You don't launch a popular blog, you build one. The writing isn't the hard part, it's the commitment.

It is hard to check five email inboxes, three voice mail systems, or five blogs that you are tracking.

I believe that all blogs should have at least one set of rhyming words. Just because. Does. Fuzz. Was.

I will not let my sales figures dictate what I say on the blog, because the blog is what I want to say.

If I really have nothing to do, I just watch my cats, take some photos, and go back to my personal blog.

When I first came out there was no such thing as Twitter or Facebook. And the blogs! Like, what is that?

I have an amazing social-media wing man who manages my Facebook fan site. All my blogs get copied there.

I don't read the reviews, the blogs, or anything else. Instead, I feel the audience when I show the film.

So my blog wasn't about "platform" but really, it was everything you are not "supposed" to do in blogging.

I loathe blogs when I look at them. Blogs look, to me, illiterate. They look hasty, like someone babbling.

I like the immediacy of blogs and the democratizing effects of letting millions of voices bloom on the Web.

And I haven't read a lot of blogs but if someone writes about what they care about I'm sure it's interesting.

I have a blog in Chinese, which you can follow, Chinese signs. But I don't even update at all, often I don't.

I read the 'New York Times,' 'USA Today,' the 'Union-Tribune,' then go online to Drudge, CNN, Fox News, blogs.

Well, there are more writers of blogs right now than there are readers, so that's clearly a vanity phenomenon.

Many news organizations have come to resemble the fact-starved blogs they once took pains to remain separate from.

I get daily mentions in blogs, I get mentions in Twitter and in different social media... I know that gets books sold.

Digital activism did not spring immaculately out of Twitter and Facebook. It's been going on ever since blogs existed.

The rock star is dying. And it's a small tragedy. Rock stars have blogs now. I have no use for that kind of rock star.

I no longer buy papers or tabloids or magazines or read blogs. I used to. But it was just filling up my day with hatred.

I don't read blogs but occasionally people tell me about what they contain, and I do take questions that come from blogs.

I check Style.com to look at the collections and love to poke around some of the other fashion blogs to see what's going on.

Some people with blogs are never going to get famous, and they've been doing it for, like, over a year. I feel bad for them.

I grew up in San Diego with immigrant parents, before the food blogs, before this kind of celebrity chef culture we know now.

I don't read literary blogs. I used to read them, but it was upsetting when they would talk, in a snarky way, about my friends.

I'm not going to sit around an pretend I'm not thinking things on my blog when I am thinking them and when I'm open to rebuttal.

I think that Twitter and YT and blogs are keeping media more honest. Everyone can be a journalist now. Everyone is a fact checker.

I live in a world where there's magazines and blogs, and people feel like they are allowed to criticize me, and in the meanest way.

Creating your own blog is about as easy as creating your own urine, and you’re about as likely to find someone else interested in it.

A key element of Web blogs is the community element. Most blogs are not self-contained; they are highly dependent on linking to each other.

I don't read fashion blogs all that much. I do read magazines, and I trust my friends' opinions, even though we all dress very differently.

Sometimes people talk about music, whether blogs or magazines, in a strange way where it doesn't seem like they're actually listening to it.

Social media, like blogs, are truth-seeking technologies. In fact, the Internet itself is the greatest truth-generating device ever created.

In a way, publishing in 2005 was similar to publishing in 1950. Nobody kept blogs; that was still optional. I didn't even have a website then.

I used to go on all these blogs and all these websites which I really don't like to go and read about at all, and I couldn't care less anymore.

A newspaper is the center of a community, it's one of the tent poles of the community, and that's not going to be replaced by Web sites and blogs.

You know, I don't read the blogs, or go on the internet, and I really just don't know what people are saying because... well I guess I'm afraid to.

Governments must ensure that the power of blogs is cultivated and implemented in collaborative ways, with a view to preserve peace and human dignity.

Without editors planning assignments and copy editors fixing mistakes, reporters quickly deteriorate into underwear guys writing blogs from their den.

I'm not going to lie. I check the iTunes charts. It's all about the iTunes charts. I only go on the Internet for the iTunes charts and basketball blogs.

There's just a proliferation of blogs and the chattering classes and people talking. More avenues for people to make their feelings known, which is good.

Fashion intersects a lot with art and film and music, and that was appealing to me. I read a bunch of fashion blogs and wanted to be part of the community.

If people want to be better writers, they can't just read the blogs! You've got to look at something that's outside this rushing world of evanescent words.

At a certain point, you try to avoid reading feedback or blogs because there's always the risk of reading some sort of negative stuff that can be hard to hear.

I try not to read the blogs or what people say about me. Because that's what brings everybody down - no matter what you do, you're always going to have haters.

I'm not good with blogs and social networks because those things come and go. By the time I am used to one thing, a new type of social media is already trending.

There's plenty to criticize about the mass media, but they are the source of regular information about a wide range of topics. You can't duplicate that on blogs.

I have an RSS reader, Feeddler. I mostly subscribe to board game blogs - they have reviews of new games and discussions about trends. It's straight-up dork talk.

One question that often comes up is why, in this age of blogs and tweets and instant digital communication of all kinds, it still takes so long to publish a book.

My family has had to move and change their name and have been subject to threats from right wing blogs calling for my son, for example, to be killed to get at me.

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