Word: lawyerã
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Third year HLS student Jeremy D. Blachman also pushed the envelope when New York Times revealed him as the “Anonymous Lawyer?? of the eponymous website. “Anonymous Lawyer?? was a fictional account of a pompous, sexist, high-powered attorney. The only catch was that Blachman didn’t mention that it was all made up. Though the site was not hosted by the Berkman Center, Harvard made the papers nonetheless, drawing attention to the possibility for blogging mischief...
...just trying to be funny,” says Blachman. “I didn’t expect to enjoy writing it so much.” By the time the Times article revealed the blog’s fictional nature, “Anonymous Lawyer?? had already gained a loyal following. And while many of his faithful readers guessed at his identity, few knew who he was until the Times article went to press...
...luckily for Jenkins, one of the more laissez-faire feminists of CodePink had slipped out of her handcuffs while in the police van and grabbed his cell phone from his pocket, using it to call the D.C. lawyer??s guild. A lawyer arrived shortly, and Jenkins and his fellow demonstrators were released...
Trager chose to keep his Judaism under wraps while in Lebanon. While getting a haircut on his second day abroad, he told the man sitting next to him—a well-educated Druze lawyer??that he was a “German-Irish Unitarian vegetarian,” the last part so that he could keep kosher without raising any eyebrows...
...movie begins with a dead end, plot wise. Bridget (Renee Zellweger) is deliriously happy with her “top human rights lawyer?? of a boyfriend Mark Darcy (Colin Firth). She texts that she’s “missing you already” immediately after they kiss each other goodbye in the morning and Bridget makes a lot of fuss about their fabulous sex life, or in Bridget-speak, their frequent “shagathons...