How to pronounce “I ♥ Huckabees”?












6















How are you supposed to pronounce the movie title "I ♥ Huckabees"?



I have seen it written "I heart huckabees" but that might be because its hard to find and type the little ♥ character. This also would seem like an odd pronunciation (but then again its a strange title to begin with.)



Actual movie logo / title:



enter image description here



For instance, did the writer/director or some official publication ever clearly state how to say the title?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Heh. Was going to edit to include the movie tag but.. now I don't know what I'd have replaced the 💙 with :)

    – Jenayah
    10 hours ago
















6















How are you supposed to pronounce the movie title "I ♥ Huckabees"?



I have seen it written "I heart huckabees" but that might be because its hard to find and type the little ♥ character. This also would seem like an odd pronunciation (but then again its a strange title to begin with.)



Actual movie logo / title:



enter image description here



For instance, did the writer/director or some official publication ever clearly state how to say the title?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Heh. Was going to edit to include the movie tag but.. now I don't know what I'd have replaced the 💙 with :)

    – Jenayah
    10 hours ago














6












6








6








How are you supposed to pronounce the movie title "I ♥ Huckabees"?



I have seen it written "I heart huckabees" but that might be because its hard to find and type the little ♥ character. This also would seem like an odd pronunciation (but then again its a strange title to begin with.)



Actual movie logo / title:



enter image description here



For instance, did the writer/director or some official publication ever clearly state how to say the title?










share|improve this question
















How are you supposed to pronounce the movie title "I ♥ Huckabees"?



I have seen it written "I heart huckabees" but that might be because its hard to find and type the little ♥ character. This also would seem like an odd pronunciation (but then again its a strange title to begin with.)



Actual movie logo / title:



enter image description here



For instance, did the writer/director or some official publication ever clearly state how to say the title?







title i-heart-huckabees






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 5 hours ago









Napoleon Wilson

42.2k42272522




42.2k42272522










asked 10 hours ago









DaveInCazDaveInCaz

1233




1233








  • 1





    Heh. Was going to edit to include the movie tag but.. now I don't know what I'd have replaced the 💙 with :)

    – Jenayah
    10 hours ago














  • 1





    Heh. Was going to edit to include the movie tag but.. now I don't know what I'd have replaced the 💙 with :)

    – Jenayah
    10 hours ago








1




1





Heh. Was going to edit to include the movie tag but.. now I don't know what I'd have replaced the 💙 with :)

– Jenayah
10 hours ago





Heh. Was going to edit to include the movie tag but.. now I don't know what I'd have replaced the 💙 with :)

– Jenayah
10 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















10














It’s pronounced “heart” usually but “love” is accepted. From the Wikipedia article:




I ♥ Huckabees (known usually as I Heart Huckabees but also as I Love Huckabees) is a 2004 American comedy film directed and produced by David O. Russell, who co-wrote the screenplay with Jeff Baena.




Both Wikipedia and IMDb refer to it as I Heart Huckabees.



In an interview with Indie Wire, the writer/director David O. Russell is quoted as saying:




However, another short that Russell was planning was stuck in the writing stages. “I wanted to make a short film, that later became ‘I Heart Huckabees,’ about a guy who sits in the back of a Chinese restaurant with microphones on every table to surreptitiously listen to everybody’s conversations, then write perversely personal fortunes for each of the people.




So, he uses "heart" himself.



As to the oddness of the phrase, it's actually pretty common to see around now. There's a few company names based on it, even. The most recognizable is probably iHeartRadio, a music streaming service.






share|improve this answer


























  • Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

    – DaveInCaz
    1 hour ago











  • @DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

    – Brian McCutchon
    38 mins ago













  • The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

    – Catija
    12 mins ago



















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









10














It’s pronounced “heart” usually but “love” is accepted. From the Wikipedia article:




I ♥ Huckabees (known usually as I Heart Huckabees but also as I Love Huckabees) is a 2004 American comedy film directed and produced by David O. Russell, who co-wrote the screenplay with Jeff Baena.




Both Wikipedia and IMDb refer to it as I Heart Huckabees.



In an interview with Indie Wire, the writer/director David O. Russell is quoted as saying:




However, another short that Russell was planning was stuck in the writing stages. “I wanted to make a short film, that later became ‘I Heart Huckabees,’ about a guy who sits in the back of a Chinese restaurant with microphones on every table to surreptitiously listen to everybody’s conversations, then write perversely personal fortunes for each of the people.




So, he uses "heart" himself.



As to the oddness of the phrase, it's actually pretty common to see around now. There's a few company names based on it, even. The most recognizable is probably iHeartRadio, a music streaming service.






share|improve this answer


























  • Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

    – DaveInCaz
    1 hour ago











  • @DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

    – Brian McCutchon
    38 mins ago













  • The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

    – Catija
    12 mins ago
















10














It’s pronounced “heart” usually but “love” is accepted. From the Wikipedia article:




I ♥ Huckabees (known usually as I Heart Huckabees but also as I Love Huckabees) is a 2004 American comedy film directed and produced by David O. Russell, who co-wrote the screenplay with Jeff Baena.




Both Wikipedia and IMDb refer to it as I Heart Huckabees.



In an interview with Indie Wire, the writer/director David O. Russell is quoted as saying:




However, another short that Russell was planning was stuck in the writing stages. “I wanted to make a short film, that later became ‘I Heart Huckabees,’ about a guy who sits in the back of a Chinese restaurant with microphones on every table to surreptitiously listen to everybody’s conversations, then write perversely personal fortunes for each of the people.




So, he uses "heart" himself.



As to the oddness of the phrase, it's actually pretty common to see around now. There's a few company names based on it, even. The most recognizable is probably iHeartRadio, a music streaming service.






share|improve this answer


























  • Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

    – DaveInCaz
    1 hour ago











  • @DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

    – Brian McCutchon
    38 mins ago













  • The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

    – Catija
    12 mins ago














10












10








10







It’s pronounced “heart” usually but “love” is accepted. From the Wikipedia article:




I ♥ Huckabees (known usually as I Heart Huckabees but also as I Love Huckabees) is a 2004 American comedy film directed and produced by David O. Russell, who co-wrote the screenplay with Jeff Baena.




Both Wikipedia and IMDb refer to it as I Heart Huckabees.



In an interview with Indie Wire, the writer/director David O. Russell is quoted as saying:




However, another short that Russell was planning was stuck in the writing stages. “I wanted to make a short film, that later became ‘I Heart Huckabees,’ about a guy who sits in the back of a Chinese restaurant with microphones on every table to surreptitiously listen to everybody’s conversations, then write perversely personal fortunes for each of the people.




So, he uses "heart" himself.



As to the oddness of the phrase, it's actually pretty common to see around now. There's a few company names based on it, even. The most recognizable is probably iHeartRadio, a music streaming service.






share|improve this answer















It’s pronounced “heart” usually but “love” is accepted. From the Wikipedia article:




I ♥ Huckabees (known usually as I Heart Huckabees but also as I Love Huckabees) is a 2004 American comedy film directed and produced by David O. Russell, who co-wrote the screenplay with Jeff Baena.




Both Wikipedia and IMDb refer to it as I Heart Huckabees.



In an interview with Indie Wire, the writer/director David O. Russell is quoted as saying:




However, another short that Russell was planning was stuck in the writing stages. “I wanted to make a short film, that later became ‘I Heart Huckabees,’ about a guy who sits in the back of a Chinese restaurant with microphones on every table to surreptitiously listen to everybody’s conversations, then write perversely personal fortunes for each of the people.




So, he uses "heart" himself.



As to the oddness of the phrase, it's actually pretty common to see around now. There's a few company names based on it, even. The most recognizable is probably iHeartRadio, a music streaming service.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago

























answered 9 hours ago









CatijaCatija

24.3k291105




24.3k291105













  • Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

    – DaveInCaz
    1 hour ago











  • @DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

    – Brian McCutchon
    38 mins ago













  • The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

    – Catija
    12 mins ago



















  • Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

    – DaveInCaz
    1 hour ago











  • @DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

    – Brian McCutchon
    38 mins ago













  • The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

    – Catija
    12 mins ago

















Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

– DaveInCaz
1 hour ago





Neat observation about the use of "heart" like that, as a verb... I wonder if that is an effect of the film or perhaps some other usage was an influence for it.

– DaveInCaz
1 hour ago













@DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

– Brian McCutchon
38 mins ago







@DaveInCaz The original is I ♥ New York, which predates the film by about 27 years. That Wikipedia article explicitly mentions I ♥ Huckabees as one of the many, many names inspired by the New York slogan.

– Brian McCutchon
38 mins ago















The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

– Catija
12 mins ago





The one issue with that, @BrianMcCutchon , is that the slogan is "I love New York" (according to that Wikipedia article) and references "heart" as a facetious usage - probably not inappropriate in this case.

– Catija
12 mins ago



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