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Thre year-old writes letter to cameron. I don't think so.

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Chunkles | 01:37 Wed 01st Feb 2012 | News
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I have two children, a girl and a boy who (in my humble opinion) are very intelligent. They were both walking by ten months and could both speak clearly by the age of two. However, they could not write until they went to school aged four. So I am very sceptical of a three year-old that can write a letter to Sainsbury's let alone know where to send it.

OK. I know what's going on here. The parents write the letter, put in a few deliberate typing errors and pretend it's from the little girl. It then miraculously appears on the mother's blog.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16812545
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Don't know why I wrote cameron. It should have been Sainsbury's.
yes it all sounds a bit iffy! lets hope little lilly can repeat the trick in front of a captive audience. she doesn't even go to school.
I see nothing wrong here.

Youngsters often need a little help with writing their letters. A 10-year-old friend of mine was really interested in ferries, so I helped him to write a letter which we sent to about 50 companies. His bedroom was soon crammed with brochures, postcards, photographs, company literature, car stickers, models and loads more freebies.

There seems to be nothing more to the letter than a proud mum pointing out her daughter's acute sense of observation. My aunt, on the other hand, regularly received payments from women's magazines for letters which had allegedly been penned by her cat!
;-)

Chris
I was just wondering why you put Cameron:-)
Think I prefer it to be called Tiger bread rather than Giraffe bread.
Wonder if Tesco will call it that too or is it just Sainsbury's.
PS: The assumption that a 3-year-old can't write might not necessarily be accurate. I've no idea what his writing was like but my cousin was reading fairly 'advanced' children's books (such as the 'Just William' stories and the works of Rudyard Kipling) at the age of 2½. He could read them out loud with the fluency of an adult (including putting the stresses and intonations in exactly the right places).
Sounds like a gifted child Chris.
Probably so, MissP, but I've no idea how good a solicitor he is these days!
My 13 year old daughter could write her own name when she was 2 and was a fluent reader and writer at 3. When she was 6 she read Wuthering Heights to herself. My other children didn't read and write anywhere near as fluently until much later, but each child has it's own special abilities and some kids write very early so i see nothing particularly odd in the Sainsbury's letter.
Why am I not bothered about whether or not this was written by a 3yr old but am more concerned about Sainsbury's changing the name of the bread!
Undoubtedly the bread tastes exactly the same whatever it is called.

Presumably it was given the name 'Tiger Bread' by some marketing person who had actually never seen a Tiger or tasted one and did not know that the Bread did not resemble it in the slightest.

Move on 10 years, and some 3 year old does the exact same thing, but christens the tasteless splodge of polystyrene taste-alike 'giraffe Bread'.

Maybe I'm missing something, but both are massively wrong in their naming. Take it home and wait anything less than two hours, you will soon reach the conclusion you are eating 'Aarkvark Bread'.
Hands up who's ever heard of Tiger Bread? It obviously wasn't selling, but, now thanks to this marketing stunt, Giraffe bread is splashed across the media.
Well I've certainly heard of 'tiger bread', Toby!

It looks too much like cheese-topped bread (which I often buy) for my liking. It's too easy to pick up the wrong one!
I don't shop at Sainsburys Buenchico. That's probably why I've never heard of it.
It might be time for you to visit Specsavers, Toby ;-)

A quick web search confirms that it's sold in Asda, Tesco, Waitrose & Morrisons, and that Warburton's bake it as well!
Well perhaps you're right. I read "Sainsbury's is renaming its tiger bread" I
assumed it was a product and name exclusive to them.
Awww, you're all (apart from a few) heartless cynics! Why, for once, can't you read a nice news story and thing "ahhh, bless, the little poppet" and smile. Does news have to be all doom and gloom? Why try to look further into it?
I could read and write by the age of 3 so I'm not too sceptical, I was also relatively observant and creative too. Fast forward thirty years and I can still read and write but I'm no longer observant and being creative doesn't pay the bills :c)

Good on the kid and I actually hope that it IS true.
My youngest could read and write at 3.
Exactly the sort of thing a child would pick up on the surface of tiger bread does look more like the markings of a giraffe... can just imagine it... small child sees mum pick up a loaf saying shall we have tiger bread
Small child saying why isn't it stripey like a tiger then?
publicity for sainsbury. job done !

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