A Quote by Rick Moranis

I have a problem with blogs - all the best writers benefit from edits. — © Rick Moranis
I have a problem with blogs - all the best writers benefit from edits.
I don't understand blogs. People used to write to make money, no? You didn't give it away. I have nothing against blogs. I don't have a problem with them. But it's like, 'What are you doing? Why aren't you working?
It's the same argument people say about the blogs. The blogs are responsible. No, they're not. The blogs are like anything else. You judge each one based on its own veracity and intelligence and all of that.
I admire writers who have the tenacity to write a blog, and I'm told by everyone that it's an important element in remaining visible in the online world. That said, I'm personally turned off by writers' blogs that do nothing but sing their own accomplishments.
Yeah. When I was in high school I used to do stupid video edits. I would hook-up two VCRs or three VCRs and do film edits for the basketball team and stuff like that because I was always just into doing that.
For almost a year, I sporadically made these rather lame video blogs in my dorm. These video blogs were reflective of most video blogs during that time in that they had no real structure and were kind of just all over the place.
Well, there are more writers of blogs right now than there are readers, so that's clearly a vanity phenomenon.
Fans write to us via our publisher and more than ever via the Internet, blogs and fan sites, and good writers should be actively seeking out that interaction. Gone are the days when writers are dead or hidden away in dusty attics; nowadays, you've got to get out there.
I read my web blogs, my tech blogs, it's highly educational, folks.
Much of the lifeblood of blogs is search engines - more than half the traffic for most blogs.
The English may not always be the best writers in the world, but they are incomparably the best dull writers.
I don't read blogs but occasionally people tell me about what they contain, and I do take questions that come from blogs.
I also spend a lot of time on political blogs, and music blogs getting things for my radio show.
The important thing is to write when your brain is at its best. Work edits or do outside reading with the rest of the day.
Writers get to stay with the piece. They don't just turn the script in and somebody else takes it over and goes out and produces it and edits it and all that stuff. We stay with the piece all the way through.
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.
You have very short travel blogs, and I think there's a split among travel writers: the service-oriented writers will say, 'Well, the reader wants to read about his trip, not yours.' Whereas I say, the reader just wants to read a good story and to maybe learn something.
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