Wednesday, February 1, 2012

How to Become a Bronx Lawyer

By Sam Sandstone


Hollywood tends to focus on who the evil guy is. Sure, there is money to be made in promoting the good guy, but the good guy is easy to carve out. They are simply the victim, the guy not getting shoved down. It is much easier to pick a profession, make it seem like it is an act of the devil and carve your movie plot around that very idea. Well, for a lot of years, Hollywood did this act exclusively with the idea of a lawyer. They made the lawyer not an intelligent part of the community, but an evil sadistic talker whose only intention is to steal money, and large sums of it. The truth of the matter is many lawyers today take a lot of cases pro bono, lending a hand down to the little guy. They occupy a number of health boards and school boards, and ultimately look to do more good than harm at each passing corner. Thankfully, Hollywood execs seem to see the profession in a more rounded way, and they are looking to right what was once a very wrong impression. If there is any lawyer particularly happy about that change, we would bet it is the Bronx lawyer, whose efforts around New York City have long been synonymous with good and honest.

The path to becoming a lawyer is anything but a short trip down memory lane.

Actually, just to be allowed to go to law school one has to endure four years earning their bachelors degree and then take the LSAT.

The LSAT is a test that will determine which law school you will be able to get into once you start applying and it is a tough test.

You do not want to select a law school to quickly, because you are going to be stuck there for the next three years in non stop study mode just to get out alive.

Once law school is finished, should you finish, you are required to take the bar exam, which certifies you as a lawyer. Then you will need to take the state certification tests for whatever state you wish to practice in.

Once you finish all of those years of schooling, which to recount is a minimum of seven, the real work begins. You start at the low levels of a firm, become a Bronx lawyer, and work non stop for the next forty years hoping to become a partner. Sounds like a walk through the park no?

You see, there is a lot more to the profession of the law and living in New York City than one would realize. Surely no one would go through all that schooling and live in a place that is filled with all the mischief New York City is if there only intention was to do something wrong. There are definitely other places one could turn to in order to capitalize on evil deeds. So, the next time you bump into a Bronx lawyer, do not see them with an evil eye, but get to know who you are really seeing.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment