
Making The Case For Annalise Keating As An Important Fictional Lawyer
Analyzing the cultural context of How To Get Away With Murder's Annalise Keating.
Analyzing the cultural context of How To Get Away With Murder's Annalise Keating.
Apparently no one brushed up on legal ethics over the break.
It seems our freaked out law students have all been scared about the felony murder rule.
The latest case of the week addresses sleeping pill killings.
Autopsies and sex go together like... well they really shouldn't go together.
Finally, a scene that realistically depicts what being a lawyer is really like.
What moment had columnist Alex Rich saying, “that is exactly what law school is like”?
The internet is vast and there are recaps aplenty, so we are focusing on the legal inaccuracies.
There is something just so scream-worthy about a show that can't bother to even get the basics right.
Absurd dialogue and even more ridiculous plotlines? You might love this show.
Proper trust accounting and three-way reconciliation are essential for protecting client funds and avoiding serious compliance risks. In this guide, we break down these critical processes and show how legal-specific software can help your firm stay accurate, efficient, and audit-ready.
* When people tell you that you can do anything with a law degree, they’re wrong. Sounds like… everything Elie writes. [Slate] * Student debt is dragging down the economy. Is today “every news outlet catches up with Elie Day”? [New York Times] * Everyone’s talking about the law student turned prostitute. What about the law professor who was a gigolo? [The Nota Bene] * Baker Hostetler lawyer leaving the law to start a gym. With any luck he’ll have a championship dodgeball team in no time. [Crain's Cleveland Business] * Just a reminder, there isn’t a “telling a university everything you’ve done for an oral history” privilege. [BBC] * An argument for Republicans to get serious about loosening the reins on technological innovation like the Republican Party of old. But that might require saying no to some billionaire donor, so that’s off the table. [The American Conservative] * Professor Will Baude pointed us to a fun new law professor blog from Professor Richard Re, soon to be of UCLA Law, with an even more fun title. Here he compares Justice Sotomayor’s dissent in Schuette to Quidditch. [Re's Judicata] * A new show about law school. It’s supposedly about criminal law, but the trailer looks more like a professional responsibility fact pattern. [YouTube]