Dumb Problems
I’m going to talk about a dumb blogging problem I experienced recently, so feel free to skip this one.
Like most problems in the world, it started with Tobold. I’ve been a persona non grata in his comment section for years now, but I’ve kept his blog on my Feedly for masochistic reasons. One of his latest posts was so unbelievably asinine though – “Trump isn’t doing any permanent damage!” – that I had had enough. That’s when I realized that I still had him linked over in the Blogroll section of my sidebar, so I figured I should take care of that too.
Big mistake.

Over the years, I have often heard people complain about WordPress, sometimes vehemently enough to drive them to self-host and even try and reinvent the Comment section wheel. While I had misgivings when WordPress changed to the “block” format many years ago, for the most part all the nonsense seemed to just happen to Other People. As it turns out, that’s because WordPress does indeed make inexplicable changes and then hides them in a sort of load-bearing Schrödinger’s box to surprise you with if you ever open it. “Looking to edit your Blogroll? Well, now it’s a Legacy Widget. Also, that widget doesn’t exist anymore! Enjoy the dead cat.”
Now, on the one hand, I can kind of see the logic. The original setup was clunky as fuck: you place a Blogroll widget in your sidebar, and then add entries to the “Link” section of your blog. The new setup is… add a list block to the sidebar with some hyperlinks. Technically, it’s a more elegant solution. Or would be, if they also added information on how to recreate the sort of red bar thing.
Guys, I was raging. It’s bad enough when you have a problem that you find difficult to articulate in a searchable way. But when the problem is caused by someone else laying a goddamn trap in your code… I get it now. The extra dumb thing was how I stumbled onto the solution. After several hours, I was finally giving up and willing to try and grab a JPG of the red bar and manually photo edit some text on it when I ended up right-clicking and Inspecting the bar, e.g. looking at the HTML code directly.
For future reference:
<h3 class="widget-title">
<span>Blogroll</span>
</h3>
More specifically, you have to add the “Custom HTML” widget to the sidebar and then paste that in. Change the title in the Span section to match your needs, of course. I’m assuming that the H3 (header) design is keyed off of the overall Theme (I’m using Mystique) and color options of the blog.
Anyway, that was a lot more of my yesterday than strictly necessary. Also, the Blogroll itself is looking a bit sparse after trimming Tobold and several bloggers who no longer post. Honestly, I never even liked the static list in the first place – it’s just a poor substitute for the glory that was Blogspot’s dynamic blogroll. You know, the one that allowed you to link to 50+ blogs or whatever and display whichever ones posted most recently at the top? If there was ever a wheel that needed reinventing, it is that one.
Posted on October 23, 2025, in Commentary and tagged Blogging, Blogroll, Dumb Problems to Have, Schrödinger's Cat, Wordpress. Bookmark the permalink. 5 Comments.
I still read and comment at Tobold’s but I vet every post by the titles and if it looks like he’s writing about politics (Or the economy or doing any kind of social commentary.) I skip. He’s okay on board games and such still.
I was a bit confused by your use of the past tense when talking about Blogger’s dynamic blog roll. It still works just as you describe, except the limit seems to be a lot higher than 50. I just counted mine and gave up at 200. Although now I look at the lower ends of the list, I notice some that don’t seem to be updating even though I’m pretty sure they’ve posted recently. I might have to look into that…
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Ah, yeah, I meant more that the technology apparently exists only for Blogspot and not elsewhere. Technically RSS feeds and Feedly in general do the same job for the individual, but there was (is!) something special about seeing a little curated ecosystem of active blogs on someone else’s page.
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I self-host my blog and for some reason I had to purchase a blogroll widget. I eventually just made a static blog listing, but as near as I can tell, nobody ever used it. I started up the Daily Blogroll just to have something more useful to me. I guess visitors to my blog will be out of luck, but I hope I replaced it with something better.
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Once upon a time, I used Rohan’s blog as my “homepage” since I enjoyed all the blogs that were linked in the sidebar. Eventually, I went over to Google Reader (RIP) and now Feedly, so my own use-case is minimal for a dynamic blogroll.
That said, a blogroll does (did?) wonders for discoverability. In fact, I really have no idea how blogs even get discovered anymore. Sure, there are random Google searches, but otherwise? I dunno.
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Thanks for the opening laugh up there. I’m old enough to remember using Nils’s roll as a makeshift directory, and it’s kind of sad that the hobby-blogging era (as opposed to Substack, etc.) seems to be over. I wonder if it started with MMOs, which in their heyday kept everyone on the same page.
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