John Travolta comes immediately to mind. Tom Hanks, too. Robin Williams. Jim Carrey. And once you look at SNL as a source — the list gets very large.
John Travolta comes immediately to mind. Tom Hanks, too. Robin Williams. Jim Carrey. And once you look at SNL as a source — the list gets very large.
It was an action show which happened to be set indoors. Unbelievable pacing compared to its contemporaries.
That was the most unrealistic part: O'Malley's winning counties?
I was trying to figure out who here was Lee Siegel's sockpuppet.
Speaking of which, what happened to all the clients Alicia was stealing from Lockhart Agos because of Diane's representation of the anti-choice client?
There's no difference between "finding our way in a small partnership" and the early days of Florrick/Agos, is there? She's back to doing the same types of cases again.
Has she slept with anyone since his death other than her husband?
Bring back Nathan Lane! Or the Daddy Detective with the Talking Lion Phone.
At least it explained why Cary made so many absurd giveaways during the faux-negotiation to bring them back. This is a down legal market, people, and has been that way for a decade.
Here's the fundamental problem: they've exhausted the premise of the show -' they've everything they can say about being an ambitious spouse in a political marriage, one who's been wounded by scandal, and they've said everything they can about law firm politics and the role of technology. All that's left is telling…
In your opinion?
The conclusion was fun. The rest had nothing to do with how law firms have operated in the past 15 years.
Unless, for the first time in Survivor history, final four?
He's one of the few guests (Baldwin's another) who could fit right in as cast members.
Little Shop, with Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Or Legally Blonde.
And yet, no Christian Borle. The streak is over.
I get all my clients via word of mouth and recommendations. It works.
Correct. Grace can talk to Wilson's secretary, but would never get to the principal. And the way you do it is to set up a lunch or coffee, not a flat-out "hey, you need a lawyer?"
As a lawyer who does politically-involved stuff all the time: this episode was stupid to the nth degree on how lawyers seek and secure clients (the Grace plot). But it was savvy and right-on as to how we can alienate existing clients by not being mindful of positional conflicts (the Diane plot).
Yes, law firms do, and lawyers do, and it's not unusual — it's about lawyers looking for the place where they will find the best mix of guaranteed/potential revenue, power, and back-end support.