Yeah, who the fuck said you need to go to a top 14 school to make it anywhere in that field?
Jesus I'm always shoveling out some cash to my lawyers for something. When it comes down to it graduating from a top school may get you into a firm. But if you aren't worth your salt you won't get anywhere, chances are you'll be kicked to the curb.
I've bought the plugin, and even though I don't know the OP he seems like a legit dude. Just because you may start a few rungs below the big guys doesn't mean you can't surpass them in no time at all.
Hard work + office politics FTW.
Good job man and keep up the good work!
My man, go do a little research and see how many folk who graduated from a T2 school outside of the top 5% of their class are represented in Vault 100 firms, are working inhouse, or have their own successful practices. One of the reasons why most folks are at second rate schools in the first place is that they are not terribly hard workers, not very intelligent, or both. Your chances of making it big after you graduate from Hofstra Law are not exactly great. Your chances of working long hours doing doc review on contract are fairly decent though.
Another part of the equation that I think many people fail to really understand is that there is a derth of legal talent out there that is already unemployed and US schools are cranking out tens of thousands of graduates a year...only a few of which will ever actually pass the bar and be licensed to practice in an area worth living in. IE - We already have a larger supply than we need and we are continuing to produce far more of the "good" than we have need for. Not a great situation to be in for most graduates entering the market. This situation will likely continue to worsen as India produces hundreds of thousands of graduates from their law schools who can perform research and draft motions for US firms at a fraction of the cost of what it currently costs to pay a 1st or 2nd year associate to do the same job. A senior associate then reviews the work which was done by some Indian that night while he slept and after reviewing the document and checking the citations, spelling, etc., he submits the same document at a fraction of the cost to the firm and can still bill the client at an exorbitant rate.
Lastly, and this kind of loops back to the prestigue/T14 issue, few professions in this world are as hungup on pedigree as the folks in the legal field. Where you went to school, who you know, and where you have worked is insanely important - there is no way around this. To get a cool job as inhouse councel you need to have cut your teeth in the "real world" for a while usually. And to get that job which actually means something on your resulme (as in not just doing document review/discovery on contract) you need to have solid grades from a reputable school or fucking spectacular grades from a decent school. While it is true that nothing is a substitute for hard work, you can't get through a good law school with respectable grades without either being brilliant or working your ass off.
If you were starting a company and wanted to hire someone would you choose the guy who graduated from CUNY with solid grades, or the guy who decided that after spending 4 years at Cravath he was sick of the rat-race and the golden handcuffs? I know who I would hire...