Top 40 Lebanese Blogs! - Includes Many Familiar Faces

Lebanese bloggers: Quirky, funny and always have politics on their minds.
Lebanon’s 40 Most Visited Blogs With Reviews
In spite of causing quite a kerfuffle in the Twittersphere (you can't rank bloggers based on analytics without causing an uprising on the comment section), this oddball Norwegian duo attempts to rank the 40 most visited Lebanese blogs. Not an easy feat.
Al Bawaba is proud to say that most of these blogs have been featured on the Blog Roundup at one point or another, including our regulars.
Al Bawaba is proud to say that most of these blogs have been featured on the Blog Roundup at one point or another, including our regulars.
Source: 2Famous
Lebanon’s 40 Most Visited Blogs: This One Ranks 35 (or 36)
It's honorable when someone takes criticism with a grain of salt. Instead of having a massive rant about his ranking, this Lebanese blogger takes his ranking from the previous blog in good humor and wants to work on his shortcomings. A good attitude never goes out of style.
"Though I might be bounced to 36 as it appears, one blog may have been missed. Nevertheless, I will take their advice and experiment with a few designs and see if anything sticks."
"Though I might be bounced to 36 as it appears, one blog may have been missed. Nevertheless, I will take their advice and experiment with a few designs and see if anything sticks."
Source: Jad Aoun
The Lebanon Blogs Aggregator Now Open to Jordanian Blogs
So, here's some amazing news for the Jordanian blogging community! Lebanon Aggregator is now allowing Jordanian blogs, which should allow more merging between the two vibrant blogging hubs. Also, this might encourage some fledgling Jordanian bloggers to take a step forward.
Source: And Far Away
Your Choice: Your Career or Your Identity Or other stories of Empowerment, Lebanese Style
"The new regulation adopted by the Lebanese Internal Security Forces to prevent women from wearing the hijab to work on the field has stirred a lot of debate and controversy in the highly sect-sensitive state of Lebanon."
Source: Cafe Thawra
















