Mine are all over the place. I don't care anything much about layout, ease of use, readability. I'm determined and will put up with most anything to get what I want.
I've been, well, outraged by the kind of news coverage that has an agenda. Now that I am old I agree with what William Buckley said of himself after he got old: facts were of the most interest. So I don't watch tv nor read much in newspapers. Won't listen to talk radio. I haunt The Conservative Treehouse. Caught my attention when they had an admin and a squad of volunteers who investigated the coverage given to George Zimmerman/Trayvon Martin case. I really admire and rely on their dedication. I don't comment there.
I also read Takimag because I like the quality of the writing. I think Kathy Shaidle's a hoot and like to read Theodore Dalrymple (pen name, I think), who I think was a prison doctor/psychiatrist. There's mostly a lot of rants here. And that's the opposite of the Treehouse.
For more rants, I like Unz (the Unz review): billed as an alternative media selection: a collection of interesting, important and controversial perspectives largely excluded from the American mainstream media.
These are all over the place and quite a few are really out there. I like how focused they are in their wild-eyed speculation about history, current, modern and ancient. For all the above sites, I read the comments to the articles. I often find interesting links that way. They wouldn't be the same for me if they were straight thinkpieces and had
no audience response, challenge, interaction with the authors and ideas.
I read the Dilbert blog: Scott Adams. Just a whole bunch of fun to me. I like to hear the ideas people have about what is behind the curtain. There seem to regularly be over 3000 comments attached to each of his posts and I don't read those.
Style, I've cut back a lot on the sites I would read (besides here, of course). I like Lisa Armstrong, who is the fashion editor of the Telegraph. So I'll read a fair number of articles there throughout the month. I've run into the paywall/limits, though. I obviously don't like it enough to pay. I just stopped opening articles entirely for a month, out of cussedness. After I found out to open a private tab in my browser but keep my bookmarks, now I read whatever I want. I don't read the comments there, as they're mostly idle jeering.
I really like the blog of a former? YLF member who's become a stylist/shopper. Rachel Klewicki. I like how she puts her own outfits together and I relate to how she explains concepts. That's really important to me. I read for ideas. And even the visuals I like are because it's an idea that hadn't occurred to me yet.
I use Pinterest a lot. Won't start my own board. Too much of a nuisance. But I keep it as an easy search tab and when I want to see how someone styled an item or color, I open it.
On the other hand, I tend to avoid Polyvore like the plague. I can't relate to a collage of clothing that is usually out of scale and quite obviously cannot show any movement.
ETA: I also like Joe Baltake's blog The Passionate Moviegoer. I remember when he was the Phila Daily News critic and what I always liked about him, even if I didn't agree, was exactly his passion. He writes now, sporadically about favorite neglected films and actors. It's typographically hard to read but I persist because it's so absorbing to me.
And YouTube when I feel like going down the rabbit hole hearing different musical versions of something. I find it really easy to use because the site picks up on that and suggests alternative artists or songs. Though they also suggest based on what I've listened to before and I already know that.