It is tagged and categorized fairly richly (via WordPress) and then Guides, Movie and Video Game reviews all called out onto separate pages. Once you are there it is pretty easy to find something you want, but visiting the site every day or reading it's feed does absolutely give you a mish-mash of just about every topic on the planet... it covers my interests, which are all over the map.
Back in the early days it was almost exclusively about tech, HDTV and video games because that is what I was focused on for the first year in my personal life... since then it has widened up quite a bit.
There is even a guide on how to lay laminate wood floors in there because I spent a few weeks doing that with my wife... why wouldn't I want to write that up? It was a lot of work.
It really rubs me the wrong way to think I'm actually being punished by doing that... that had I left those 1-off topics out, I'd have a successful tech site... but as soon as I add that extra content, well then it drags the whole effort down.
Logically, I get it... it makes sense. Another replier pointed out that it kills the grep-ed-ness of the site, not knowing what you are going to get. Makes sense... but there is still this part of my brain that is like "why? why would that HURT it?"
I'm trying to jam my "passion" and my "profession" into the same box and make it all fit, and it's not fitting... and that makes me want to smash the whole box and set it on fire.
Perhaps if you're willing to let other folks look in the box and see what they have, you'll not only get a honest assessment but also some advice on what it holds for you?
I don't think I'm that person. But many folks here are.
Is your content organized around anything in particular? Only reviews? What's your branding besides you?
Care to share?