Law in Contemporary Society

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DanielImahiyeroboSecondEssay 3 - 15 Jun 2018 - Main.DanielImahiyerobo
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After a year of law school, what have I learned about the sort of lawyer I want to be
 
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The Best Is Yet To Come

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Coming into law school I had two ideas about the type of lawyer I’d like to be, and after the first year I still hold those initial ambitions. First I want to be financially independent, and to run my own music focused entertainment law practice. At first that will mean working for someone else, however I’m okay with that as long as I stick to the plan to reach my greater goals.
 
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-- By DanielImahiyerobo - 27 Apr 2018
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Entering law school I recognized that I was walking into a school/career where it would be all too easy to put my head down and be assimilated into the status quo. However, the second idea I had about the type of lawyer I wanted to be is one who remembers the things that are important to them as a person. Personally my family, my values and my own happiness are those things. Though there will be times when work temporarily becomes all consuming, it’s important not to forget what my real priorities are so that I make moves that ultimately lead me towards those goals.
 
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I learned something new about the type of lawyer I’d like to be while observing second circuit court of appeals judge Reena Raggi. I was struck by the mastery of her craft she displayed, and the confidence which with her knowledge allowed her to speak. Still, I didn’t see the billboard addressed to me until hearing you talk about taking law school finals in class. You mentioned how it is okay to say something the teacher might not agree with as long as you have a strong enough command of the material to state it in terms that they can recognize and thus would likely respect. I realized then that I wanted to become the type of lawyer who displayed this mastery within the context of his own practice. Especially because as an independent I’ll be facing an uphill battle against firms with more resources and bigger networks, so I’ll need a strong work ethic, knowledge base, and some business savvy to combat that.
 
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After a year of law school, what have I learned about the sort of lawyer I want to be
 
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There a two ideas about the type of lawyer I want to be that I had coming into law school, and after the first year I still hold those initial ambitions. First I want to be financially independent. I want to run my own music focused entertainment law practice, and use that as a platform to start a hip hop centered after school program of sorts for inner city kids where they can get early exposure to studio and other musical equipment. At first that will mean working for someone else, in order to recoup the monetary investment I have made into getting my law degree. However I think that is okay as long as I have a plan to reach my greater goals.
 
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This leads into the second idea I had as to the type of lawyer I’d like to be. Entering law school I recognized that I was walking into a school/career where it would be all too easy to put my head down and get assimilated into the status quo. However, the type of lawyer (person) I wanted to be is one who remembered the things that were truly important to them as an individual. For me personally my family, my values and my own happiness are all very important. And there will be times when an work temporarily becomes all consuming, but it’s important not to forget what my real priorities are and to make sure that I am making moves that ultimately lead me towards those goals.
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How- if I am returning to law school in the fall do I plan to guide my learning in order to become the lawyer I want to be
 
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I learned something new about the type of lawyer I’d like to be while observing second circuit court of appeals judge Reena Raggi. I was struck by the mastery of her craft she displayed, by the pervasive knowledge she committed to gaining on each subject before her, and the strength/confidence which that knowledge allowed her to speak with. Though I was impressed I didn’t see the billboard addressed to me until hearing you talk about taking law school finals in class. You mentioned how it is okay to say something the teacher might not agree with as long as you have a strong enough command of the material to state it in terms that they can recognize and thus would likely respect. I realized then that I wanted to become the type of lawyer who displayed this mastery within the context of his own practice. Ideally I’m practicing something I’m interested in so ill naturally want to learn more about it. Plus If the goal is independence I’ll be facing an uphill battle against firms with far more resources and bigger networks, so I’ll need a strong work ethic, knowledge base, and some business savvy to combat that.
 
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The big difference between this year and next is the ability to choose the courses that I will take. What this means to me is that I will be able to immerse myself in work that I am naturally interested in, and I think that will help me apply myself in learning/mastering the material. I also hope to distance myself from the traditional classroom setting and take advantage of any clinics and/or externships that are in the field I want to practice in.
 
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Another major way I can guide my leaning next year is to find people whom I can model myself after and who can provide me with mentorship. I think one of my strengths is my self-determinative attitude, but it turns to a weakness when it gets to the point of me thinking I have to do everything on my own. Some of the best decisions I made this year involved reaching out to people and asking for help, I hope to remember that lesson next year.
 
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How-if I am returning to law school in the fall- do I plan to guide my learning in order to become the lawyer I want to be
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Finally, I recognize that entertainment law has high barriers to entry, and as an independent can be difficult to sustain oneself with alone. Therefore working in multiple areas will help me build a high-functioning practice. My internship at McDermott? Will & Emery this summer will help me gain experience in many practice areas. Four weeks in and I have noticed how some practice areas such as tax are more standardized and tend to offer more consistently flowing work as well as better work life balance. I have also recognized that there may be an extra step between my first firm job and my ultimate self-run practice, likely in the form of a lateral transfer in-house or to an entertainment focused firm. I worry slightly that spreading myself across multiple practice areas, may make me less attractive to firms who seem to desire their laterals to be specialized. However, I believe that I’ll be able to find a few practice area such as contracts or IP that will nicely compliment the entertainment law background I wish to develop.
 
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The big difference between next year and this year is the ability to choose the courses that I will take, and increased opportunities to get involved on campus. What this means to me is that I will be able to immerse myself in work that I am naturally more interested in, and I think that will help me apply myself in learning/mastering the material. I hope to distance myself from the traditional classroom setting and take advantage of any clinics and/or externships that are in the vein of the field I want to practice in.
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If I have learned that I should not continue in law school how have I come to that conclusion
 
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Another major way I can guide my leaning next year is to find guides, people whom I can model myself after and who can provide me with mentorship/ advice. I think one of my strengths is my self-determinative attitude, but it turns to a weakness when it gets to the point of me thinking I have to do everything on my own. Some of the best decisions I made this year involved reaching out to people, and I think I will carry that lesson into next year.
 
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In considering if I’ll come back this fall, I had to reflect on the reasons I came here in the first place. Arguably, if I just want to run a record label there were more direct routes than law school. Yet I thought about building that label, the business and creative sides of it I could figure out without a degree, but I felt without an understanding of the law I’d have to continuously outsource an integral part of my practice. In addition the entertainment industry can be very hard to get a foot into if you don’t know someone. I thought a law school with the vast resources of Columbia would be a great vehicle to get me into the places where I could start to meet and shake hands with the people working in the areas I want to work in. I saw my degree like lucrative trade that could be applied in variety of settings. Therefore I saw going to law school as a chance to put a tool (my JD) into my tool box, to learn new skills and ways of thinking, and as a way to expand my network.
 
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If I have learned that I should not continue in law school how have I come to that conclusion

In considering if I’ll come back this fall, I had to reflect on the reasons I came here in the first place. Arguably, if I just want to run a record label there were more direct routes than law school. Yet I thought about building that label, the business and creative sides of it I could figure out without a degree, but I felt without an understanding of the law I’d have to continuously outsource an integral part of my practice. In addition the music/entertainment industries can be very hard to get a foot into, especially if you don’t know someone. I thought a law school with the vast resources of Columbia would be a great vehicle to get me into the places where I could start to meet and shake hands with the people working in the areas I want to work in. Plus, I may feel sure that I want to do this now, but I recognize may be wrong about myself, or I may change over time. I saw having a law degree almost like having a very lucrative trade that could be applied in variety of settings. Therefore I saw going to law school as a chance to figuratively put a tool (my JD) into my tool box, to learn new skills and ways of thinking, and as a way to expand my network.

I think that my opportunity to achieve those goals only increases in each of the next two years I have at this school. I’m proud of myself for working through the waves of self-doubt and disinterest that I felt working through the 1L course load. If I was going to quit I think I would have done it already, and thus I am committed.

One small route to improvement is a strong editorial review for grammar and usage.Pronoun agreement, the use of subjunctive ("If I were") rather than imperfect ("If I was") to indicate conditions contrary to fact, avoiding "Plus" to start a sentence—these are precise markers of a command over formal language that you also want to accompany the mastery of substance you heard in Judge Raggi. Strunk & White may seem old-fashioned now (given that it's as old as I am, it must be), but in fact you are exactly the sort of man, and will be the sort of lawyer, whose style should be classic.

An important attribute of good strategy is flexibility. A method of achieving various objectives given a particular mix of resources is inherently better if there's more than one way for it to work: otherwise it is a "brittle" plan that can become useless in the face of contrary events. Your objectives are different in their degree of inherent flexibility. There are many routes to making a successful after-school program; visits to New York City's extraordinary music and performance art high schools would give you dozens of ideas from the young people closest to the subject. Building a music company, on the other hand, requires narrower conditions and lies at the end of much longer odds. Building a practice with more than one kind of business inside the license, in which entertainment law is one area but doesn't have to fund the whole show, might be a useful strategic improvement. Thinking about what else might go in the basket is useful now, while there's still law school to help you put it there. Substantively improving the draft in this direction, using space gained by reducing wasted words and adopting a terser style, would make a real difference in its power for the reader, and its utility to you, I think.


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

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I think that my opportunity to achieve those goals only increases in each of the next two years. I’m proud of myself for working through the waves of self-doubt and disinterest that I felt throughout 1L year. If I were going to quit I would have done it already, thus I am committed.

DanielImahiyeroboSecondEssay 2 - 28 May 2018 - Main.EbenMoglen
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META TOPICPARENT name="SecondEssay"
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It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
 

The Best Is Yet To Come

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 There a two ideas about the type of lawyer I want to be that I had coming into law school, and after the first year I still hold those initial ambitions. First I want to be financially independent. I want to run my own music focused entertainment law practice, and use that as a platform to start a hip hop centered after school program of sorts for inner city kids where they can get early exposure to studio and other musical equipment. At first that will mean working for someone else, in order to recoup the monetary investment I have made into getting my law degree. However I think that is okay as long as I have a plan to reach my greater goals.
Changed:
<
<
This leads into the second idea I had as to the type of lawyer I’d like to be. Entering law school I recognized that I was walking into a school/career where it would be all too easy to put my head down and get assimilated into the status quo. However, the type of lawyer (person) I wanted to be is one who remembered the things that were truly important to them as an individual. For me personally my family, my values and my own happiness are all very important. And there will be times when an work temporarily becomes all consuming, but it’s important not to forget what my real priorities are and to make sure that I am making moves that ultimately lead me towards those goals.
>
>
This leads into the second idea I had as to the type of lawyer I’d like to be. Entering law school I recognized that I was walking into a school/career where it would be all too easy to put my head down and get assimilated into the status quo. However, the type of lawyer (person) I wanted to be is one who remembered the things that were truly important to them as an individual. For me personally my family, my values and my own happiness are all very important. And there will be times when an work temporarily becomes all consuming, but it’s important not to forget what my real priorities are and to make sure that I am making moves that ultimately lead me towards those goals.
 
Changed:
<
<
I learned something new about the type of lawyer I’d like to be while observing second circuit court of appeals judge Reena Raggi. I was struck by the mastery of her craft she displayed, by the pervasive knowledge she committed to gaining on each subject before her, and the strength/confidence which that knowledge allowed her to speak with. Though I was impressed I didn’t see the billboard addressed to me until hearing you talk about taking law school finals in class. You mentioned how it is okay to say something the teacher might not agree with as long as you have a strong enough command of the material to state it in terms that they can recognize and thus would likely respect. I realized then that I wanted to become the type of lawyer who displayed this mastery within the context of his own practice. Ideally I’m practicing something I’m interested in so ill naturally want to learn more about it. Plus If the goal is independence I’ll be facing an uphill battle against firms with far more resources and bigger networks, so I’ll need a strong work ethic, knowledge base, and some business savvy to combat that.
>
>
I learned something new about the type of lawyer I’d like to be while observing second circuit court of appeals judge Reena Raggi. I was struck by the mastery of her craft she displayed, by the pervasive knowledge she committed to gaining on each subject before her, and the strength/confidence which that knowledge allowed her to speak with. Though I was impressed I didn’t see the billboard addressed to me until hearing you talk about taking law school finals in class. You mentioned how it is okay to say something the teacher might not agree with as long as you have a strong enough command of the material to state it in terms that they can recognize and thus would likely respect. I realized then that I wanted to become the type of lawyer who displayed this mastery within the context of his own practice. Ideally I’m practicing something I’m interested in so ill naturally want to learn more about it. Plus If the goal is independence I’ll be facing an uphill battle against firms with far more resources and bigger networks, so I’ll need a strong work ethic, knowledge base, and some business savvy to combat that.
 
Line: 33 to 35
 In considering if I’ll come back this fall, I had to reflect on the reasons I came here in the first place. Arguably, if I just want to run a record label there were more direct routes than law school. Yet I thought about building that label, the business and creative sides of it I could figure out without a degree, but I felt without an understanding of the law I’d have to continuously outsource an integral part of my practice. In addition the music/entertainment industries can be very hard to get a foot into, especially if you don’t know someone. I thought a law school with the vast resources of Columbia would be a great vehicle to get me into the places where I could start to meet and shake hands with the people working in the areas I want to work in. Plus, I may feel sure that I want to do this now, but I recognize may be wrong about myself, or I may change over time. I saw having a law degree almost like having a very lucrative trade that could be applied in variety of settings. Therefore I saw going to law school as a chance to figuratively put a tool (my JD) into my tool box, to learn new skills and ways of thinking, and as a way to expand my network.
Changed:
<
<
I think that my opportunity to achieve those goals only increases in each of the next two years I have at this school. I’m proud of myself for working through the waves of self-doubt and disinterest that I felt working through the 1L course load. If I was going to quit I think I would have done it already, and thus I am committed.
>
>
I think that my opportunity to achieve those goals only increases in each of the next two years I have at this school. I’m proud of myself for working through the waves of self-doubt and disinterest that I felt working through the 1L course load. If I was going to quit I think I would have done it already, and thus I am committed.

One small route to improvement is a strong editorial review for grammar and usage.Pronoun agreement, the use of subjunctive ("If I were") rather than imperfect ("If I was") to indicate conditions contrary to fact, avoiding "Plus" to start a sentence—these are precise markers of a command over formal language that you also want to accompany the mastery of substance you heard in Judge Raggi. Strunk & White may seem old-fashioned now (given that it's as old as I am, it must be), but in fact you are exactly the sort of man, and will be the sort of lawyer, whose style should be classic.

An important attribute of good strategy is flexibility. A method of achieving various objectives given a particular mix of resources is inherently better if there's more than one way for it to work: otherwise it is a "brittle" plan that can become useless in the face of contrary events. Your objectives are different in their degree of inherent flexibility. There are many routes to making a successful after-school program; visits to New York City's extraordinary music and performance art high schools would give you dozens of ideas from the young people closest to the subject. Building a music company, on the other hand, requires narrower conditions and lies at the end of much longer odds. Building a practice with more than one kind of business inside the license, in which entertainment law is one area but doesn't have to fund the whole show, might be a useful strategic improvement. Thinking about what else might go in the basket is useful now, while there's still law school to help you put it there. Substantively improving the draft in this direction, using space gained by reducing wasted words and adopting a terser style, would make a real difference in its power for the reader, and its utility to you, I think.

 



DanielImahiyeroboSecondEssay 1 - 27 Apr 2018 - Main.DanielImahiyerobo
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META TOPICPARENT name="SecondEssay"
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

The Best Is Yet To Come

-- By DanielImahiyerobo - 27 Apr 2018

After a year of law school, what have I learned about the sort of lawyer I want to be

There a two ideas about the type of lawyer I want to be that I had coming into law school, and after the first year I still hold those initial ambitions. First I want to be financially independent. I want to run my own music focused entertainment law practice, and use that as a platform to start a hip hop centered after school program of sorts for inner city kids where they can get early exposure to studio and other musical equipment. At first that will mean working for someone else, in order to recoup the monetary investment I have made into getting my law degree. However I think that is okay as long as I have a plan to reach my greater goals.

This leads into the second idea I had as to the type of lawyer I’d like to be. Entering law school I recognized that I was walking into a school/career where it would be all too easy to put my head down and get assimilated into the status quo. However, the type of lawyer (person) I wanted to be is one who remembered the things that were truly important to them as an individual. For me personally my family, my values and my own happiness are all very important. And there will be times when an work temporarily becomes all consuming, but it’s important not to forget what my real priorities are and to make sure that I am making moves that ultimately lead me towards those goals.

I learned something new about the type of lawyer I’d like to be while observing second circuit court of appeals judge Reena Raggi. I was struck by the mastery of her craft she displayed, by the pervasive knowledge she committed to gaining on each subject before her, and the strength/confidence which that knowledge allowed her to speak with. Though I was impressed I didn’t see the billboard addressed to me until hearing you talk about taking law school finals in class. You mentioned how it is okay to say something the teacher might not agree with as long as you have a strong enough command of the material to state it in terms that they can recognize and thus would likely respect. I realized then that I wanted to become the type of lawyer who displayed this mastery within the context of his own practice. Ideally I’m practicing something I’m interested in so ill naturally want to learn more about it. Plus If the goal is independence I’ll be facing an uphill battle against firms with far more resources and bigger networks, so I’ll need a strong work ethic, knowledge base, and some business savvy to combat that.

How-if I am returning to law school in the fall- do I plan to guide my learning in order to become the lawyer I want to be

The big difference between next year and this year is the ability to choose the courses that I will take, and increased opportunities to get involved on campus. What this means to me is that I will be able to immerse myself in work that I am naturally more interested in, and I think that will help me apply myself in learning/mastering the material. I hope to distance myself from the traditional classroom setting and take advantage of any clinics and/or externships that are in the vein of the field I want to practice in.

Another major way I can guide my leaning next year is to find guides, people whom I can model myself after and who can provide me with mentorship/ advice. I think one of my strengths is my self-determinative attitude, but it turns to a weakness when it gets to the point of me thinking I have to do everything on my own. Some of the best decisions I made this year involved reaching out to people, and I think I will carry that lesson into next year.

If I have learned that I should not continue in law school how have I come to that conclusion

In considering if I’ll come back this fall, I had to reflect on the reasons I came here in the first place. Arguably, if I just want to run a record label there were more direct routes than law school. Yet I thought about building that label, the business and creative sides of it I could figure out without a degree, but I felt without an understanding of the law I’d have to continuously outsource an integral part of my practice. In addition the music/entertainment industries can be very hard to get a foot into, especially if you don’t know someone. I thought a law school with the vast resources of Columbia would be a great vehicle to get me into the places where I could start to meet and shake hands with the people working in the areas I want to work in. Plus, I may feel sure that I want to do this now, but I recognize may be wrong about myself, or I may change over time. I saw having a law degree almost like having a very lucrative trade that could be applied in variety of settings. Therefore I saw going to law school as a chance to figuratively put a tool (my JD) into my tool box, to learn new skills and ways of thinking, and as a way to expand my network.

I think that my opportunity to achieve those goals only increases in each of the next two years I have at this school. I’m proud of myself for working through the waves of self-doubt and disinterest that I felt working through the 1L course load. If I was going to quit I think I would have done it already, and thus I am committed.


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules for preference declarations. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of these lines. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated ALLOWTOPICVIEW list.


Revision 3r3 - 15 Jun 2018 - 11:23:51 - DanielImahiyerobo
Revision 2r2 - 28 May 2018 - 20:30:52 - EbenMoglen
Revision 1r1 - 27 Apr 2018 - 02:18:18 - DanielImahiyerobo
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