Showing posts with label Lawyers on Television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lawyers on Television. Show all posts

August 31, 2020

Corcos on Law and Norms and Will and Grace @LpcProf @WillandGrace

Christine A. Corcos, Louisiana State University Law Center, has published Law and Norms and Will and Grace at 50 Cumberland L. Rev. 85 (2020). Here is the abstract.
Like many other popular series featuring lawyers and law-related characters that are not primarily legal shows, Will & Grace was and is primarily a “relationship” show. The show features the friendships and closeness among the four main characters, best friends Will Truman and Grace Adler, who originally met in college, and Will’s friend Jack McFarland and Grace’s friend Karen Walker, who are brought together through their relationships with Will and Grace and also eventually become friends. Jack and Karen’s friendship is an exaggerated analogue of Will and Grace’s relationship. While it is not a legal show, Will & Grace does often feature legal themes, partly because one of its main characters is an attorney and partly because the law is such an important part of daily American life. If we have a problem or a dispute, we often consider whether the appropriate solution is a legal one, or whether we will be satisfied with a less formal and perhaps less binding outcome. More and more, we tend to view relationships and interactions through the legal system, using the law’s language and the law’s behavior. However, the characters in Will & Grace do not always decide on legal solutions to their problems. They may fashion other solutions that they think suit their needs, or they may never consider the law at all.
Download the article from SSRN at the link.

August 21, 2018

The Jackie Chiles Law Society: A Law Student Organization Devoted to Law and Popular Culture @sjquinney

At the University of Utah's S. J. Quinney's College of Law, students can join  many interesting organizations, including the Jackie Chiles Law Society, devoted to "The Jackie Chiles Law Society is dedicated to the examination of how popular culture interacts with the law. The Society meets regularly to discuss how broadcast & print media and the internet affect the American legal system. Recent guest presenters include Patrick Markey, the film producer of A River Runs Through It and The Quick and the Dead, and Sam Lloyd, the actor who plays the attorney “Ted” on the television show Scrubs. The Society also maintains a collection of popular books and movies related to lawyers and the law in the SJQ law library for student use."

The Society is named for the attorney character played by Phil Morris on Seinfeld. Jackie was well-known for his over-the-top statements. 

July 24, 2017

Asimow on Jewish Lawyers on Television @StanfordLaw @OxfordCSLS ‏

Michael Asimow, Stanford Law School, has published Jewish Lawyers on Television at 2017 (2) Journal of the Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies 14.
Jewish lawyers have appeared in numerous television series, including lawyer shows as well as soap operas and police stories. Many of these portrayals reflect negative stereotypes that suggest Jewish lawyers are worse than other lawyers. Jewish lawyers frequently are represented as shrewd, manipulative, cunning and unethical. Most are physically unattractive and many are obnoxious. These negative representations may reflect deep seated and persistent anti-Semitic views. However, some Jewish TV lawyers are presented in a mildly positive light and a few are very positively represented. This article introduces the Jewish TV lawyers and seeks to explain both the negative and positive stereotypes embodied in their characters.
Download the article from SSRN at the link.

February 24, 2017

@CBS Cancels Legal Drama Doubt After Two Episodes

CBS has cancelled one freshman legal drama, Doubt, after airing only two episodes, citing poor ratings. I liked this show at least as well as some of the law-related shows that have been on air lately, and I actually think it could have developed to be almost as interesting as The Good Fight. Doubt has at least one fresh new character, Cameron Wirth (played by Laverne Cox), and gives Dule Hill, whom we haven't seen since Psych, a chance to stretch a little bit, playing an experienced criminal defense attorney and law partner to Sadie Ellis (Katherine Heigl). Sadie herself is more complex than leading characters in these shows often are; she puts up a noncommittal and brave front, but has secrets, mostly centering on her mother, who is in prison for murder. Cameron's interactions with 1st year associate Tiffany Walker (Dreama Simon) are fun, and allow the show to investigate some of the stereotypes associated with lawyers and with New Yorkers. Indeed, the show's first two episodes seem to concentrate on pointing out stereotyping and bias, from Cameron's acceptance that some people don't want to deal with her because she's trans and her own stereotyping of Tiffany as a "girl from Iowa," to general assumptions that viewers have about lawyers.

I understand that there are an additional eleven unaired episodes of the show. I hope we get to see them, so that some of the story arcs get wrapped up. And I continue to wonder why the show Bull, which is going to fill in Doubt's time slot, is still on the air. But more about that another time.

October 19, 2016

Another Legal Drama In the Works From Shondaland and Writer Paul William Davies @harrierhound

Paul William Davies is working with Shondaland and ABC on a pilot for a legal drama. The show, which doesn't yet have a name, would follow the personal and professional lives of budding legal eagles on both sides of "high profile" cases filed in the Second Circuit. More here from the Hollywood Reporter.

Well, no question--the Second Circuit does have a lively docket, and some fascinating personalities. It will be interesting to follow this development.

July 19, 2016

Denvir @JohnDenvir on Better Call Saul and the Trickster Lawyer

John Denvir's latest post from Guile Is Good: this one on Better Call Saul's Jimmy McGill and signs that his tenure at Davis & Main demonstrates some real ethical challenges. In this post Professor Denvir continues to develop his "lawyer as trickster" theme.

May 13, 2016

Yes, Even More New Legal Shows For Fall 2016

ABC has ordered up the new drama Notorious, based on the the career of high profile attorney Mark Geragos, for the fall season. It has also scheduled the new legal drama Conviction, staring Hayley Atwell, about a former First Daughter in charge of investigating cases in which persons have been wrongly convicted.

Note that "Conviction" is a popular title for law-related tv series and films. A 2005 movie with that name starred Lisa Gay Hamilton and Jenni Baird,  Conviction (2010) starred Hilary Swank in the docudrama about a woman who went to law school to exonerate her brother who was jailed for murder, and a 2006 Dick Wolf series with the name lasted one season; it was vaguely related to the Law & Order franchise.

May 12, 2016

More Lawyer Shows To Make Debuts This Fall

Come fall 2016, Dick Wolf will have another series on air. This one will be called Chicago Justice, yet another one of the "Chicago" franchise, and will focus on the attorneys that criss-cross the hospital and police department scenes of Chicago Med and Chicago P.D.

The series will star Philip Winchester, Nazneen Contractor, Joelle Carter, Carl Weathers, and Ryan-James Hatanaka.

Meanwhile, CBS is headed toward putting a Good Wife spinoff in production, with Christine Baranski (Diane Lockhart) again in a starring role, but this show, title as yet unannounced, will air first on the network and then move on to CBS' All-Access streaming service (right now priced at $5.99 per month). Interesting proposition.

May 11, 2016

Some Early Entries In the Legal Series Summer/Fall Sweepstakes: Northern Lawyers, Southern Poets, and New York Murders

As expected, a new crop of law-related shows is on tap for summer and fall. Some early entries:

NBC has green-lit the legal comedy Trial and Error  In this "fish out of water" comedy, Nick D'Agosto (Josh Segal) is a Yankee lawyer who goes South to defend a professor of poetry (!) played by John Lithgow, accused of killing his wife. (What? There are no high profile enough criminal lawyers in the South? No, I get it--we're looking for opposites here to spark the comedy).  This will be the attorney's "first big case." Hmmm. Again I ask, no lawyers in the South available to take this case?  Never mind; I'll watch. Mr. Lithgow is always great, and I'm up for anything depicting suspected homicidal poets. (Incidentally, this is why I think he's probably not guilty. All the male poets I know are brilliant, charming, quirky, and often highly annoying. But homicidal? It's counterproductive).

HBO will begin airing The Night Of, a miniseries based on the British series Criminal Justice, that begins after a New York woman's murder on July 10th. 

Meanwhile, Fox's The Grinder (starring Rob Lowe as an actor who made his mark playing a lawyer on TV and Fred Savage playing his brother, an actual lawyer in Boise, Idaho) might be cancelled--it's on the bubble. Too bad, as it's a funny show--a satire on Hollywood, lawyers, family life, just about anything it turns its eye on. Catch it while you can and catch up on already aired episodes online.



Update: Fox has cancelled The Grinder.

May 5, 2016

Grading the (TV) Lawyers

Tired of grading? Take a look at this discussion of "grading" TV lawyers, posted by Jayne Reardon for 2Civility at the Illinois Supreme Court Commision on Professionalism Website. Here's a link to the full infographic (click on each mini-page for the grade for each TV lawyer; unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be an overall guide to the list). Do you agree with the spread? Criteria seem somewhat undefined, but include "ethics," "professionalism," and attitudes toward work and justice.

 And how would you score folks like Patty Hewes (Damages), Sebastian Shark (Shark), Ben Matlock (Matlock), Perry Mason (Perry Mason), Harvey Birdman (Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law), Christine Sullivan (Night Court), Ken Preston (The Defenders), Bobby O'Donnell (The Practice), and Kevin Hill (Kevin Hill).

More about tv lawyers here in this article from the New Republic. 

September 2, 2015

CBS Interested In Legal Drama Based On Gloria Allred's Career

Deborah Schoeneman is writing the script for an as-yet unnamed CBS legal drama based on the career of attorney Gloria Allred. Ms. Schoeneman, Ms. Allred, Peter Principato, and Paul Young will executive produce. More here from The Hollywood Reporter.

July 24, 2015

New David E. Kelley Series "The Trial" Will Star Billy Bob Thornton

The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that Billy Bob Thornton (Sling Blade, Monster's Ball, Friday Night Lights) will star in David E. Kelley's new legal series The Trial for Amazon after Kevin Costner dropped out.  The series features a disaffected attorney, Billy McBride (Thornton), who is tossed out from the law firm he founded and finds a new purpose in life when a younger attorney brings him a wrongful death case.

May 12, 2015

A Lawyer In Natchez

Bill Sheehan of the Washington Post reviews Greg Iles' new novel The Bone Tree here. The book, the second in a trilogy about lawyer/novelist Penn Cage, explores violent events linked to Mississippi's  past.

Mr. Iles' novel Natchez Burning, the first novel in the trilogy, is slated for TV; more here from Deadline.com.

May 6, 2015

Fall 2015 Legal Pilots, You're Up!

The Hollywood Reporter notes that the fall 2015 season might bring us new legal series. Nearly every network has some kind of legal show. ABC is looking at a pilot called The Adversaries, CBS at Doubt (a lawyer gets involved with her client--have we seen this plot before?), Fox at a comedy called The Grinder (Rob Lowe as a TV lawyer who thinks he's a real lawyer: I suppose this show is the playing out of the line "I'm not a real...but I've played one on TV"), NBC at Game of Silence (David Lyons as an ambitious young lawyer with secrets).  More here.

February 8, 2015

February 6, 2015

January 15, 2015

USA Network Benches "Benched"

USA Network has canceled the legal comedy Benched.  Yes, I can hear you making jokes about this one now. The show, starring Eliza Coupe and Jay Harrington, revolves around a corporate lawyer who loses her job and ends up practicing as a public defender. The website has links to complete episodes.