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Disney Quietly Shut Down Babble, the Parenting Blog It Once Acquired For $40 Million (techcrunch.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Babble, a parenting blog that Disney acquired reportedly for about $40 million to help it target hipster parents, quietly ceased publishing in the middle of December, TechCrunch has learned. "For everything there is a season, and after more than a decade of serving as a community and resource for parents, Babble will be saying goodbye," reads a post from the site's editors. "To all the moms, dads, family, friends, writers, and readers who supported us -- thank you. We are so grateful for the time spent sharing your stories and your lives, through all the ups and downs of raising tiny humans."

When Disney acquired Babble -- originally spun out from a (now-defunct) dating website called Nerve.com -- in 2011, it was part of a bigger push at the media giant to built up a stock of content properties to target younger parents, the kind that turn to online media for parenting advice and inspiration. The idea was that Disney would populate the site with lots of evergreen content aimed at savvy middle class parents -- recent articles included a post on soft-serve pickle-flavored ice cream and kids nailing 80s-style Halloween costumes -- to help it build a connection to these consumers that would lead, over time, to trusting and using and exposing kids to other Disney products as they grew up. But times have changed. The Disney Interactive Media Group that housed Babble doesn't exist as such anymore -- and Babble's two founders, Rufus Griscom and Alicia Volkman, moved on years ago from Disney.

3 of 20 comments (clear)

  1. Nerve wasn't a dating web site by DogDude · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was a web site that had articles having to do with sex. They added a dating component only towards the end of their existence.

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    I don't respond to AC's.
  2. Quietly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So they made an announcement on the site that they were shutting it down. How is that "quietly"?

  3. Social media is generational now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We once thought social media networks were here to stay, they're not. Almost everything is generational, kids never want the same things as their parents, the same is true of social media. Kids today think Facebook is for middle aged people, Instagram is for "serious" pictures and they have at least one flavour of the month social network right now, in 10 years time another will rise for the next generation. I wouldn't want to work in marketing and PR right now, trying to keep up with social media trends.