pick a random name from the phone book.



Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/12/13/business/us-name-auction-sadler/





Well... that's one way to make money.
 
I can't believe people would bid on his last name. It's not even a unique name.
 
They're not bidding on his current name. The highest bidder gets to choose his new surname, no matter what it may be.



e.g if you bid and won, you could change his surname to Cocklick, and he'd have to do it.
 
Shiro Tenshi Yuri said:
They're not bidding on his current name. The highest bidder gets to choose his new surname, no matter what it may be.



e.g if you bid and won, you could change his surname to Cocklick, and he'd have to do it.

I realized that after I read it more carefully. I love your example surname!
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Shiro Tenshi Yuri said:
e.g if you bid and won, you could change his surname to Cocklick, and he'd have to do it.
Nah, he had the right of refusal.

4Chan would've probably started pooling money to get him to change his name to something... bad otherwise
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