
* An in-depth look at Netflix’s most lovable lawyer, Foggy Nelson. [Netflix Life]
* Berkeley Law is not alone in dealing with scandals. Where is Olivia Pope when you need her? [Law and More]
Keeping Law School Accessible When Federal Loans Fall Short
As federal borrowing caps tighten financing options for law students, one organization is stepping in to negotiate the terms they can't secure alone.
* Wasting time, but churning bills, creating PDFs. [Daily Lawyer Tips]
* Environmental law will never be the same now that Justice Scalia’s dead. Mother Nature, for one, is grateful. [Huffington Post]
* Court rules there is no constitutional right to BDSM. [Slate]
LexisNexis Practical Guidance Rolls Out Dedicated Practice Area for AI & Technology
The new generation of AI-related legal issues are inherently cross-disciplinary, implicating corporate law, intellectual property, data privacy, employment, corporate governance and regulatory compliance.
* A battle over Texas’s voter ID law is coming back to the Fifth Circuit, just in time for the 2016 election. And if the Supreme Court stays split in its presumed 4-4 breakdown, the Fifth Circuit could get the final word on the law. [The Atlantic]
* A fascinating look inside the shady business of wrangling amicus briefs. [Chicago Tribune]
* Is Camille Paglia flirting with Donald Trump support? [Lawyers, Guns and Money]
* Corporate lawyers agree: leaving a vacancy on the Supreme Court is a terrible idea. [Wall Street Journal]