Significant Monogram

"Moreover, as high school English teachers never tire of observing, the innocence of martyred fictional characters bearing the initials "JC" must never be questioned. Indeed, as we first discover about an hour into The Green Mile, this particular JC bears mysterious powers of healing, as well as monumental capacities for sympathy and forgiveness, that make his Biblical heritage even harder to ignore or, for filmgoers who prefer not to be beaten over the head, to put up with."

- Nick's Flick Picks review of The Green Mile

A monogram is a symbol made from two or more letters - usually a person's initials. Sometimes a character's personality or destiny is indicated by his or her full name, whether it be a Steven Ulysses Perhero or a Louis Cypher. Sometimes, however, the character's full name seems perfectly ordinary, until you spot his or her monogram on a handkerchief or pen and find a funny "coincidence". This trope is about when a character's initials bear some significance to the story.

The most common Significant Monogram, of course, is "JC," most often seen on the Sacrificial Lamb, The Messiah, The Obi-Wan or The Hero. Those initials can be found everywhere from Jesse Custer in Preacher (Comic Book) to Jiminy Cricket in Pinocchio to John Connor in The Terminator and its sequels to JC Denton. When those specific initials are used unintentionally and in a completely discordant manner with the character's role in the story, they can often lead to an almost literal Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory situation.

However, sometimes initials may be used as a Shout-Out to another, pre-existing fictional character. It's almost certainly not a coincidence that so many fictional super-spies in the late 20th and early 21st century have had the initials "JB" (Jason Bourne, Jack Bauer, Jack Bristow, et al.) And sometimes the similarities may be subliminal or completely unintentional, as for instance with Gene Roddenberry's dashing, womanizing, handsome young hero who first debuted in 1966. Although ostensibly named after Capt. James Cook, his "JTK" monogram would be merely a stroke and a half away from the commonly-used monogram for a certain dashing, womanizing, handsome young president who had been martyred, in the eyes of many Americans, merely three years previously. Er... probably. In many cases, initials may be used to indicate an Author Avatar, especially in Mary Sue or Marty Stu circumstances.

Compare to Significant Anagram, Meaningful Name, Name's the Same and Fun with Acronyms. Distinguished from Theme Initials in that Theme Initials are used for multiple characters in a story or universe and may have no significance outside of their recurrence, whereas Significant Monograms may be used for only one character in a story but refer to someone or something outside of that story. However, when Significant Monograms are used for multiple characters in a universe or work of fiction, it may easily become a case of Theme Initials.

It can also become an unfortunate name, particularly if other characters remark upon such initials as "BS," "ASS" or "FU." Often in comedies, an Embarrassing First Name or Embarrassing Middle Name may be employed to complete the monogram.

JC and Other Variations
Bonus Points if the "C" stands for "Carpenter", Jesus' mundane occupation.

Comic Books

 * Jesse Custer in Preacher (Comic Book).
 * John Constantine and several other key characters in Hellblazer.

Film

 * John Connor in The Terminator and its sequels and spin-offs.
 * Jericho Caine in End of Days.
 * Variation: In the film Greaser's Palace, the character Jessy's name is often pronounced to sound like "JC." What do you mean it's not symbolic?
 * Joey Cusack, the in A History of Violence.
 * James Cole in 12 Monkeys.
 * John Carpenter in "The Day the Earth Stood Still"

Literature

 * John Coffey in both novel and film The Green Mile.
 * Jenny Curran in both novel and film Forrest Gump.
 * Jim Casy in The Grapes of Wrath.
 * Jim Conklin in The Red Badge of Courage. Apparently, this wasn't intentional, but it inspired a lot of crazy interpretations.
 * John Cotton in Bless the Beasts And Children.
 * Jerry Cornelius and his dozens of incarnations in the Eternal Champion series. You know it's him because his initials are JC.
 * John Carter (of Mars). A messianic, immortal and anviliciously moral chap, who spent half the series inspiring coexistence and racial harmony on the world to which he came...
 * Joe Christmas in A Light in August.
 * Joshua Calvert in the Night's Dawn trilogy.
 * Johnny Cade of "The Outsiders".
 * Jack Crow of "Armor" and "Vampire$".

Live-Action TV

 * Jordan Collier on The 4400; he even at one point.
 * British sketch show Not the Nine O'Clock News ran a sketch parodying moral outrage at the film Life of Brian, in which a self-proclaimed Pythonist accused The Bible of being a rip-off of Python lore, pointing out that the main character's initials were the same as those of John Cleese.
 * Attorneys Lindsey MacDonald, Lilah Morgan, Lee Mercer and Linwood Murrow, who share their initials with Lucifer Morningstar, on Angel.
 * Jayne! The man they call Jayne! Jayne Cobb not only bears the initials, but in Jaynestown, we're introduced to a village that worships him as a folk hero.
 * Jeremy Clarkson from Top Gear mentions this during the Middle East Special when he begins to get delusions of grandeur near the Sea of Galilee.

Video Games

 * JC Denton from Deus Ex.

Western Animation

 * Jiminy Cricket, the Only Sane Man in Pinocchio. No coincidence, since his name comes from an Unusual Euphemism for Jesus Christ.
 * In one episode of King of the Hill, President Jimmy Carter settled a dispute at a Habitat For Humanity house. Bobby instantly invoked this, since Carter was "a carpenter, who worked a miracle, with the initials J.C.".

Literature

 * Jason Bourne in The Bourne Series.
 * John Brock, secret agent hero of three novels by Desmond Skirrow.

Live-Action TV

 * Jack Bauer on 24.
 * Jack Bristow on Alias.

Video Games

 * In a direct Shout-Out to this, the three Player Archetypes for Alpha Protocol were referred during its development as "the three JBs" (James Bond, Jason Bourne, and Jack Bauer).

Literature

 * It is fully acknowledged by the author that Honor Harrington is Horatio Hornblower In Space.

Live Action TV

 * Star Trek: The Original Series: James T. Kirk's monogram would be extremely close to that of President John F. Kennedy's, of whom series creator Gene Roddenberry was a known admirer.
 * Star Trek: Voyager: Kathryn Janeway, the first major female Starfleet captain, has the inverted initials of Star Trek's first-ever captain.
 * On House, Gregory House shares a lot with Sherlock Holmes. House's 'sidekick' James Wilson has the same monogram as Holmes' Dr. John Watson, while House himself shares his second initial with Holmes (as well as being a pun on the name).

Literature

 * Variation: In And Then There Were None, Mr./Ms. Owen gives his/her hosts various first and middle names that start with "U" and "N" respectively. Combined with the last name, they're pronounced as "unknown".
 * From another Agatha Christie novel, The ABC Murders, we have the unfortunately named Alexander Bonaparte Cust, the.
 * In House of Cards (British series), the author picked the name Francis Urquhart for the protagonist from the initials, "F.U."
 * In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, has quite a good reason to be afraid of getting sorted into the snake-themed Slytherin. Word of God says it was intentional.
 * In Charles Stross's Bob Howard series, a throw-away line reveals that geeky Bob's full initials are B.O.F.H. (another throw-away line reveals that his name is a pseudonym to protect his True Name, suggesting that he picked his initials deliberately).
 * In Live and Let Die, the villain's name is Buonapart Ignace Gallia, which combined with his size made the nickname "Mr. Big" inevitable.
 * Pops up a few times in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid books: Peter Uteger ("P.U.") and Preston Mudd ("P. Mudd") are subject to teasing by their middle school peers. Greg proudly takes credit for the former incident.
 * In the Oz books, the Wizard of Oz is named Oscar Zoroaster Phadrig Isaac Norman Henkel Emmannuel Ambroise Diggs. Because this is so long, he typically shortens it to O.Z.P.I.N.H.E.A.D., which he (for understandable reasons) further shortens to O.Z. Which is why he became the ruler of Oz.
 * In the Uglies series, one of the character's names is Andrew Simpson Smith.
 * Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden's initials are HBCD. He must be very thankful his father couldn't think of any magicians whose names began with "A".

Live-Action TV

 * All in The Family: when Mike and Gloria had a son, they were going to name him after the two grandfathers: Stephen Archibald Stivic. Archie complained that his name should come first, until Mike mentioned his initials would then be A.S.S. Eventually, they named him Joseph.
 * In Only Fools and Horses, Del Boy names his son Damien Derek Trotter. Rodney points out that this makes his initials DDT.
 * Carl Otis Winslow. And he's well aware of what it spells.

Real Life

 * Nineteenth-century military buff Hiram U. Grant was reportedly always embarrassed by the weak-sounding implications of his monogram. That is until his application for West Point, when his Congressman, who nominated him for acceptance, apparently mistook his middle name for his first name and his mother's maiden name for his middle initial and submitted him under the much more patriotic initials "Ulysses S. Grant," which Hiram kept throughout the remainder of his career as general and later as president.
 * 1950s B-Movie director Bert I. Gordon, who specialized in giant monster movies.
 * In the Netherlands, we have "Katholieke Universiteit Tilburg" (Catholic University of Tilburg), the initials of which spell out the Dutch word for cunt.
 * At a lecture to the Digital Biota group at Cambridge University, which studies evolution algorithms, Douglas Adams commented, "I was born in Cambridge in 1952, and my initials are DNA!"
 * Russian Humour offers us a joke about one Barov Leonid Yakovlevich, whose initials read "BLYA" (a vulgar expletive, derived from "whore").

Theater

 * Felix Unger in The Odd Couple, whose initials spell out an unfortunate signature in his notes to Oscar.

Video Games

 * Ignatius Mortimer Meen, whose first two initials are to complete the Punny Name.

Western Animation
"Hank: Mr. Holloway, this is the only man ever censured by the Texas Propane Association, for lewdness and conduct unbecoming a propane salesman. M.F. Thatherton: M.F. Thatherton. Thatherton Fumes. Mr. Holloway: Dang glad to meet you, M.F. Hank: The M.F. stands for— M.F. Thatherton: My friend!"
 * In an additional King of the Hill example, Hank Hill and The Rival / Phrase Catcher Thatherton meet a new potential client, providing this glorious exchange:

Literature

 * Philip José Farmer has had two characters with the same initials in his works: Peter Jairus Frigate in the Riverworld novels and Paul Janus Finnegan in the World of Tiers series.
 * P. Frank Winslow in F Paul Wilson's Repairman Jack novel Bloodline.
 * A.P. (Alan Patrick) Herbert's "Albert Haddock", defendant in numerous preposterous law cases in Misleading Cases In The Common Law. According to Herbert, Haddock's middle name was probably Percival.
 * Franz Kafka and every character named "K" in his body of work.
 * Charles Dickens was reportedly very surprised when a reader pointed out that the initials of the title character in David Copperfield (a quasi-autobiographical novel) are Dickens' own, reversed (there's also a Charles Darnay in A Tale of Two Cities).
 * From The Host, written by Stephanie Meyer: the main character's host Melanie Strider. Bonus points in that the two names sound alike.

Live Action TV

 * Babylon 5's Jeffrey Sinclair and John Sheridan both share their initials with series creator J. Michael Straczynski.
 * He did it again with John Simon, protagonist/narrator of his comic book series Rising Stars.
 * The initials of the lead couple (JS and D) also match the initials of JMS and his wife at the time, Kathryn Drennan.
 * Straczynski once said, "I don't do cameos, my initials do."

Anime and Manga

 * Puella Magi Madoka Magica has the Soul Gems serving as the Puella Magis' Transformation Trinket and the Grief Seeds, which act as their sort of cleaning device when their Soul Gems go dark that spring up from defeated Witches..

Film

 * In The Santa Clause franchise the businessman who takes on the role of Santa Claus is named Scott Calvin.
 * Anti Trust—the villain is Gary 'Williams...GW....WG...William Gates.

Literature

 * If you come across any character with the initials "RF" in a Stephen King book, there's a good chance that character is actually Randall Flagg.
 * Stanley Hopkins, first introduced in "The Adventure of Black Peter", is a young detective at Scotland Yard who Sherlock Holmes believes may have a bright career.
 * In The Illuminatus Trilogy, one of the characters is warned to look out for anyone with the initials H.C. The character is almost raped in a jail cell by a convict named Harry Coin.
 * In an unusually all-encompassing example, the initials of the cast of Atlanta Nights spell out "PublishAmerica is a vanity press", which the book was written to prove.

Live Action TV

 * Doctor Who: The Scrooge character in A Christmas Carol is named Sardick, although his first name is Kazran. His father, however, was named Elliot, and was even Scrooge-ier than he is.
 * In the pilot episode of Grimm, the little girl who's been kidnapped by a Big Bad Wolf has her initials of "RH" written on her backpack, as if her wearing a red hoodie weren't enough of a hint which fairy tale is being played out.
 * In the last episode of The Sarah Jane Adventures, the Steve Jobs-esque CEO has the initials JS.

Theatre

 * On the stereo remake of the original cast recording of Kiss Me, Kate, Those Two Guys who sing "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" are credited as "Aloysius Donovan" and "Alexis Dubroff." These were both pseudonyms for featured star Alfred Drake.

Video Games

 * In Halo 3: ODST, the Rookie's initials are JD. He has no voice (besides for grunting) and no face. JD could stand for John Doe. This would also mean we would have 2 Johns. Add this with the Spartan Clone Training facility description for a map in Halo 1 (all MP maps/descriptions in Halo are canon) and we may have a John-117 clone. Could explain his John levels of luck.
 * In Metal Gear Solid the are named GW, TJ, AL, TR and JD. The first 4 are named after the initials of the American Presidents on Mount Rushmore and the latter (the head AI) stands for John Doe.
 * In City of Heroes, the Longbow officer in charge of operations in the Rikti War Zone is Wilhelmina Marlena Dietrich (WMD).
 * The Big Bad in the first BioShock (series) game is an ambitious, government-hating industrialist named Andrew Ryan. Get it?

Web Comics

 * Homestuck: During an intermission, Nanna Egbert reveals that her Evil Matriarch, Betty Crocker, wasn't human. A while later, we've almost forgotten about it -
 * The Exiles. Their names change, but their initials remain the same, forcing their past selves to be named with an additional question mark (with the semi-exception of Snowman and Jack Noir).
 * The post-Scratch kids retain the chumhandles of GG, GT, TG and TT. Jake English also retains the monogram of John Egbert, and RL and DS also stay this way (even though the names themselves weren't revealed yet), and Jade Harley (JH) is, predictably enough, replaced with JC.

Real Life

 * In the Library of Congress Classification scheme used by most college and university libraries in the U.S. and Canada, Bibles and Bible commentaries are shelved under call numbers starting with the letters "BS". At the reference desk, we'd tell students to use the memetic "Bible Studies".
 * Vladimir Putin's initials read VVP, which is the Russian abbreviation for GDP (Gross Domestic Product). Cue the jokes derived from him promising to double the Russian GDP and instead doubling himself (bringing Medvedev into big politics).
 * British comedian Adrian Edmondson is known for his staggering array of talents in addition to comedy. His middle name is Charles. Think about that for a second.