This is an advertisement packaged as “news”
On the one hand, I agree with you. On the other hand, paying less for groceries in this climate kind of is news.
If higher prices are news, so are lower prices.
An Aldi opened up near me 2 months ago and I’m exclusively shopping there now because it’s cheaper than the other local grocery stores. Just wanted to share the news with others who may be looking to save some money on groceries.
Growing up in a small town in the South it was kind of crazy when Aldi and Lidl set up nearby. Not only are the prices so much better on nearly everything but in general the quality of the products was much better than at existing local grocery stores.
The only thing is they’re (especially Aldi) missing a few things that either someone in my household is fussy about the brand or sometimes some regional things. Like you’re not going to find some of the particular ingredients you might want when cooking soul food.
While I’m absolutely stoked that I can finally buy gruyere in Kansas thanks to Aldi, I do agree that sometimes they just don’t have the specific things. Fortunately there’s a Thai grocery and a tortillaria down the road from mine, between the 3 I haven’t needed to even consider Walmart for food.
Aldi is awesome. As someone who pseudo-homesteads, if I can’t grow it or raise it, I buy it from Aldi. It’s the next best thing.
Combo of Aldi’s and a local store got me through college. Got cheap as fuck meat (bless $3/lbs ground pork) at the local store, everything else at Aldi’s
Dude, even as an adult, my meal planning is walking into the store and seeing what’s on sale and going from there.
By that logic, all positive corporate news are advertisement, and thus worthy to be shunned?
No, it’s the framing. Consider this sentence from the story. Does it sound like it was written by a journalist reporting facts or a public relations specialist?
“There’s no frills — just high-quality products at affordable prices which is what customers have grown to love and rely on.”
That’s all opinion. Certainly you can find some products at Aldi that are not high quality, and speaking for what “all consumers have grown to love” is backed by any evidence.
It’s a lightly repackaged press release.
No, that’s simply what discounters, especially Aldi, are known for. Their whole concept relies on this principle and the US is sort of discovering this for themselves nowadays as well. The fact that German grocery stores with this concept are spreading throughout the US is very much evidence of that already.
And all negative ones are ads for the competition.
Yes.
Are ads news now?
It’s Yahoo Finances, they report corporate news which may be interesting for investors.
Speaking of ads, here in UK shops have this “priced matched with Aldi” stickers showing they lowered prices to match aldi… Best advertisement ever! Anything without that sticker? Is cheaper at Aldi… which is other 90% of the shop.
They don’t do any gluten free stuff so I don’t really shop there. But their hams are good and well priced vs the other shops.
Would’ve appreciated it yesterday when I went grocery shopping.
Noticed a few weeks ago they raised prices by 40-50 cents on certain items, then “discount” them by 10-25 cents to make them seem cheaper.
I have a list on my notes app with prices per pound/oz. You can’t fool me, Aldi.
*In America
Please please please come to Canada
What a dumb headline. Did you really need prices in there twice?
How are baguettes “picnicking essentials” in the US? I have literally never seen one at a picnic.
Edit: I will die on this hill…a bread knife isn’t even a part of standard picnic basket kit sold in the US.
Slice it before you go. Are items with bread not found in picnics?
Sandwiches are perfect for a picnic, and it’s an occasion you’d want to gussy them up a bit for. Fancier bread might be the cheapest and most obvious way to do that.
Just going to the wrong picnics I guess! Nice baguette with cheese and salami.
That’s not a picnic, that’s a movie meal. Picnics should be fried chicken, watermelon, and mac n’ cheese.
Do you have other activity-food pairings you can share? I’m curious what’s allowed.
Just going to the wrong picnics I guess! Nice baguette with cheese and salami.
That’s not a picnic, that’s a movie meal. Picnics should be fried chicken, watermelon, and mac n’ cheese.
You obviously do not have a Leatherman Flair. Knife with serrated tip for crusty bread, pâté spreader, cocktail fork, corkscrew, etc.
I had no idea there was such a thing as a Leatherman for high-class occasions.
The gold part even has a cluster of grapes embossed on it. Ooh la la
You don’t use a knife on a baguette, you freak. You tear a piece of. Ever hear of breaking bread?
Fuck’s sake, heathens.
Everyone knows that the only way to eat a baguette is while wearing a striped shirt and a black beret after taking it home from the boulangerie on your bicycle.