We were also faced with alienation from the products of our labor. You would work on the tiniest part of a huge transaction. You would never see the big picture, never know if your all-nighter made a difference, if your clauses appeared in the final documents, never even find out if the deal had gone through.
Quote from: chief justice lacoste on July 19, 2006, 11:24:01 AMWe were also faced with alienation from the products of our labor. You would work on the tiniest part of a huge transaction. You would never see the big picture, never know if your all-nighter made a difference, if your clauses appeared in the final documents, never even find out if the deal had gone through.My biggest complaint about big law. (Well....at least one of my biggest complaints about big law) As an academic, there ain't a damn bit of learning or room for subtantive growth in the law within a law firm. You're not even really an attorney. You're a glorified paralegal who knows how to find stuff and write about it. Its the partners who get to see the big legal picture (and the big bucks). I've head friends at the blue chip firms in manhattan who billed mad hours working on one bullet point of one brief and couldn't tell you who the client was, let alone the outcome of the case or even so much as when the case went to trial or settled.Clerkship is starting to look real good right about now, which is crazy b/c I knew nothing about clerkships when I started. It was all about get money at a big firm b/c that's all you know from the outside looking in. (sound familiar 0L's? )
Don't forget the EEOC
Freak is the best, Freak is the best! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!I don't like calling you Freak, I'd rather call you Normal Nice Guy.