I think this article might be appropriate.
I was really excited when it came to naming my daughter. She has a traditional christian name, an unusual middle name, and a nickname from birth. A couple of weeks after my wife's announcement we had those and a corresponding set of names all ready to roll in case she had turned out to be a little boy. We gave both a lot of thought, playing with variations, experimenting with abbreviations, changing orders, one in seven seems like a pretty big number of parents to have made a mistake!
One in seven parents admit they made a 'terrible mistake' with the name they chose for their child, according to a study.
Researchers found despite 'loving' the moniker at the time, millions of mums and dads soon grew to dislike it.
Amazingly, 28 per cent of people have even told their child that they regret choosing their name, and more than one in ten said their children have told them they don't like it themselves.
One in five dislike the fact their chosen name has become too common, while nearly one in 10 were put off thanks to a celebrity choosing it for their own child.
Another one in 10 started to regret the name after someone with the same moniker went onto become famous.
[...]
The study of 2,000 parents found one in three of those who regret their child's name tried to choose something which was unique, but now can't venture to the park without bumping into hordes of other youngsters with the same name.
It also emerged one in 20 parents call their child something different to the name on their birth certificate because they no longer like it.
And 14 per cent have even considered officially changing their child's name.
It also emerged one in two parents would be put off a name if a celebrity chose it for their child, with half saying they wouldn't choose Bear, the name picked by Cheryl Cole and Liam Payne for their son.
Source (lots of examples of which celebrities the public dislike):
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20..._source=LI&li_medium=li-recommendation-widget