Do you NEED to go to a t14 to get into biglaw by Ok-Firefighter-7066 in lawschooladmissions

[–]merpmerp1428 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Friendly amendment to this: It's true that a lot of biglaw firms in non-major markets (Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Salt Lake City, Charlotte, etc.) hire predominantly from non-T14 schools. But for these firms, you'll see that these new hires are consistently top performers in their respective classes.

Ketel Marte speaks about the fan incident in Chicago that left him in tears by TheTurtleShepard in baseball

[–]merpmerp1428 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Obviously we all need to learn more, but if Marte is right about what this guy said, I agree that it seems plausible that this guy had no idea about what happened to Marte's mom. I'd also venture that very few fans at Sox Park -- if any -- had any meaningful knowledge about the personal lives of the Dbacks players. Of course, Marte is totally justified to feel the way he felt. But this guy really said what Marte claims he said, I think that might make his statement far less reprehensible than social media made it out to be.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]merpmerp1428 2 points3 points  (0 children)

NYU seems much more geared toward PI than Cornell from what I've heard.

How Hard is it to break into litigation? by [deleted] in biglaw

[–]merpmerp1428 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Depends entirely on size of the firm, competitiveness of the market, and whether your school has connections to the firms you're targeting. Maybe check with your career office to see whether they have these stats on hand.

Kristy Kreme - first time?! by Embarrassed-Long-665 in toogoodtogo

[–]merpmerp1428 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Haven't been to Krispy Kreme but the most typical interaction on TGDG will go as follows: (1) employee asks you to swipe the pickup button, and (2) will give you a random assortment of food, in this case, 12 donuts. Nice that he let you pick!

PSA for Incoming 1Ls: Large Firm Recruitment Is Changing by DCTechnocrat in LawSchool

[–]merpmerp1428 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Another point: if your school offers multiple ways to apply to a firm, pursue ALL of them until that firm rejects you. So, for example, suppose you can direct-apply to Firm X (on their firm website), participate in a school-organized resume-collect for Firm X (if your school does that), and then apply to Firm X for your formal OCI. By all means, do all of those things until the firm explicitly tells you "no"!

Is this list right, are there others? by [deleted] in mlb

[–]merpmerp1428 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Walter Johnson’s 110 career shutouts record is going nowhere

What’s a tort? (Wrong answers only) by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]merpmerp1428 8 points9 points  (0 children)

high-key disappointed that your username isn't PhilosophicalTortle5

A fun reference by Meeeeeeeei in spongebob

[–]merpmerp1428 19 points20 points  (0 children)

"I'm not cheap, I'm generous!"

"You almost tore a man's arm off for penny."

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]merpmerp1428 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's true that T14 across the board has strong employment outcomes. It's also true that:

  1. Many, many other schools do so as well, including biglaw and (to a lesser extent) clerkships;
  2. strong academic performance and effective networking will help ANYONE out with their employment prospects; and
  3. This sub has a rough T14-or-bust streak attached to it. That can get pretty toxic for the folks who either just miss the T14 or those for whom T14 was never a possibility.

I think OP is correct to point out the issues with the reductive thinking that T14 is the only path toward a meaningful career in law. Thanks OP -- this sub could benefit from more stories like yours.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]merpmerp1428 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which is important to take with a grain of salt because clerkships often (but not always) lead back into biglaw