It has been estimated (by the NY Times, and other blog counting services) that there are 3 million blogs and 5 million daily blog readers. Twenty percent of these blogs go dead after about two months of operation, while many more are started. Of those live and regularly updated, the content, for various reasons, can be very useful. This kind of information, provided free on the internet by bloggers, can be useful if the nuggets of value can be extracted and understood. Creating an interface to make explicit these conversations is key to making what people say available. Most users of the internet have not yet found these conversations accessible, though many people have expressed interest. Our project proposes to create a useable, useful, and enjoyable interface for those who are unfamiliar with either blog terminology (the use of which might aid in searching for them) or how to access blog content that is trustworthy and useful, and how to see the conversations and linking that occur across blogs that concentrate on particular types of information or discussions. This system design relies on technology that already exists, so our concern is with designing the front end effectively. Therefore we will not focus on the algorithms in the back end system, but rather the interface that communicates the results of an existing backend and the topic and conversation searches users perform.