Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Starting Salaries For Law Students are BiModal — If Not Bipolar

Bill Henderson has a really interesting chart up at Empirical Legal Studies: Distribution of 2006 Starting Salaries: Best Graphic Chart of the Year which shows a very bimodal distribution of starting lawyer saleries. As he says,

The sample includes—in order of size—private practice (55.8%), business (14.2%), government (10.6%), judicial clerks (9.6%), public interest (5.4%), and other (2.8%). Half of the graduates make less than the $62,000 per year median—but remarkably, there is no clustering there. Over a quarter (27.5%) make between $40k-$55k per year, and another quarter (27.8%) have an annual salary of $100K plus.

If the chart were a flipbook of the last twenty years, the first mode would be relatively stationary, barely tracking inflation, while the second mode would be moving quickly to the right—i.e., the salary wars. In fact, because of the recent jump to $160K in the major markets, the second mode has already moved even more to the right.

Lots of other interesting comments there too.

Posted in Law School | 5 Comments

MT 2.6x –> MT 4.0x Anyone?

Has anyone actually upgraded a MT 2.6x installation to the current version?

The instructions suggest you upgrade to MT 3.5 first, and even have a link to the MT archive where it is said to reside. But when I go there it looks awfully blank….

I suppose it ain't seriously broke, so maybe I shouldn't try to fix it. But maybe a test site just to see….

Posted in Discourse.net, Software | Comments Off on MT 2.6x –> MT 4.0x Anyone?

Car Cookies!

All I want to know is, will this method for baking chocolate chip cookies on a car dashboard work in a humid climate?

Actually, I also want to know how long the smell lingers and whether I have to share.

Posted in Food and Drink | 2 Comments

For the Record

Despite what Atrios seems to think we are Ashkenazi, not Sephardic.

Posted in Dan Froomkin | Comments Off on For the Record

A Real Back-Handed Compliment

I can explain this.

You may think that this looks like media bias —

Crooks and Liars » Romney Fundraising Scandal Ignored By Liberal Media – Clinton Gets Hammered Over Hsu: In recent days, NBC, CNN, and Fox News have all aired reports or discussed the case of Norman Hsu, who The Wall Street Journal suggested may have funneled illegal campaign contributions to Sen. Hillary Clinton. However, when Mitt Romney’s national finance committee co-chairman Alan Fabian was charged with mail fraud, money laundering, bankruptcy fraud, perjury and obstruction of justice, the three networks did not report or discuss it during programs available in the Nexis database.

It looks like the media protect Republicans and go after Democrats, right? Well, that may be true of Fox News and the Wall Street Journal, but I have a different theory as to why the rest of the media falls into this pattern.

You see, it's not news when Republican officials are involved in sleazy financial deals. It is news when it happens to Democrats. After all, it happens to Republicans all the time and only happens to Democrats occasionally — despite the vast disparity in prosecutorial resources devoted to trying to find dirt on Democratic office-holders as opposed to that devoted investigating Republicans.

(And don't even get me started on the frequency of GOP sex scandals.)

Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze, The Media | Comments Off on A Real Back-Handed Compliment

Post Does Pickups

The Florida Third DCA decision that I wrote about in There Goes the Neighborhood? has grabbed the attention of the Washington Post: Appeals Court Finds Ugly Implications in City's Anti-Truck Law.

Posted in Miami | Comments Off on Post Does Pickups