Babble

a magazine and community for the new urban parent

 



Here’s our press release.  And here’s what people are saying about us:

"Babble is the hipster parents' own online magazine." — David Brooks, The New York Times

"It's good, really good. Finally, an exciting, intelligent daily publication and interactive community for urban parents. ... Take a look for yourself...it's a treat."
Huffington Post

"The online Bible for hipster parents" — Details

"A is for Alternadad. B is for Babble.com. C is for Cookie magazine." — Slate.com

"Babble . . . aspires to appeal to educated, culturally engaged urban hipsters who are knee-deep in baby gear and seeking not just advice but the humor in it all."
—Pamela Paul, The New York Times Sunday Styles

"Service, all powerful in traditional parenthood offerings, will play only a partial role here. Humor is in." —The New York Post

"Babble is a really ambitious effort with much to offer. The site is easy to navigate and nicely cross-linked." — Cookie

“Babble has become the go-to site for parents anxious for advice but intimidated by the sunny banality of traditional baby magazines. Its layout is crisp but unpretentious, its gray and burgundy design serene and grown-up in comparison to the screaming pastels of a Babies "R" Us.”  —Baltimore City Paper

"Parents are certainly caregivers, but they are also adults, and Babble.com will address them as such." — Medialife

"10 great blogs every working mum should read - 1. Babble It's great-looking and very arty, with articles about taking your kids to Japan and plenty of unfeasibly well groomed columnists." — Times Online

"The site, which will be updated almost daily and feature interactive community-building features like video sharing and message boards, will attempt to cater to its prospective audience's sensibilities by mixing low-brow and high editorial content." — Marketing Vox

"Babble readers aren't 'vain or adolescent just because they have an iPod,' says editor in chief Ada Calhoun, 30. They want to hold onto the culturally rich life they had as childless adults, 'and they want to be good parents.'" — USA Today

"Whatever the issue, someone is probably discussing it somewhere on the site. And if not, anyone can start a new discussion." — Toronto Star





From the Blogosphere

"My belief is that Babble will tap a need which is so far largely unserved online. To the degree that Babble can work together and augment the parent-blogosphere, the site will be tremendously successful." — Planting Liberally

"As it turns out, Babble.com is as hip and dad-friendly as they claim. You've gotta love a place that rounds up The Zero Boss, MetroDad and, apparently, DaddyTypes. And let's face it, any publication that dares to take on Maisy the Mouse is worth a second look." — Rebel Dad

"Brand spanking new to the scene is Babble, a site devoted to being 'a revolution in parenting magazines: a publication that talks to parents not just as caregivers, but as fun, smart, intellectually curious people.' Well, hallelujah, I say." -- Pop Goes the Library

"I like the site's irreverant attitude towards the nuances of parenting. There is a lot (I mean A LOT) of interesting content to read." — Self Made Mom

"Babble.com, I have come to praise you: Wow! Babble.com doesn't suck. When I first heard about this Web site for "the new urban parent," I figured it was another example of a disturbing trend: Your baby/child is a fashion accessory. "Cookie" magazine, events like Baby Disco and Ramones onesies send the message that you've had a baby, but that doesn't mean you have to stop being an annoying hipster jerk. Babble had all the earmarks — New York City-centric, snarky tone, interns sporting weird haircuts. It was also started by the people behind Nerve.com, the famous sex-focused Web site....OK, here I am a few days since the launch and I'm hooked. Funny blogs, useful information and an overall impression that everyone involved actually enjoys having children." Kid You Not

"According to editor-in-chief Ada Calhoun quoted in last Sunday's New York Times, Babble intends to avoid the fear and didacticism she sees as endemic to the parenting magazine category. Amen ... In a web overrun with mommy-daddy drivel we'll see if this one makes it. I have a good feeling."—Parenting Solved

"Of course I am always looking for signs that our society is moving in the right direction, and at first blush, this looks like one of those signs." — Dad at Work

"Babble is the latest and greatest parenting site up and running" — The Collin Chronicles

"So for all you parents and soon to be parents or even people who think they might one day be parents, I urge you to read Babble and belly laugh like I did over the honesty of the writers and the absolute hysterics of having a baby." — VELVETDE

"Babble is as good as I'd hoped. It's intelligently written, insightful and frequently funny. And it's really content-heavy; there's a ton to read."— Marketing Mommy

"If you ask me, Babble is a breath of fresh air." —DC Baby

"I've been reading the Strollerderby feed with glee ever since it launched. Multi-author blog of Nerve's new parenting site, Babble , it's got a fresh, gender-neutral take on the ups and downs of urban parenting. A lineup of fantastic writers keeps it comin'." — Parent Hacks

"It is hands down the coolest site I've come across in the last while." — Pirate Papa

"Babble has tons of links to entertaining blogs, cute baby stores, and good info, too - plus columns on everything from traveling with babies on band tours to breast feeding. This site makes me feel almost normal."— Whistling in the Dark

 


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