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AIBU?

To wonder why people put birth announcements in the paper?

22 replies

IsEatBedThyme · 20/02/2016 08:53

I've just discovered it costs £85 to put an advert in one of the national newspapers. Surely it's cheaper to buy a load of stamps and announce the news to people via post, or even text and e-mail these days?

OP posts:
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BikeRunSki · 20/02/2016 09:02

Traditionally it was a way of reaching a lot of people quickly. In the days before texting, phones, email etc.

I remember seeing the announcement of the birth of the DD of good friends of my parents in The Times in about 1982. We'd had no idea that she had been born until then. I also remember my gf checking the local and national papers for who had died!

I don't see the point in it now. I don't know anyone who regularly reads a paper.

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AyeAmarok · 20/02/2016 09:04

Because some people (probably mistakenly) believe that loads of people will be oh so interested.

I suppose it's no different to putting marriage /graduation announcements in, but generally I do think anyone who would do so, in a national newspaper, has a bit of an over-inflated sense of their own self importance.

Deaths are different.

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Katenka · 20/02/2016 09:05

My mum did it when I had dd.

I couldn't have cared either way. She did it because it was traditional I think.

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ImogenTubbs · 20/02/2016 09:07

It's a status thing for 'society' types, I think.

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soapboxqueen · 20/02/2016 09:09

My mum put both of my children's birth announcements in the local paper. It's still quite popular for birthdays, anniversaries etc

There was no real point because everyone who would need to know was told.

I just made her happy 😊

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Pseudo341 · 20/02/2016 09:09

I think people do it because they like the tradition. Also it's a nice keepsake to hang onto. I wouldn't bother personally but each to their own.

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Cabrinha · 20/02/2016 09:11

It's just a nice tradition. I wouldn't bother, but why not? For a certain social group they probably do read and notice "oh the Family have had another boy". But mostly I expect it's just the tradition of placing the advert, then the fun of keeping the paper.

Life without any traditions would be less interesting I think - Xmas certainly would be less fun without a carrot for Rudolph!

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Andrewofgg · 20/02/2016 09:12

Traditionally I suppose to reach extended family and friends you've lost touch with but who will be pleased about the baby or sorry about a bereavement.

It might still work. After all, everyone reads the Daily Telegraph Smile

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MrsJayy · 20/02/2016 09:13

Our local paper has a section and no way round here are we society types Grin it is just a traditional thing to do but I have noticed over the years the Birth announcement section getting smaller maybe 1 or 2 a week when dds were born decades ago there would be columns

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DonkeyOaty · 20/02/2016 09:14

I wish I had done The Times not local free rag with mine [weirdo]

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MrsJayy · 20/02/2016 09:15

I didnt do it but my mum has mine and my sisters cut outs

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Cerseirys · 20/02/2016 09:19

I don't know either. It mainly seems to be society types who like to stealth boast about little Ptolemy or Honoria being born at the Portland Hospital or Lindo Wing!

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Salmotrutta · 20/02/2016 09:21

It was very much a tradition and definitely not for "society types"!

I suppose now it's seen as old fashioned because everything goes on Facebook or people text/e-mail etc.

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yankeecandle4 · 20/02/2016 09:28

I haven't seen birth announcement in our broadsheet for years. The community paper, on the other hand is full of announcements of births to Shaznay-Marie/Hunter-Jay's.

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RaspberryOverload · 20/02/2016 10:36

Our local paper tends to have a couple of births, but loads of deaths. Which I guess lends weight to the idea that it's a generational thing. I never paid for announcements for the birth of my own DCs, but my mum insisted on putting her own announcements in. I didn't see the point as the people who would have been interested had all been told anyway.

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PurpleThermalsNowItsWinter · 20/02/2016 10:42

It's a status thing. A friends (snobby) dmother put her (my friend) engagement, wedding and Dgc announcements in the paper as we would obviously all need to know that her precious dd was doing ok for herself (she wasn't the first to marry or have children amongst us, and the youngest one has never left home or gotten married). My friend is really lovely and nothing like her mother who looks down her nose at most people.

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tilliebob · 20/02/2016 10:45

Around here it's just what you do. We did it for all 3dcs, I've got the paper with my birth announcement in it....just the local weekly paper though, not a national or anything. We recently put dads obituary acknowledgement in the same paper and it was about £70 a throw Shock

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tilliebob · 20/02/2016 10:46

*obituary AND THEN acknowledgement - I think of dad and my brain seizes, it seems.

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kippersyllabub · 20/02/2016 10:51

Our family have always done it. I suppose it isn't necessary now for family history purposes but it's nice to record our births, engagements and deaths as notable things - acknowledging that they're notable only for our family and not anyone else.

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ForalltheSaints · 20/02/2016 11:57

Pride perhaps? Joy maybe?

Very different from death announcements which can come as a shock.

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Sparklingbrook · 20/02/2016 12:00

I have no idea. There are a couple in the local free paper every week in amongst all the deaths.

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TSSDNCOP · 20/02/2016 12:55

We did it with DS in the Telegraph. Did none of you see it?

When he is famous in his chosen field it will be there for the journalists writing about him to find.

Grin

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