
Outside the bedroom, Who’s your daddy became a notable taunt in sports when one athlete makes a power play over another-you know, “ownage.” Around 2004, for instance, Who’s your daddy? was a popular chant among Yankees fans against Red Sox pitcher Pedro Martínez who once said after a loss: “I just tip my hat and call the Yankees my daddy.” Not to be confused with Daddy Yankee of “Despacito” fame.

In the 1975 movie The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother, Sigerson Holmes (Gene Wilder) grills a female suspect by sitting over her nearly naked body, massaging her breasts, and asking her over and over Who’s your father? This is clearly a reference to the sexual who’s your daddy trope-the gag being that Holmes actually wants to know who the suspect’s father is. The kinky flair of Who’s your daddy spread in the 1970s. The contemporary expression Who’s your daddy? got a big boost from British rockers The Zombies in their 1968 “Time of the Season,” which features the lyrics: “What’s your name? Who’s your daddy? / (Who’s your daddy? He rich?) Is he rich like me?” The daddy here isn’t exactly clear, but the sultry theme of the song suggests competition with another male lover. One interesting early example of Who’s your daddy? comes from the 1850s in a story about Uncle Sam (yes, that Uncle Sam) who tells off some rowdy young Irishmen in New York: “Did’nt I give you every foot of land you own, you rebellious rascals?… who’s your daddy, hey?” Uncle Sam, here, is being semi-literal but still rhetorical, reminding the lads who’s boss. Daddy as slang for male lover is found in the early 1900s and still calls up sexual dominance today.

As early as 1681, there’s evidence of daddy referring to pimps. Records from the early 17th century show daddy being used for any controlling and older figure, regardless of biology. Who’s your daddy? is a slang expression used to show dominance over someone else in an aggressive, playful, or sexual way.ĭaddy goes way back.
