Document entire websites, not a specific document from a site, by citing it within the text of your paper. Always double space lines and include the entire URL. Refer to the following example:
The APA style website leads researchers to publications and other resources that
help them with all types of citation issues (http://www.apastyle.org).
Reference blog entries both in-text and in your APA style reference list (bibliography). Indent the second and all subsequent lines of reference-list entries five spaces to create a hanging indent. Use the following format to cite a blog entry in your reference list.
Jones, T. (2010, June 1). An inside look at the NHL playoffs. Message posted to
http://www.hockeypeople.com
Your corresponding in-text citation looks the same as it does for a traditional source. Use APA's author-date format (Jones, 2010). Alternatively, you can include the author's last name as part of the narrative, as Jones (2010) suggests. If the author is an organization or entity other than a person, include the group's name in place of the author's last name and first initial in your references.
Cite traditional sources, such as newspaper articles, the same as if you had accessed the material in print. At the end of the reference, however, APA requires that you add the full URL from which the information was accessed, as exampled below. Italicize the newspaper's name.
Egan, T. (2009, June 6). Rangers look ahead to NHL Draft. The New York Times.
Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/includefullurl