Picard777 wrote: Anecdotes can often be more true to life and helpful than a statistical analysis.

Picard777 wrote: Anecdotes can often be more true to life and helpful than a statistical analysis.
lollymenheimer wrote:I haven't yet seen an anecdote of a biglaw washout with no options after they leave.
edit: from my time here...as a 0L. But since this is apparently the case:Cogburn87 wrote:lollymenheimer wrote:I haven't yet seen an anecdote of a biglaw washout with no options after they leave.
show me one and I'll retract my statement.Picard777 wrote: Anecdotes can often be more true to life and helpful than a statistical analysis.
is very stupid.Yeah, and there are fewer DEFENSE lawyer jobs as well moron, because there are fewer Plaintiff's lawyers.
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I think the point is that such people aren't that likely to show up here and talk about what happened to them. Paul Campos had an account of such a guy in his blog, I know (yet more anecdotes).lymenheimer wrote:edit: from my time here...as a 0L. But since this is apparently the case:Cogburn87 wrote:lollymenheimer wrote:I haven't yet seen an anecdote of a biglaw washout with no options after they leave.
show me one and I'll retract my statement.Picard777 wrote: Anecdotes can often be more true to life and helpful than a statistical analysis.
That's why I said "maybe that's embarrassment". I realize that not being successful isn't the easiest thing to be able to share. I just wasn't sure why OP was getting hung up on the whole partner-track idea. I'm getting the same feeling as you about his work history, so that's why I wanted to know where the dots were connecting.A. Nony Mouse wrote: I think the point is that such people aren't that likely to show up here and talk about what happened to them. Paul Campos had an account of such a guy in his blog, I know (yet more anecdotes).
I would imagine the OP is right in a lot of ways; there are a lot more forms/assistance available for your average individual litigant to forge ahead on their own on a lot of the garden variety stuff out there. It sounds like the OP went solo pretty much from the start, and I don't know how far you can generalize from that experience to every other law job out there. But that doesn't make him wrong about his own experience. (Not sure why he thought people would hail him as a prophet, though.)
There is no way you worked 16 hour days if you're starving for cases. I handle 3-400 cases a year and work 9-5, maybe a few weekends here and there when I'm a prepping something for trial.Picard777 wrote:I made it, but maybe not for much longer if things keep getting worse. Most of my colleagues did not make it. I made it because I worked and did very little else in my life. Only one real vacation in ten years, working 16 hour days and wasting money on employees to collect from the deadbeats.. Some advice to capitol idea- big law and T14 is not a true hedge against the market as most will not make partner there. Most defense side lawyers make pennies for salaries. The elites love what is happening, it preserves their hoards of wealth from litigation. Seriously injured people need economic redress and they are not getting it.
Anecdotes can often be more true to life and helpful than a statistical analysis.
Except all the data to the contrary... ffs, grads from schools ranked in the 30s (BC) have over a 30% chance at big law based on employment figures.Picard777 wrote:No one wants or needs lawyers in their minds anymore. You won't get a job. All of you who go to T14 will have only a 10% chance of actually making partner at Biglaw. After that, you will be thrown to the wolves like everyone else. Not a great way to restart your career in your 30s.
+1zhenders wrote:The real Captain Picard would never generalize like this. You're an imposter
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I know numerous people who left biglaw in an undesirable manner. a few went through periods of long-term unemployment. many are still underemployed.lymenheimer wrote: show me one and I'll retract my statement.
Noted.Cogburn87 wrote:I know numerous people who left biglaw in an undesirable manner. a few went through periods of long-term unemployment. many are still underemployed.lymenheimer wrote: show me one and I'll retract my statement.
this website is mostly non-lawyers, so a lot of the talk here regarding exit options is 2L's with SAs in hand confidently parroting each other about going inhouse "after a couple years or so." they don't yet know about the burned out 5th year lit associate who desperately wants a different job but simply can't find anything decent and is thinking about just quitting with nothing lined up
definitely not a megalomaniac in presuming everyone who challenges you has zero "real world experience."Picard777 wrote:I'm not going to waste more time on here arguing with 20 somethings who have never met the real world and who will fall hard when their silly expectations are not met. For the humble ones that want real world advice, private me.
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I think TCR is to try to have a legal career, fail, and then angrily post about it on internet forums.Traynor Brah wrote:Best solution for current students: drop out, or suicide?
Picard777 wrote:I'm not going to waste more time on here arguing with 20 somethings who have never met the real world and who will fall hard when their silly expectations are not met. For the humble ones that want real world advice, private me.
Communicate now with those who not only know what a legal education is, but can offer you worthy advice and commentary as you complete the three most educational, yet challenging years of your law related post graduate life.
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