Having written legal briefs for 2 years in undergrad classes and planning fully to be an attorney, I cannot imagine the whiplash of jumping in without any knowledge
Bro… everyone is jumping in without any knowledge. I am saying this totally respectfully, and if you wanna go to law school I urge you to, but people with masters in public policy, extensive experience in difficult prelaw courses, and experience as paralegals, are ALL taken by surprise in law school. A lot of us took those classes taught by attorneys who swore we were writing full briefs, still abridged that material. Enter at your own risk. No one is prepared. Law as a practice is so gatekept that no classes outside of the law school really resembles law school.
This seriously sounds like something straight from "Ace Attorney" but in real life... What's next, Gym-class with all the suited up lawyers-in-training lining up and slamming their hands on a table while yelling "OBJECTION!!!" for thirty minutes?
@@henryreed4697history classes are seminar based too. It’s honestly pretty easy to interject thoughtful and critical analysis without having read multiple documents back to back
@@loki4807 "The Socratic method is a form of cooperative argumentative dialogue between individuals, based on asking and answering questions to stimulate critical thinking and to draw out ideas and underlying presuppositions" So if you just focus on an author's argument or how they present a piece of evidence, you can just barely gut a book and be fine for the next class period
I feel like it would've been better if That lady sang "Hellfire" from Hunchback of Notre Dame. If I was in lawschool orientation with Bob and I wish I was I would also be thinking I lost my fucking mind.
@@jasmeetk0 I believe Bob graduated law school fully, though I don't know exactly what certifications or licenses he has. Wade was pre-law but stopped after getting a BA in Philosophy if I recall.
I went to a music school, and despite how difficult that was, the orientation for the music school was much less confusing and much less randomly musical than Bob's orientation was. I think someone just talked to us for a bit and sent us on our way to our first classes.
2:35 "Did I apply to a joke Law School?" I mean, that could have been hazing (not only it happened right at the start, but apparently they didn't even acknowledge it happened - I can see that being some kind of gaslighting)
Okay so this case is about locking away this murderer who killed 50 people on a bus and oh hey here comes Fred! Fred: We're all in this together! Once we know, that we are We're all stars And we see that, We're all in this together... (1 hour of high school musical later) Dean: ...aaaaaand go away!
I went into law school knowing nothing about it, and having homework before the first class was mind boggling to me. But in many ways I was better prepared that some classmates because I was slightly older, more experienced, and understood we were not lawyers yet. It's amazing how many law students assume they know better than everyone else already.
as someone who’s beginning her 1L year this fall & whose school also has a church onsite, i will be sorely disappointed if i do not have the same experience at orientation
My professors would kick out students who clearly didn’t study the case in depth. They would call on students to stand and speak about a case and answer their questions. Every class would have two or three cases, so you could have 10 cases you had to memorize for the day. I was just grateful that I wasn’t the first person in the semester to get kicked out of class 😂😂😂
I went to a game development class in college and our Teacher, he had a button up shirt and a tie didn't know shit about Game Development. So me 2 other dudes just ended up trying to make a game on our own which didnt work and the teacher just played games on his big projector for the whole term and would get mad everytime one of us asked him a question. He didn't teach anything other then a plan for game development and thats it. Funny enough he gave us all A's which cool but thats not why I went to class haha
Had a STEM game design course in Highschool, the teacher barely showed up and only talked about game dev structure, or put on "Indie dev: the movie" once. No coding, no digital art, no game engine, not even game design theory. The amount of knowledge I know now from online courses and self teaching is astronomical compared to anything I "learned" in that class.
@@NobleWolf Oh for sure, I know it's hard to rally a bunch of teenagers to get anything done for a group project spanning a week, let alone 2 whole school years (The STEM class was a part 1 'intro' and part 2 'project' courses). I'll be the first to say I wasn't anywhere close to being a perfect student at the time, but still just the sheer amount of nothing burger and waste of time in hindsight is infuriating. To top it all off the class was hyped up from outside departments, like how we'd all be making a game by the end of part 2 and everyone would get a scholarship from it, promised we'd go to E3 as junior game devs, we'd even went so far as to go to a STEM convention where a skeleton crew of student "leadership" went as a "proof of concept" (a rough outline of game concepts, nothing even close to resembling a proper GDD) so the teacher could make it look like he was doing something during all that time. I say all this because the experience caused me to doubt my abilities and game development in general when seeking higher education and probably stunted my Game Dev journey by at least 6 years. I'm doing much better on my own now of course, but man did those years leave a sour taste in my mouth for the craft.
@@thomasrapp992hey maybe you should try to teach game design! From what I've just read you can teach them how to make mashed potatoes and *still be better than that teacher*
@@halosreaper1 hmm... perhaps, I'd at least like to get a few successful projects under my belt first or at least career experience (to show myself and others that I know what I'm doing). Teachers in the U.S. don't get paid anything these days and game design tends to be filed under "the arts" which tends to get cut immediately. We'll see if any of that changes in the next 10 years or so though.
I had a similar experience to this, though on a much smaller scale. To this day, I still think, 'Maybe it was my fault? Did I misunderstand the purpose of any of those classes? Was there something I should have done before trying to join those classes?' In high school, I'd always been a percussionist, so my two electives were concert band and percussion ensemble (marching band, for my school, was an after-school extra-curricular activity, but I did that too). One year, however, I wanted to switch things up. I wanted to learn how to sing, so I signed up for a choir class. I don't remember which class specifically, but I imagine it would have been something like "Intro to Choir" or anything that gave the impression that I wanted TO LEARN HOW TO SING. That's not to say I couldn't sing; I just wanted to learn, you know, how to sing "correctly" so that I wouldn't be hurting myself, things I should be doing to hit pitches better -- you know, the usual things people seek out classes for, to learn to do the thing the class is for. Anyway, I was put in the class "with the best singers of all the choir classes", which is how that was described to me. I was put in "Chamber Choir". Let me tell you, I did not learn how to sing better or more efficiently while in that class apart from this one instance when a student heard me struggling and gave me the hot tip, "Sing from your diaphragm, not your throat". Thanks. I know that already. If there was one thing I already knew about singing, it was that. What I didn't know was WHAT THE HELL DOES THAT MEAN??? That's the whole reason why I joined choir, to LEARN how to sing better. Okay, yes, "sing from your diaphragm", I get it, but how do you do that? I thought singing comes from your vocal chords. No? No expounding on how to sing? We're just going to sing Lacrimosa expecting all of us to know how to belt Latin lyrics without hurting ourselves? Okay, sure. I like Mozart anyway.
I really wish the story had ended with Bob leaping up out of his seat and singing "Hellfire" at the lady! "HELLFIRE, DARK FIRE, NOW GYPSY IT'S YOUR TURN! CHOOSE ME OR YOUR PYRE! BE MINE OR YOU WILL BUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUURN!!!" That's what lawyers do, right?
I loved that I was approaching a Burger King when I got to this part. Definitely made me laugh while I was eating my Double Cheeseburger with 8pc Nuggets and Fries.
Why do u think so many lawyers listen to clasical music/opera because they claim "it helps them focus" when they have been structurally thought to listen to a lady sing every day randomly when they have to do work.
As a teacher, this is actually a common thing everywhere. School just had to take students as a mandatory thing on event as a participants instead of classes so kids won't won't argue about their time being spend on nothing. Unless they where all grown-ups, then that's was weird.
Having written legal briefs for 2 years in undergrad classes and planning fully to be an attorney, I cannot imagine the whiplash of jumping in without any knowledge
Bro… everyone is jumping in without any knowledge. I am saying this totally respectfully, and if you wanna go to law school I urge you to, but people with masters in public policy, extensive experience in difficult prelaw courses, and experience as paralegals, are ALL taken by surprise in law school. A lot of us took those classes taught by attorneys who swore we were writing full briefs, still abridged that material. Enter at your own risk. No one is prepared. Law as a practice is so gatekept that no classes outside of the law school really resembles law school.
hahah yes
@@aristotlechipotle2669💀
The US legal systems is suddenly starting to make a whole lot more sense.
As someone who just graduated law school, this is so unbelievably true
Okay but what's the point of the singing??
@@Dualumina prepare for anything, life as you knew it is inconsistent with law school reality
@@TheGzilla99 That answer is so straight-faced that I honestly can't tell if you're playing a bit deadpan or if you're being serious.
When Distractible becomes more engaging than your college professors 👨🏫
Because Professors don't know shit
And or High School teachers
Well, it's called Distractible podcast for a reason.
This seriously sounds like something straight from "Ace Attorney" but in real life...
What's next, Gym-class with all the suited up lawyers-in-training lining up and slamming their hands on a table while yelling "OBJECTION!!!" for thirty minutes?
As a newly licensed attorney- law school is WILD. The socratic method is the bane of my existence.
I mean, the discussion sounds intellectually stimulating to say the least.
@@henryreed4697history classes are seminar based too. It’s honestly pretty easy to interject thoughtful and critical analysis without having read multiple documents back to back
Unless you personally knew Socrates.
@@loki4807 "The Socratic method is a form of cooperative argumentative dialogue between individuals, based on asking and answering questions to stimulate critical thinking and to draw out ideas and underlying presuppositions"
So if you just focus on an author's argument or how they present a piece of evidence, you can just barely gut a book and be fine for the next class period
@@thesecretnewbie8872 It was a joke and also I was fucking with you.
I feel like it would've been better if That lady sang "Hellfire" from Hunchback of Notre Dame. If I was in lawschool orientation with Bob and I wish I was I would also be thinking I lost my fucking mind.
Except it would have to be a horny old man instead.
Except it would have to be a horny old man instead.
Nah, they probably sing that in medical school if half the things I hear about that are true.
Considering the current legal system, I think that song would be a lot more fitting
@@demonprincess9680 ya got that right your majesty.
I never knew Bob went to law school. That explains why there's this one time they were joking around and Wade and Mark called Bob a lawyer 🤣
Bob and Wade both have a small history in law I think. Not sure what exact qualifications they've cleared though
@@jasmeetk0 I believe Bob graduated law school fully, though I don't know exactly what certifications or licenses he has. Wade was pre-law but stopped after getting a BA in Philosophy if I recall.
Though I wouldn’t make it a 2 quarters in law school, I want to see something like this in my life.
I went to a music school, and despite how difficult that was, the orientation for the music school was much less confusing and much less randomly musical than Bob's orientation was. I think someone just talked to us for a bit and sent us on our way to our first classes.
I am now convinced the phoenix wright games are normal.
Wade's laughing his butt off and Mark's trying to analyze the strange event in the story X'D
2:35 "Did I apply to a joke Law School?" I mean, that could have been hazing (not only it happened right at the start, but apparently they didn't even acknowledge it happened - I can see that being some kind of gaslighting)
Okay so this case is about locking away this murderer who killed 50 people on a bus and oh hey here comes Fred!
Fred: We're all in this together! Once we know, that we are We're all stars And we see that, We're all in this together...
(1 hour of high school musical later)
Dean: ...aaaaaand go away!
As a lawyer, yeah a lot of teachers don’t explain absolutely anything
Law is really fascinating, I loved studying it at school.
indubitably
I went into law school knowing nothing about it, and having homework before the first class was mind boggling to me. But in many ways I was better prepared that some classmates because I was slightly older, more experienced, and understood we were not lawyers yet. It's amazing how many law students assume they know better than everyone else already.
as someone who’s beginning her 1L year this fall & whose school also has a church onsite, i will be sorely disappointed if i do not have the same experience at orientation
i'd really like an update once you have orientation! also, good luck on your schooling! 💜
@@gadiesandlentlemen orientation begins tomorrow! will return with an update soon ☝️
did the lady appear
@@maddie-qe7su
any updates? hope law school is going well!@@maddie-qe7su
@@maddie-qe7suhow did it go????
To be fair to your law school, one of the most important characters in Hunchback of Notre Dame... was a judge.
Student: (pays tens of thousands of dollars for law school)
Law school: here's some cases. Go be a lawyer! What do you mean you don't know how?
My professors would kick out students who clearly didn’t study the case in depth. They would call on students to stand and speak about a case and answer their questions. Every class would have two or three cases, so you could have 10 cases you had to memorize for the day. I was just grateful that I wasn’t the first person in the semester to get kicked out of class 😂😂😂
this just gave me insight so that i’m prepared for the singing when i get to law school 😂
I have a friend who is going to law school soon. I sent her this so freaking quickly.
I went to a game development class in college and our Teacher, he had a button up shirt and a tie didn't know shit about Game Development. So me 2 other dudes just ended up trying to make a game on our own which didnt work and the teacher just played games on his big projector for the whole term and would get mad everytime one of us asked him a question. He didn't teach anything other then a plan for game development and thats it. Funny enough he gave us all A's which cool but thats not why I went to class haha
Had a STEM game design course in Highschool, the teacher barely showed up and only talked about game dev structure, or put on "Indie dev: the movie" once. No coding, no digital art, no game engine, not even game design theory. The amount of knowledge I know now from online courses and self teaching is astronomical compared to anything I "learned" in that class.
@@thomasrapp992 This is a trend for other courses, like bad teachers just phoning it in or are in the classroom because they did some favors. Ugh
@@NobleWolf Oh for sure, I know it's hard to rally a bunch of teenagers to get anything done for a group project spanning a week, let alone 2 whole school years (The STEM class was a part 1 'intro' and part 2 'project' courses). I'll be the first to say I wasn't anywhere close to being a perfect student at the time, but still just the sheer amount of nothing burger and waste of time in hindsight is infuriating. To top it all off the class was hyped up from outside departments, like how we'd all be making a game by the end of part 2 and everyone would get a scholarship from it, promised we'd go to E3 as junior game devs, we'd even went so far as to go to a STEM convention where a skeleton crew of student "leadership" went as a "proof of concept" (a rough outline of game concepts, nothing even close to resembling a proper GDD) so the teacher could make it look like he was doing something during all that time. I say all this because the experience caused me to doubt my abilities and game development in general when seeking higher education and probably stunted my Game Dev journey by at least 6 years. I'm doing much better on my own now of course, but man did those years leave a sour taste in my mouth for the craft.
@@thomasrapp992hey maybe you should try to teach game design! From what I've just read you can teach them how to make mashed potatoes and *still be better than that teacher*
@@halosreaper1 hmm... perhaps, I'd at least like to get a few successful projects under my belt first or at least career experience (to show myself and others that I know what I'm doing). Teachers in the U.S. don't get paid anything these days and game design tends to be filed under "the arts" which tends to get cut immediately. We'll see if any of that changes in the next 10 years or so though.
2:30 best bob face ever
The education system in general once you get to university is like this
I had a similar experience to this, though on a much smaller scale. To this day, I still think, 'Maybe it was my fault? Did I misunderstand the purpose of any of those classes? Was there something I should have done before trying to join those classes?'
In high school, I'd always been a percussionist, so my two electives were concert band and percussion ensemble (marching band, for my school, was an after-school extra-curricular activity, but I did that too). One year, however, I wanted to switch things up. I wanted to learn how to sing, so I signed up for a choir class. I don't remember which class specifically, but I imagine it would have been something like "Intro to Choir" or anything that gave the impression that I wanted TO LEARN HOW TO SING. That's not to say I couldn't sing; I just wanted to learn, you know, how to sing "correctly" so that I wouldn't be hurting myself, things I should be doing to hit pitches better -- you know, the usual things people seek out classes for, to learn to do the thing the class is for.
Anyway, I was put in the class "with the best singers of all the choir classes", which is how that was described to me. I was put in "Chamber Choir". Let me tell you, I did not learn how to sing better or more efficiently while in that class apart from this one instance when a student heard me struggling and gave me the hot tip, "Sing from your diaphragm, not your throat". Thanks. I know that already. If there was one thing I already knew about singing, it was that. What I didn't know was WHAT THE HELL DOES THAT MEAN??? That's the whole reason why I joined choir, to LEARN how to sing better. Okay, yes, "sing from your diaphragm", I get it, but how do you do that? I thought singing comes from your vocal chords. No? No expounding on how to sing? We're just going to sing Lacrimosa expecting all of us to know how to belt Latin lyrics without hurting ourselves? Okay, sure. I like Mozart anyway.
Oh don't worry that's not only Law School that's the entire issue with advanced education.
This has fridge energy
I bet Mark didn't say anything in this podcast, but he loves listening something hilarious than ever.
Lmao Bob IS Elle Woods 😂
I really wish the story had ended with Bob leaping up out of his seat and singing "Hellfire" at the lady! "HELLFIRE, DARK FIRE, NOW GYPSY IT'S YOUR TURN! CHOOSE ME OR YOUR PYRE! BE MINE OR YOU WILL BUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUURN!!!" That's what lawyers do, right?
Watching this AS I’m prepping for my first year is wild 🧍🏾♀️
Bob just met Esmeralda.
My own law professor said "I don't like being in court guys."
"Aren't you a lawyer?"
"..yes."
that's fair
Those of us who follow Legal Eagle know all about this lol
Right, like I am not even a law student but for some reason hearing a lawyer explain law is interesting to me lol
god im so glad they have video, so much of Bob's acting out the story would be missed haha
I wish we had had video for Bob's Fridge
I loved that I was approaching a Burger King when I got to this part. Definitely made me laugh while I was eating my Double Cheeseburger with 8pc Nuggets and Fries.
🎵Bob be a lawyer tonight,
Bob be a lawyer tonight,
Do it for Chewie and the ewoks, and all the other puppets,
Bob be a lawyer tonight 🎵
The hunchback of notre dame is one of my top favorite movies so that is hilarious and I wish I could’ve been there
We need more of these in our lectures. Certainly would be more fun
I have a feeling that singing Woman was there for a lesson. And that lesson is "Try not to get distracted from your work!"
All that's missing is the lessons on making a case out of random crap while yelling "Objection!" at the most unreasonable moments
That's hilarious
I would've loved if they randomly did that lol.
wow
Bob lost weight, Mark looks the same, and Wade has aged like a king.
Compared to... when? That time they went on tour? The beginning of their youtube careers? When they were college freshmen? I'm genuinely asking here
@@elsie8757 not everyone watches these channels every day.
It's been a few years for me, thanks.
@@forkshifter I literally just wanted to know what the last time you saw them was. Genuinely. I was curious.
LOL funny Distractable I liked this Podcast Video Clip [PVC] yes!!!!👍😅
I heard the best law schools don't actually teach you to be a lawyer they just give you a ton of briefs to read..... And wow singing?
I was gonna say at the beginning “this sounds a lot like online film school” bc of the group/class discussions but it took a turn real quick 🤣
Why do u think so many lawyers listen to clasical music/opera because they claim "it helps them focus" when they have been structurally thought to listen to a lady sing every day randomly when they have to do work.
Suddenly Australian law degrees feel so easy by comparison
I think I know what happened, when you went into the church, you went through a wormhole that sent you to the Ace Attorney universe
Bob looks and is way to nice to be a lawyer.
I heard that law school is the closest thing to hell that someone can experience.
"🎉SURPRISE 🎉
You joined clown school!"
My parents are attempting to push me into law school after being a history undergrad, i really would not like to.
As a teacher, this is actually a common thing everywhere. School just had to take students as a mandatory thing on event as a participants instead of classes so kids won't won't argue about their time being spend on nothing. Unless they where all grown-ups, then that's was weird.
Journalism school is basically that too, but way more pauses to people singing.
Hearing this makes me a lot happier that Google exists now 💀
Man, I thought con law was weird. Lol
We need legal eagle on this
Mark's face the entire time: 🤔
Damn, I’m in law school rn and I *wish* my law school was this cool
Everything I know about law is from phenix right ace attorney
Is this my hint to quit law school
Wen u gonna stream again ??
My stomach and cheeks hurt❤❤😂
New distractible vids drop on Monday and Friday on Spotify. That's where I get my doses of these three
Which episode is this
🤣
Bob still says umm too much but the story is awesome! 😆😆
I should have been a lawyer. Apparently I'm analytical and a know-it-all and a disappointment.
1 thing what was costume was she wearing
But what did she do for the commoners' verses??
Where’s todays Ep of distractible???
I fucking love distractible lol
I love watching your videos when I'm high
As someone who just graduated law school, this is so unbelievably true