
"Kim Kardashian's effort to become a real life lawyer just like her dad has provided a steady stream of content here at Above the Law. In 2019, Kardashian officially announced that she was studying to become a lawyer without going to law school (seeing as she's without a bachelor's degree, a requirement for the traditional lawyer route) and instead studying through an apprenticeship. The process took six years - thanks, COVID - and now she's waiting on her bar exam results."
"Because it's a Kardashian we're talking about here, she's documented much of the process on social media. She shared her hatred of con law, struggles with evidence, and a criminal law issue spotter that cast Justin Bieber as a criminal mastermind. She's complained about the fact that law student life sucks, explained that she neglected her Keeping Up With the Kardashians livetweeting duties to keep up with torts homework, bailed on summer holiday festivities as she continued with her contracts homework, and dealt with personalized questions all about her. She even has a favorite law professor - University of Washington contracts professor Steve Calandrillo - who she's shouted out on Insta. Kardashian even has her "just like us" moment, like when she posted about shooting tequila while studying torts."
"Speaking of Kardashian's test-taking troubles, Kim learned that ChatGPT isn't an ideal study partner. In a Vanity Fair lie detector test (because everyone needs a gimmick these days), Kardashian dished about her use of ChatGPT. Kardashian told her All's Fair c o-star Teyana Taylor that she has used ChatGPT for "legal advice." And it didn't go great. "When I need to know the answer to a question, I'll take a picture and snap it and put it in there. It has made me fail tests ... all the time," Kardashian explained. "And then I'll get mad and I'll yell at it." "So she's a frenemy?" Taylor, followed up. And Kardashian agreed, "Yes, a frene"
Kim Kardashian pursued a path to become a lawyer through a legal apprenticeship beginning in 2019 because she lacks a bachelor's degree required for law school. The apprenticeship stretched six years, delayed by the COVID pandemic, and culminated in awaiting bar exam results. She shared study experiences on social media, describing dislike of constitutional law, difficulties with evidence and criminal law problem-spotting, missed social events while completing torts and contracts homework, and named a favorite University of Washington contracts professor. She even posted a tequila-shotting moment while studying torts. She used ChatGPT for legal questions and reported that it provided incorrect answers that caused failed tests and frustration.
Read at Above the Law
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