Sentences with phrase «like blawg»

But Like Blawg Review, I question the format and it's true value.»
So how does hosting a carnival like Blawg Review help?
We need folks who can turn around a couple of thoughtful posts on the legal news of the day for us every once in a while — a little like Blawg Review, but more sporadic and without the need for a highbrow theme, like Victorian porn or Dante's «Divine Comedy.»

Not exact matches

Blawg Review # 138 commemorates World Human Rights Day, by devoting part of the review to human rights issues, and part to the types of matters, like ceremonies, traditions and habits that make us human.
«A law professor blawg designed to feel like a faculty lounge with conversations about law, culture, and academia.»
Furlong's Blawg Review # 207 is structured to resemble your local newspaper, complete with sections like News, Business, Sports and even Comics.
As I blogged about here last week, the editor of Blawg Review kicked off a meme he called Simply the Best, in which he listed his top 10 law blogs and then asked each listed blog to list its 10 top and so on like some blogger pyramid scheme.
We obviously can not continue to rely on all - purpose blawgs like Slaw to cover all tattoo law developments, so who wants to fill this void?
To corrupt an old phrase, I see the Blawg 100 as like a candy bar — half sweetness and half nuts.
What I would like to write about, web strategy wise, is the opportunity Blawg Review provides for legal bloggers looking to establish themselves.
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.
Would you like to see links to your shiny blawg in next week's Blawg Reblawg in next week's Blawg ReBlawg Review?
While Dicus represents a victory for defense attorneys who can cite the ruling as precedent for sentence reductions, law professors like Carissa Hessick at Prawfs Blawg are rejoicing as well because Dicus shows that from time to time, courts still listen when law professors have something worthwhile to say.
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.
In addition, Blawg Review # 69 also hits a couple of other topics like how to determine reasonableness in sentencing law and Orin Kerr's must - read, soon - to - be-classic advice on How to Read A Judicial Opinion: A Guide for New Law Students.
But at Blawg's Blog, Bill Gratsch sees something he really likes in Avvo — its commitment to providing its services «for free.»
Still that must put us in the top 10 %, assuming there are at least 1600 Blawgs out there, and it looks like there are considerably more than that: http://blawgsearch.justia.com/category.aspx
Hannah Hawsl - Kelcher of the Legal Literacy Blog hosts this week's holiday - themed installment of Blawg Review # 87, which features both the naughty (like Leon Gettler's discussion of prosecutors behaving badly or use of PowerPoint to improve congressional debate as described at Freedom to Differ) and the nice (such as Bruce McEwan's discussion of ways to use technology to effect an exchange of ideas).
With a headline like that, we could be referring to only one thing: Blawg Review # 56, from the legal pundits at PointofLaw.com.
«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.
Plus, Blawg Review reveals a preview of the future, with upcoming «all star hosts» like Professor Bainbridge, Arnie Herz, Kevin O'Keefe and even David Lat.
As with many states, there are a multitude of laws and tiers that make up Florida state law — everything ranging from constitutional, regulatory, to tort law — so it's no surprise to see the prevalence of Florida law blogs (or «blawgs,» as the ABA Journal likes to call them).
Ever since Al Gore invented both the Internet and the legal blog back in 1898, it seems like a new Blawg Review («the blog carnival for everyone interested in law») has come out like clockwork every week or so.
Overall, All In looks like a solid effort in the gambling blawg area by DLA Piper, which now produces 12 different blogs.
Not a criticism, but this seems a little like preaching to that proverbial choir (and using that choir to draw traffic to your blawg business).
Like last year, whenever I sat down and thought about what blawgs were candidates for this award, I always came back to SLAW.
If you are a GLR reader and like what you find here, please take a moment to let the good people over at the ABA know by filing a friend - of - the - blawg brief.
And like I always say, everyone's already a winner when it comes to Blawg Review!
Reading some of the themed Blawg Reviews has been like going...
Moving on to privacy rights of a Constitutional nature, Jotwell (the Journal of Things We Like (Lots), a relatively new publication which is to law review articles what Blawg Review is to blawg posts, takes a look at group searches and Fourth Amendment riBlawg Review is to blawg posts, takes a look at group searches and Fourth Amendment riblawg posts, takes a look at group searches and Fourth Amendment rights.
I'm a cyclist, my dad's from Iowa, and my post made the cut: so what's not to like about Rush Nigut's Blawg Review # 147?
Nothing taints the practice of law quite like the Business of Law, and the inherent value of a blawg to both its author and its audience suffers, says I, to the degree that it is driven by — or, heaven forfend, is actually about — the Business of Law.
And now, smashing into Blawg Review like a nuclear blast or a particle beam death ray, comes Blawg Review # 166, detonated by an anonymous English barrister known only as GeekLawyer.
Or, perhaps, you may decide you'd like to play Blawg Review host yourself one day...
The roster of those who hosted Blawg Review looks like a Who's Who of the legal blogosphere.
Journalism is alive and it will be well — and Blawg Review is a tremendous example of what it will look like in the 21st century.
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