What the hell is that on the index page?
Other than THAT, anyone who names a section “for mom” can’t be all bad. Unless it links to a wishlist for Amazon.com. Quite clever, wish I’d thought of that myself, but my mother doesn’t know how to use her credit card on the internet.
On to the “review”:
A consistent weblog of nearly a year’s length, bolstered with regular entries, including a hilarious conversation with his parents about a cordless phone during August of 2001 and “Dream Gifts for Mother’s Day” sent me a visual headache.
Nice site design, clean and uncluttered, with easy navigation, and articles by Druzba worth reading.
PS…I figured out what the hell that graphic is!
druzba.com
Month: January 1970
Review 522
Why do I get all the hard ones?
Superb site design and navigation…spare and clean, just like I like ’em.
The weblog has fits and starts from October 20 of 2000 to the present, but oh what fits and starts…a few postings in October, a few in December through March and May, and then he really takes off!
The poems are masterful, raw, and filled with emotion. I especially liked the newest from October 20, 2001 called “Nine Inches of Emo”. Here’s a quote from that one:
“my parents call me moody
my shrink calls me depressed
they don’t know the emo heart
that beats within my chest”
Evocative, huh?!!
I’m still trying to figure out the grocery list.
koax dot org
Review 495
Tom is probably going think that the reason his site got the review it did is because I am sucking up to him so he won’t go off on TWR on his site. Nope that isn’t it. I would not suck up to Tom unless I really had to in order to live or win lots of money.
The reason Menucha Blog got the best rating there is, is because he is a really good writer. Every post is worth visiting the site for. I started reading his site a long time ago because I found out about Blog You and it links straight to Menucha Blog. I read it, and didn’t think to much of it. Then I talked to Tom about things in general, and guess what, he doesn’t like TWR too much. Oh well, such is life.
So I went back to reading his site, just to see what he would say about our conversation, and it was a little skewed, but that is ok. What I found following that post though, was some very interesting posts. So I read, and read and read some more, and I got hooked.
See there are two types of writers when it comes writing about things on the internet. There are those that try to influence you straight forward, like Zeldman or Evhead, and those that do is subtly. Tom does it very well in the later form.
His design is that of 5 years ago, and that is the way he wants it. He likes it that way and doesn’t care. The best part is, it works! There are other parts of the site other than the weblog which are enjoyable, though not as much as the weblog itself.
Everyone has what he or she would call his or her daily reads. Some vary between different types of weblogs, while others stick to one genre. If this doesn’t fit into your genre, you should make it fit.
Menucha Blog
Review 374
This site is a News/Link site which has around 10 posters, the links link to articles with topics in the area of politics, goverment relations and some random things that don’t really interest me. What they do is take a part of the article and link the qoute or add a half a sentence introducing it. The content is adult oriented and more specifically targeted to the 20something male that has nothing to do when Jerry Springer is on. I gave this site a 3.0 due to the fact what little content that’s there doesn’t interest me a great deal and because the design could use some help.GuerrillaNews[dot]org
Review 364
The main thing that struck me about Sarah G was the lack of any sort of background info. I mean, maybe I just couldn’t find it (which would be a problem anyway), but there was a screaming lack of any sort of “about me†page. This isn’t really the kind of blog where everything about it is intuitively obvious, so it would nice to have a page with some information about the author; something for the reader to grasp until enough of the blog has been read for them to feel comfortable.
In that same vein of thought, I found it interesting that she talked about work so much, but made it a point not to reveal what it is she does.
So, we’ll boil this down to its parts: this is the kind of blog I’d definitely find myself reading regularly, if I knew anything about her. I mean, if the blog is just for her friends who already know her, more power to her; but if it is in fact meant for a wider crowd, the blog can’t really stand up as is.Sarah G