Juno: Honest to blog?

I blog; therefore, I am.

I read blogs quite a bit.

I like blogs. they're good times.

I can put up a blog in 10 seconds.

Esquire needs to be more like a mommy blog

We all know about blogs and how big they are.

I don't have a particular go-to political blog.

If you neglect your blogs they don't take up much time.

I think a lot of journal articles should really be blogs.

I try to stay away from all the blogs and messages boards.

I try not to read blogs. The comments are extremely harsh.

Tumblr was simply a tool for anyone to make a blog like mine.

I got into writing short stories and blogs while on the road.

Blogs are for anoraks who couldn’t get published any other way.

Blogs are for anoraks who couldn't get published any other way.

I think it hurts blogs when they have to turn off their comments.

My site has the whole thing - blogs, information, video interviews.

I read my web blogs, my tech blogs, it's highly educational, folks.

I'm terrible at posting regularly; I don't deserve the blog success!

People are mean and hateful, angry - haters everywhere, stupid blogs.

I have a problem with blogs - all the best writers benefit from edits.

Science blogs bore me. When everyone is an expert, no one is an expert.

Blogs are the main exception I make in my aversion to complex machinery.

I no longer buy papers or tabloids or magazines or read blogs. I used to.

Many of us get our news from social networks, blogs, and daily aggregators.

It turns out that social networks drive a heck of a lot of traffic to blogs.

I buy way too many cookbooks and read food blogs at night when I can't sleep.

One of the liberating things about having a blog is the total vision it allows.

Use your blog to connect. Use it as you. Don’t ‘network’ or ‘promote.’ Just talk.

People only see you in blogs, and they think they know everything about your life.

Never blog just to put something out there. I would post only things that excite me.

I don't read blogs. I'm living the life they're writing about. So why read about it?

I enjoy reading blogs, but am not interested in having my spurious thoughts out there.

I'm not big on looking up myself. I don't get Google alerts, and I don't look on blogs.

Blogs are a great way to monitor and even participate in the chatter about your new site.

I don't read blogs, I don't have MySpace, I don't have Facebook or Twitter - none of that.

Fashion blogs are great, but I also take inspiration from movies, nature, everyday objects.

While I love the medium, I've always been skeptical about the value of blogs as businesses.

I mostly read online - tech/VC blogs. I also enjoy the 'NY Times', 'Atlantic', 'New Yorker'.

Much of the lifeblood of blogs is search engines - more than half the traffic for most blogs.

Blogs seem to have two magnetic poles, one attracting friends, the other repulsing relatives.

I do feel like the blogs that I follow share an aesthetic and draw a lot from '90s influences.

Blogs are easy to start, but unless the author is famous, it takes years to build a following.

Franchesca and Sharkey, my French bulldogs, have their own blog. And they are brilliant at it.

In the world's eyes, what they know of me is from the blogs. What they know is from the media.

My career wouldn't exist without blogs, electronic text, hyperlinks, and mass online audiences.

I also spend a lot of time on political blogs, and music blogs getting things for my radio show.

I subscribe to about 200 blogs. I look for insights and good writing, and I look to get smarter.

Sometimes you might feel blogs are like TV: You have a thousand channels, but nothing good is on.

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