Stanford & Berkeley: Fried Frank DC
Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 5:32 pm

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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=129328
Honesty is nice, but I'm sure he didn't tell them to their faces. So it's really not honesty at all -- it doesn't benefit me to hear it, and it generally just comes across as snarky and rude.Anonymous User wrote:Boaltie here, had an interviewer who couldn't stop trashing another school for the quality of its students. The fact is it happens, firms have schools they like better than others, happens all the time. At least this guy was honest about his preferences.
The bold is relevant why? You mean to say that OP should refrain from calling someone out who said something stupid and rude because that someone has a successful career? What a tool you must be. Are you for real?spanktheduck wrote:Of course the school didn't do anything. Nothing the interviewer said was inappropriate. He may have been rude, although he may have been attempting to see how you would reaction. Unless the interviewer asks you something illegal, the school does not care. Also, outing him is a real dick move. He is a partner at a major law firm, you are a 2l.
Is it me or are there more posts this year from 2l's complaining about rude interviewers, even where the interviewer wasn't really that rude?
It's recognition that he has earned the right to talk that way to a law student, especially in an interview. OP, as a 2l, has not. It is reality. If you call out your boss, you will get fired. You might not like it, but that is the way it is. We all deal with it, bitching about it and running to the law school (who obviously was going to do nothing) is pathetic and makes you look like a child. We are in law school, it is time to suck it up.Anonymous User wrote:The bold is relevant why? You mean to say that OP should refrain from calling someone out who said something stupid and rude because that someone has a successful career? What a tool you must be. Are you for real?spanktheduck wrote:Of course the school didn't do anything. Nothing the interviewer said was inappropriate. He may have been rude, although he may have been attempting to see how you would reaction. Unless the interviewer asks you something illegal, the school does not care. Also, outing him is a real dick move. He is a partner at a major law firm, you are a 2l.
Is it me or are there more posts this year from 2l's complaining about rude interviewers, even where the interviewer wasn't really that rude?
Oh, so your position is that people can "earn" the right to say stupid things and not get called on it. Yeah, you are a tool.spanktheduck wrote:It's recognition that he has earned the right to talk that way to a law student, especially in an interview. OP, as a 2l, has not. It is reality. If you call out your boss, you will get fired. You might not like it, but that is the way it is. We all deal with it, bitching about it and running to the law school (who obviously was going to do nothing) is pathetic and makes you look like a child. We are in law school, it is time to suck it up.Anonymous User wrote:The bold is relevant why? You mean to say that OP should refrain from calling someone out who said something stupid and rude because that someone has a successful career? What a tool you must be. Are you for real?spanktheduck wrote:Of course the school didn't do anything. Nothing the interviewer said was inappropriate. He may have been rude, although he may have been attempting to see how you would reaction. Unless the interviewer asks you something illegal, the school does not care. Also, outing him is a real dick move. He is a partner at a major law firm, you are a 2l.
Is it me or are there more posts this year from 2l's complaining about rude interviewers, even where the interviewer wasn't really that rude?
He did interview there.bwv812 wrote:Who cares? It's highly, highly unlikely he's going to be interviewing at SLS or Boalt.
Outing the guy is just a dick move, too... and more dickish than whatever he said.
Couldn't agree more!!!!!!!!!!Anonymous User wrote:The bold is relevant why? You mean to say that OP should refrain from calling someone out who said something stupid and rude because that someone has a successful career? What a tool you must be. Are you for real?spanktheduck wrote:Of course the school didn't do anything. Nothing the interviewer said was inappropriate. He may have been rude, although he may have been attempting to see how you would reaction. Unless the interviewer asks you something illegal, the school does not care. Also, outing him is a real dick move. He is a partner at a major law firm, you are a 2l.
Is it me or are there more posts this year from 2l's complaining about rude interviewers, even where the interviewer wasn't really that rude?
Nothing gives anybody the right to be an as*hole.spanktheduck wrote:It's recognition that he has earned the right to talk that way to a law student, especially in an interview. OP, as a 2l, has not. It is reality. If you call out your boss, you will get fired. You might not like it, but that is the way it is. We all deal with it, bitching about it and running to the law school (who obviously was going to do nothing) is pathetic and makes you look like a child. We are in law school, it is time to suck it up.Anonymous User wrote:The bold is relevant why? You mean to say that OP should refrain from calling someone out who said something stupid and rude because that someone has a successful career? What a tool you must be. Are you for real?spanktheduck wrote:Of course the school didn't do anything. Nothing the interviewer said was inappropriate. He may have been rude, although he may have been attempting to see how you would reaction. Unless the interviewer asks you something illegal, the school does not care. Also, outing him is a real dick move. He is a partner at a major law firm, you are a 2l.
Is it me or are there more posts this year from 2l's complaining about rude interviewers, even where the interviewer wasn't really that rude?
Unfortunately, all the as*holes disagree.Anonymous User wrote: Nothing gives anybody the right to be an as*hole.
Okay, I concede its different - but my point is more at the guy who said he's "earned it" because he's a partner and you're a 2L. That's a pretty messed up attitude to take at the outset of entering the legal profession.bwv812 wrote: It may have been unprofessional for him to badmouth other schools, but he wasn't really being rude or a jerk or anything.