May I direct you to a certain Johnny Cash song?
Ah yes, good old Ringo Ffire. I went to school with him.
Many years ago, I dealt briefly with a customer who had formally changed his name to Long Striding Ant. He submitted documentary proof.
I agree strongly with comments above about not giving kids unusual or silly names, or, indeed, names that are spelled in a non standard way. I recently acquired a grandson and my only advice to my son and daughter in law was don't give him a name he'll have to spell to every customer and every customer service agent every time he's on the phone for the rest of his life.
I have personally known a Richola; her parents wanted a boy whom they would have called Richard. They had a daughter and decided to call her Nichola, but compromised on Richola at the last minute.
I went to school with a white western girl called Michal Boulter, pronounced simply "My Call Bolter". I remember a teacher reading out the register and pronouncing Michal's name with a pained attempt at sounding respectful to her (supposed) Arabic heritage: something like, "Meech'hahl Boowltah".
My grandad had a fairly normal name: Dennis Roy Jackson. The only strange thing was that everyone called him "John" except for his wife who called him "Jack".
One of my middle names is Denis with one N. It's caused me no end of hassle, including a company refusing to print wedding invitations with that spelling until the person placing the order showed them my birth certificate. My mother insisted on the one N spelling as a tribute to her dad. It was only after he died, many years later, and they were doing the necessary paperwork that they discovered it was really spelled with 2 Ns: Dennis.