Prática de Shadowing: Real Lawyer Reacts to Suits (Episode 2 - Cell Phone Patent Problems!) - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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This video was brought to you by CuriosityStream.
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And since you're the one who screwed me,
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I'd say you owe me one.
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Technically, he screwed his wife.
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Hey, Legal Eagles, it's time to think like a lawyer.
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You asked for it, so more analysis of suits.
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Today we are covering the second episode in the first season.
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I think I will keep going with the first season,
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but if there are specific episodes later on in this series that are especially ripe for legal analysis,
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please let me know and maybe I'll jump ahead.
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As always, of course, please subscribe and comment in the form of an objection,
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which I will either sustain or overrule.
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And of course, stick around until the end of this video where I give Suits episode two a grade for legal realism.
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So, without further ado, let's dig in to the second episode of Suits.
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Come on, what do you say,
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we go five out of nine?
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You can keep abusing me?
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No, thank you, I'm done.
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Oh, come on, I'll spot you three.
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Mid-time's over, Wyatt, they're here.
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They're here?
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Get set up in the conference room.
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Yeah, no, I'll just, uh...
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Get set up in the conference room.
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I have never seen a law office that has a game room like that.
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Even in New York where law offices for big firms can be pretty nice,
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they don't really look anything like the kind of Silicon Valley startup offices that you see often on TV,
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so this is not a particularly realistic depiction of what a law firm looks like.
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Wait, wait, where do you think you're going? into the room with the people.
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Wrong, that's the adult table in there and you haven't earned the privilege yet.
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I played air hockey with him.
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You need to go back to the office and file a patent for the phone.
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A patent?
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I don't know how to file a patent.
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What?
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Figure it out.
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Can't we do that after?
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No. So that would be crazy to wait to file a patent for this technology that you're trying to get funding for.
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Effectively what's happening here is that they're going to publish the technology
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that they want these people to invest in before they have protected it.
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We are only about a minute and a half into this episode
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and this is already malpractice that would probably get these guys disbarred.
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On top of that, this meeting is only gonna last a couple of hours
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and it's always a good idea to make sure your entire
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legal team is up to date with all the information that's going back and forth.
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So if this is a big investment deal,
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Mike should be in there to learn the facts on the ground and he should have filed his patent months,
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if not years, ahead of this meeting.
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This is crazy.
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Okay, have you ever filed a patent before?
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I just got back from this meeting with Harvey and he wants me to file this patent,
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but I have no idea what that paperwork looks like.
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So, if I have any help in this arena,
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it would be with me.
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Isn't Mike supposed to be a genius of the law?
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Isn't that why they hired him?
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He's like the greatest legal mind of his generation,
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even though he doesn't have a law degree,
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and yet he's constantly going back to his paralegal for information about the most basic things that lawyers do?
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I sense some inconsistencies in this show and the writing so far.
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Mike Ross, allow me to introduce the Bainbridge briefs. Which stack?
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All of them.
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Wait a minute, are these all?
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Still printing?
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Yeah, I think it was about a half hour.
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Oh, it's six printers, 23 pages a minute,
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30 minutes, that's 4,140 pages.
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Plus all of this, which means the next time you negotiate a deal,
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I would suggest to get your facts straight.
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In reality, if you have gone to the printer with all of your briefs,
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all of those briefs have been proofed probably a dozen times by 10 different people in a big law firm like this.
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You would never go to the trouble of printing out thousands
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and thousands of pages of documents unless you were 100% certain
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that all of those documents were ready to be filed with the court.
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But what is accurate here and is kind of amusing is the way that they bind all of these documents.
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It's called velobinding.
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It's those sort of plastic jaws that you open up,
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you have a special machine that opens them up
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and then you place the briefs in them and then you close them up on top of them.
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That is, for certain courts,
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exactly how you have to submit your briefs.
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It's a real pain in the butt.
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So at least that attention to detail is fairly accurate.
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Please tell me that you filed that.
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Patent?
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No, not yet.
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What?
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I gave it to you yesterday.
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Same time I gave you my Bainbridge briefs.
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Which you haven't finished.
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I was here all night and I barely got through half.
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I was on hold for almost 11 minutes before I gave up on your patent.
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So, what's your point?
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All right, let's talk a little bit about what it means to file a patent.
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The paperwork to file a patent is not particularly complex.
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There are forms that you can use.
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It's not that hard.
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The problem is that filing for a patent is not just filing for a patent.
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It's all the work that goes into filing for the patent before you do it.
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If there is prior art,
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meaning that there is someone who filed a similar patent before yours or that your idea has already been taken somewhere else,
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then your patent will be invalid.
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So when you go to a law firm and ask that they file a patent on your behalf,
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you're not just asking for them to file the actual physical paperwork for the patent.
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What you're asking them to do is hundreds of hours of work where attorneys will cull through the database
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that contains all of the other prior applications,
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some of which have been denied,
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some of which have been approved,
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and they're looking for similar things that might invalidate your own patent.
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And in fact, if you're following politics,
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you might know that our acting attorney general,
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Matt Whitaker, was involved with a company called Worldwide Marketing,
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which was an infamous patent scam
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that was known for filing patents without doing the legwork to find out if there was prior art.
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So a lot of people who paid tens of thousands of
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dollars to this company in order to get patents approved found
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that their patents were actually invalidated because this company wasn't doing a prior art search.
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So it's crazy, number one,
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that they haven't filed a patent for this thing before they've gone to investors.
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And number two, it's crazy that they think it's just a simple matter of filing for the patent itself,
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when in fact it's the hundreds if not thousands of hours it takes for the legwork before you file for that patent.
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You wanted to see me?
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See you.
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I look for your work on the Bainbridge briefs.
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Spectacular.
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It's just proofing.
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How can proofing something be spectacular?
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What's up?
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I just heard from Wyatt.
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He got a response from the patent office.
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You got a response back from the patent office a day after you filed your patent?
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That does not happen. And?
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It's been denied.
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What?
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Evidently, there was a similar claim.
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Wait, what do you mean?
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Somebody beat us to it?
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No, someone beat you to it.
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They filed less than 24 hours ago,
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which means you filed a day later than you said you would.
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Oh my God.
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Well, yeah, that's why you file for a patent months,
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if not years, before you start getting investments from outside people.
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That's the problem with going to investors before you've gotten the patent.
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This whole episode is so stupid.
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What's gonna happen now?
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I suggest you get on the phone,
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call the patent office, and find out who beat us to it.
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Then you're gonna have Donna find any judge who will listen
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so we can get an injunction and stop whoever it is from launching their product first.
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Okay.
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An injunction on what grounds?
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It's true that sometimes you can seek the extraordinary relief from a court,
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an injunction, which is basically a court order that prevents someone from doing something or it forces them to do something.
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But you have to have legal grounds to do it.
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And the fact that someone filed a patent based on the information
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that you provided to them is not grounds for an injunction,
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unless there was some sort of non-disclosure agreement at the investors meeting,
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but that seems relatively unlikely.
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We'll see.
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Not a good legal tactic so far.
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Hey, Harvey.
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Did you tell him it was me?
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Why would I do that?
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I'm responsible for you.
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It was me.
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Yeah.
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And that would be true whether Mike was actually an attorney or not,
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which he is not in this case.
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Harvey is the lead attorney.
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He's the one that's signing the papers most likely,
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and so it's his neck on the line.
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Also, by the way, it was his decision not to file for a patent until after he met with investors.
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That is malpractice.
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He'd get totally disbarred for that.
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Did you not see the sign outside?
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Just putting it away, Your Honor.
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It should already be in your pocket,
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but you were running late,
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so perhaps that's why it wasn't.
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Let the record show the counsel is fined $1,000 for failing to follow the poster rules of the court.
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Your Honor, I didn't mean to.
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And for mouthing off.
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Mouthing off?
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Yeah, so that's a bit extreme,
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but I have seen judges throw attorneys out of their courtroom for cell phones whose ringers go off.
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I've never seen a judge chastise counsel for just displaying a cell phone,
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that's not making any noise,
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but if the rules of the court say that you can't have a cell phone in that courtroom,
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then you can't have a cell phone in that courtroom.
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The judge gets to decide what goes on in his or her court.
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And there are plenty of courts that don't even let you take a cell phone into the building itself.
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That is the case with a lot of the federal courthouses in Virginia and Washington DC where I practice.
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So you really have to be careful and know the rules of the court before you head into the courthouse.
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Request an item.
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Court adjourned for the morning.
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Better luck next time, Harvey.
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From now on, I want him when I go against you.
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Your Honor, I have- Send him in.
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Oh no, no, no, no,
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no. You do not get to have a private meeting with the judge without opposing counsel present.
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This is an ex parte communication.
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This is totally improper, even though the judge has already denied this request.
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There might be an appeal,
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there might be other issues in this particular case.
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This is totally improper to meet with one side and not the other.
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This should never happen.
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I could have you brought up a review for talking to me like that.
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Then we can get it all on record.
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Get what?
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Whatever it is that you seem to have against me for no apparent reason,
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I have a solid argument for any reasonable judge to grant my injunction.
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So solid, it begs the question,
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why do you have it in for me?
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And I don't even know your first name.
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Really?
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My wife never mentioned it?
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Your wife?
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The woman you had an affair with last month?
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Ah, okay, so that is what we call a classic conflict of interest.
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In California, what you would do is file 170.6,
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which is a request for the judge to recuse themselves.
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There is no possible way that this judge gets to preside over this particular case when he has a huge bias problem.
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Now that Harvey knows this information,
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he absolutely should bring this judge up on review.
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The damage has already been done though.
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The judge has issued his ruling,
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so he can't back out now.
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There is not going to be a good outcome for this judge regardless of what unscrupulous conduct Harvey has engaged in here.
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This is not good.
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Thank God, he's terrible at tennis.
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Both terrible at tennis.
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My earlier ruling wasn't clear enough for you?
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Crystal, but I didn't want you to suffer for it.
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You see, if you don't sign my injunction,
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there's going to be a lawsuit.
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And when the next judge sees all the facts,
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he's going to overturn your ruling.
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You may be right.
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But by then your clients will have dumped you.
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You may be right, but that sterling reputation that you value so highly, down the tubes.
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Oh boy, okay, so this is called blackmail.
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This is incredibly unethical, not to mention this is yet another ex parte communication,
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which is totally improper.
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Man, I mean, at this point Harvey's gonna get disbarred.
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The judge might be disbarred and removed from the bench if this ever comes to light.
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This is violating your oath as an attorney.
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You file for a divorce?
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Soon enough?
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Perhaps we could discuss a little quid pro quo before I do.
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I'm listening.
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You sign a document that says you slept with my wife,
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I'll give you your injunction.
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Why would you want me to do that?
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To prevent her from taking me for half of everything I own.
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So what you're saying is,
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you'd like to blackmail me.
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I'm saying we could both benefit.
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You're blackmailing each other.
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He just came in there and tried to blackmail the judge into giving him a verdict that he wanted,
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and now the judge is trying to blackmail him right back.
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I mean, these two deserve each other.
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And since you're the one who screwed me,
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I'd say you owe me one.
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Technically, he screwed his wife.
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And he did the snapping thing,
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and Gregory- Look at me.
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You're I.
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Get out.
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No, that is not a good sign.
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Look, this is not my fault, all right?
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Lewis made me do it.
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Lewis did, right.
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He put a gun to your head and made you smoke pot.
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Yeah, he did.
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He pulled out the drug test,
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which I failed, by the way,
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and then he told me that if I didn't smoke pot to help him land this new client,
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that he'd fire me.
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It's not so different than asking someone out for drinks, is it?
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You and I had a deal.
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I'm sorry.
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And if next time Lewis asks you to do something that I told you not to do, what then?
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I told you that I did not have a choice.
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Oh, because he had a gun to your head.
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Yes!
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And what are your choices if someone puts a gun to your head?
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What are you talking about?
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You do what they say or they shoot you.
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Wrong.
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You take the gun, or you pull out a bigger one,
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or you call their bluff,
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or you do any one of 146 other things.
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This is a really interesting situation.
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I think that Lewis might be liable for conspiracy to engage in illegal drug consumption.
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Obviously, Mike is guilty of having consumed an illicit substance in New York it's still illegal to consume marijuana,
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but he was induced to do so by Lewis.
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They engaged in an agreement for him to engage in this particular action for the gain of both of those individuals.
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So I think that given that there is an agreement,
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there is an overt act to further the ends of the conspiracy here,
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I think Lewis may in fact also be guilty of the object of the conspiracy itself
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so Louis is as culpable as Mike for engaging in smoking marijuana.
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Interesting legal situation.
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Do you know how long it was before I got to sit at the adult table?
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It was when I brought in my first client,
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which I don't recall you having done it.
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And when you screwed up that patent and Wyatt went apeshit on me,
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I didn't put that on you,
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I took it on myself.
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I mean, you both royally screwed up that patent.
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That's not just Mike.
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Louis told me what you did at the club.
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I bet he didn't tell you the whole story.
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He told me enough to impress me.
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He landed the client.
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New business is hard.
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People will promise you the world,
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but until they sign that engagement letter, means nothing.
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Now, I don't know what you told Tom Keller,
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but bringing a client in at your age,
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that reminds me of Harvey.
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That's true.
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It is very unusual for junior associates to bring in new clients,
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especially potentially a summer associate like Mike.
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It's unclear to me whether he's a summer associate or a junior associate.
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He was interviewed as a summer associate,
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which is like an internship,
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but he is acting like a junior associate.
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Writers didn't quite get that one right.
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At any rate, it is incredibly unusual for a first year junior associate to bring in a client of any kind,
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and that is the way that you get promoted almost immediately.
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What are you showing us?
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Is this a website?
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Available at the SunTech domain name.
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All the design plans and calculations have been uploaded.
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Is this online now? Can be.
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Which means the whole world will have access to my designs.
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There'll be ten knockoffs of that phone before you can catch a cab back to your headquarters.
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We could file an injunction.
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Not before tomorrow and once that technology is out there.
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Good luck putting that genie back in the bottle.
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Well then we'll sue.
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But my client won't have any money.
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What he will have is credit for the initial design,
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which after he incorporates under a different name,
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will be worth a hell of a lot more money than the $20 million that you're offering.
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Yeah, except that if the other side's patent is valid,
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then they can sue anyone who uses those designs and builds the prototype without their permission.
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That's the point of the patent protection.
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And they would probably be able to sue this poor gentleman out of existence for a whole raft of things,
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including intentional interference with contract,
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disclosure of trade secrets, and still,
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at the end of the day,
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these nefarious guys on the other side still have their patent
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because Harvey and Mike didn't file their patent when they should have.
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So, yeah, this is probably yet another malpractice and disbarment trap.
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What is this?
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It's a copy of the Judicial Conduct Codes.
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A friend of mine works at the Attorney General's office who gave it to me.
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We had a nice chat about you.
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I told him if you were willing to blackmail someone once,
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chances are you'd done it before.
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He's very anxious to meet you.
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You think you can get away with screwing my wife and then have me investigated?
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You actually have it the wrong way around.
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The only thing I've done so far is have you investigated.
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What?
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I never actually slept with Lauren,
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but I knew you'd never believe me,
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so I kept my mouth shut.
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But now that she's getting a divorce,
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my policy no longer applies.
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And of course, she's free to date whoever she pleases.
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And she pleases me.
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Enjoy your evening, Donald.
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No honor among thieves.
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The judge should have gotten him to sign an affidavit at the same time that he issued his ruling,
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if he really was gonna follow through with the blackmail here.
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That was just poor lawyering on the judge's part.
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All right, so now it's time to give Suits episode two a grade for legal realism.
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There was some accurate discussion of what it takes to file for a patent,
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but also a complete disregard for all of the legwork that goes into it,
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and of course, all of the attorneys in this episode would have been disbarred many,
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many times over.
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Last time around, I gave Suits a B minus.
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I'm afraid this episode is slightly less realistic,
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so I'm going to have to downgrade it to a C plus.
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Suits is not exactly the most realistic show out there.
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Harvey and Mike seem to know nothing about the law,
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but if you're looking for the best documentaries and non-fiction movies that exist,
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you need to check out CuriosityStream.
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For example, I'm watching David Starkey's documentary on the Magna Carta,
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which explains how the 1215 Charter made everyone subject to the rule of law and became the foundation of the US Constitution.
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It's the same rule of law that Mike and Harvey disregard every single episode.
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Legal Eagles get a free account for 30 days by clicking the link below,
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or using the promo code LegalEagle.
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So a few days on CuriosityStream and you'll know more about the law than Harvey and Mike put together.
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So check out the link below,
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start learning about the real world,
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not the fictional world of Suits.
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And until next time, I'll see you in court.

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Sobre Esta Lição

Nesta lição, você irá praticar o inglês assistindo a um episódio do programa "Suits", onde um advogado real analisa as questões legais apresentadas. Através do exercício de shadowing, você terá a oportunidade de aprimorar sua pronúncia, entonação e compreensão auditiva. Vamos focar em frases específicas que são utilizadas em contextos de direito e negócios, permitindo que você se familiarize com vocabulário e expressões úteis no seu aprendizado de inglês.

Vocabulário e Frases-Chave

  • Patent - patentes
  • Legal malpractice - má prática legal
  • Conference room - sala de conferências
  • Technology - tecnologia
  • Investment deal - acordo de investimento
  • Make sure - certifique-se
  • Earned the privilege - ganhar o privilégio

Dicas de Prática

Para maximizar sua prática de conversação em inglês, utilize a técnica de shadowspeak, onde você repete o que ouve no vídeo, imitando a pronúncia e a entonação dos falantes. O shadowing em inglês é extremamente eficaz para aprender inglês com YouTube, pois você pode ouvir a linguagem em um contexto natural e dinâmico. Neste episódio, o ritmo é moderado, permitindo que você acompanhe sem dificuldade. Preste atenção nas expressões idiomáticas e tente usar o vozeio e a ênfase que os personagens empregam, isso ajudará a desenvolver um estilo de fala mais autêntico. Além disso, faça pausas regulares para absorver e repetir as partes mais desafiadoras, reforçando seu aprendizado e aumentando sua confiança na fala.

Com a prática regular e a imersão nos diálogos, você se sentirá mais preparado para se comunicar em situações do dia a dia e para explorar temas mais complexos em inglês. Boa sorte e aproveite sua prática!

O que é a Técnica de Shadowing?

Shadowing é uma técnica de aprendizado de idiomas com base científica, originalmente desenvolvida para o treinamento de intérpretes profissionais. O método é simples, mas poderoso: você ouve áudio em inglês nativo e repete imediatamente em voz alta — como uma sombra seguindo o falante com 1-2 segundos de atraso. Pesquisas mostram melhora significativa na precisão da pronúncia, entonação, ritmo, sons conectados, compreensão auditiva e fluência na fala.

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