But while not all the blogs survived,
Blawg Review not only lives on, but thrives.
Hosted by law student and Renaissance man David Gulbransen of the blog Preaching to the Perverted, this week's
Blawg Review not only recaps the best of the legal blogs but also sets a new standard for Blawg Review page design.
Not exact matches
Perhaps the future of conventional media isn't bright, but
Blawg Review continues to thrive.
We're
not saying it's sure to get your blog permanently recorded as part of legal history, but it might help if you host
Blawg Review.
«
Blawg Review Makes Its Return at the Declarations and Exclusions Blog Main Things You Can't Do on a Plane: Vol.
For those of you who don't submit your stuff for weekly
Blawg Review deadlines, get cracking.
Okay, Halloweenies, whether «You're Going As Someone Who Is
Not Going To Be A Supreme Court Justice» or «If You're Going As Some Other Member Of The Bush White House» or «If You're Going As An Author, Librarian, Or Allegedly Infringing Search Engine» or «If You're Going As A Blogger Or A Blawger» or «If You're Going As One About To Explode From The Pressures Of Modern Life In General» or any number of other costumes Denise Howell invented and tucked into her exhaustive wrap - up of last week's legal blogging, you should read
Blawg Review # 30 first.
«You have to
not only love, but stand in awe at the wit and energy behind
Blawg Review # 15, hosted this week by fellow management employment lawyer, George Lenard at George's Employment
Blawg,» writes Mike Fox.
In addition to thanking Ed and the
Blawg Review team, my thanks go out as well to my Stem colleagues, Emma Durand - Wood and Laurel Fulford, without whose help this edition would
not have been possible, as well as to Stem founder Steve Matthews, at whose invitation I had the opportunity to join you this week.
Don't think that because
Blawg Review # 94 is hosted here at Diane Levin's Mediation Blog that you'll have to settle for lower quality.
Just a month ago, in writing
Blawg Review No. 111, Bill Gratsch admitted that he did
not who was first, but that when he compiled his first
Blawg directory in January 2003, he found only 57.
This week's
Blawg Review # 104 isn't for the dogs: It's from one!
For those interested in submitting posts for consideration, please use the submission process at
Blawg Review (that is, as per the request of the
Blawg Review editors, please do
not send me any suggested posts directly).
This week, however, Res Ipsa Blog speaks
not just for itself, but for the universe of other legal bloggers, as it hosts
Blawg Review # 186.
Last but by far
not least, if this
blawg review left your appetite unsatisfied, check out this week's Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Kin
blawg review left your appetite unsatisfied, check out this week's Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Ki
review left your appetite unsatisfied, check out this week's
Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Kin
Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Ki
Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Kingdom.
Unlike Darwin's theory of evolution, you won't find any «missing links» in this
Blawg Review, which offers tips from around the legal blogosphere on surviving in this economy.
«Twas the
Blawg Review before Christmas, with no clicking of mouse,
Not a blawger was stirring, not even Althou
Not a blawger was stirring,
not even Althou
not even Althouse.
And if links like these aren't enough incentive to draw you to
Blawg Review # 159, perhaps you'll be enticed by the opportunity to reacquaint yourself with some of your favorite nursery rhymes which are interspersed throughout.
Fortunately you do
not have to wait that long for the next lot of
blawg reviews.
Blawg Review # 231 is good reading, but it's
not necessarily for the faint of heart (you'll know what I mean when you get to the section entitled «The Stripper & The Geisha»).
The elusive and talented Ed of
Blawg Review has disseminated an e-mail reminder that you legal blawggers have
not one but two opportunities to participate in legal blogging roundups on Monday.
Don't forget that
Blawg Review is published every Monday.
Even as host of
Blawg Review # 163, Brian Ritchey doesn't stray far from his own blog's mission of helping firms attain More Partner Income.
You wouldn't expect a simple
Blawg Review from a site with a name like The Complex Litigator, and this week's
Blawg Review # 221 doesn't disappoint.
Sheesh, I try to create some juice for this month's canadianized version of
Blawg Review by commending your post and I
not only get a back - handed compliment from Erik, but I instigate a pissing match with you.
That impressive streak was nearly broken last week, but thanks to a last - minute substitution we now have
not one legal blog news roundup today, but two:
Blawg Review # 223 (Sphincter Rules edition), and
Blawg Review # 223 (Caribana edition).
Blawg Review editor «Ed Post» managed to keep his name a secret, if
not his face, when he showed up at LegalTech New York's blogger breakfast Wednesday morning.
When considering a theme for this week's
Blawg Review, one thing that struck me was that lawyers do
not seem to spend nearly as much time screwing around on the web as your average employee.
So
not surprisingly, with gas prices on the increase and the economy on the decline, this week's
Blawg Review aggregates the best advice from around the blogosphere on law firm survival in economic hard times.
But to help him in writing
Blawg Review # 188, Eric Turkewitz had
not only that icon of counterculture protest, but also a whole bevy of actual blawgers.
Incidentally, if you haven't yet hosted a
Blawg Review yourself, maybe the possibilty of an «Instalanche,» i.e., an avalanche of traffic to a blog after a very popular site links to a post, will give some added incentive.
If you haven't seen it already,
Blawg Review # 158 is up and running at the Mommy
Blawg, with a theme of «Midwives and the Law» in honor of International Midwives» Day.
And if
not, did you remember to submit it to
Blawg Review?
«It has come to the attention of your anonymous Editor that some lawyers, law students, and law professors would like to be contributors to
Blawg Review, but are worried about losing clients, getting hard - marked, or jeopardizing tenure... To enable everyone to be a contributor to
Blawg Review, without fear or favor, there is now a convenient submission form created by blogcarnival.com for
Blawg Review, so you don't have to use your regular email, if you like the new form.
In the tradition of mummering, every blogger visited in
Blawg Review # 89 will be permitted to ask no more than three questions in a single private email to the editor as to his identity — each question requiring a simple «yes or no» answer — but may
not ask a direct question as to a name or other pseudonym used by the editor, such as, «Are you so - and - so?»
If you want to catch up on more than 30 of your favorite law blogs, then don't miss this edition of
Blawg Review.
Take a trip over to
Blawg Review # 108 this week — and see if it doesn't put a smile on your face as well.
Make sure you don't commit the eighth deadly sin of missing this installment of
Blawg Review.
I don't know if it's true that blondes have more fun, but readers of both this week's and last week's blonde - streaked
Blawg Reviews certainly do.
But the coolest link in this week's
Blawg Review isn't law related at all: Check out these 10 - foot «photographs» drawn with the humble ball point pen.
So it's
not surprising that in hosting
Blawg Review # 183, Kralowec opted for another first: a California - themed
Blawg Review, in honor of Kralowec's home state.
The only fault that I could find with this week's pirate - themed
Blawg Review # 153 (or Blarrg
Review) is that it's simply
not C (sea)- worthy.
I've followed his blog ever since and commend to you
not just today's
Blawg Review but all of David's regular postings on health law issues.
For those
not familiar,
Blawg Review is a weekly collection of the best of the legal blogosphere, assembled each week by a different law blogger.
Not surprisingly, Scott Greenfield, the blogosphere's most prolific law blogger (if you don't believe me, then take a look at his monthly archives in the left menu bar of his blog) has done Simple Justice to
Blawg Review # 170.
As someone who, well out of law school, still wakes up in a cold sweat worried that I have a final in the morning in a class I haven't been to in months, it is with mixed emotion that I report that Professor Kingsfield is back this week as host of
Blawg Review # 80.
«
Blawg Review # 38: Resolve to be a better blawgger Main Note to self: When committing homicide, don't post «I did it.»»
An editor's note explains that this is an alternative to Schwimmer's post, «which is
not by any measure a
Blawg Review.»
HealthBlawg blogger (and my fellow Bay Stater) David Harlow hosts
Blawg Review # 154 today, which,
not so coincidentally, is World Health Day.
It is essential to our project that we live up to those expectations, and
not use the privilege of hosting
Blawg Review for some other presentation, however interesting that might be.»