The Law Firm

2005
The Law Firm

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Week 1 Jul 28, 2005

In the series opener, the legal eagles are put to the test in the Candy Danzig vs. George Leach case involving a dog attack between neighbors and the Karen Allen vs. Bill Ryan case, a traffic dispute focusing on a woman who was pulled over by a supposed police officer who turned out to be a coroner with no police authority. Attorney Roy Black hosts the 12 real life lawyers as they try real cases, in front of real judges and juries, for the grand prize of $250,000.

EP2 Week 2 Aug 04, 2005

Join host Roy Black as the legal teams handle the Sabrina Belladonna vs. Jason Rosilli case involving a professional dominatrix and computer geek and the Brad Graves vs. Ronald Hicks case involving a Wanted Poster Prank turning two friends against each other.

EP3 Week 3 Sep 06, 2005

The show moves from NBC to its sister network Bravo, as the remaining eight contestants are split into two teams to take opposing sides in a case involving a heated dispute between neighbors. Outside the courtroom, tempers also flare among the lawyers as personalities and strategies clash.

EP4 Week 4 Sep 13, 2005

The six remaining contestants take on a custody case involving parents who share custody of their young son, and a charge of false arrest.

EP5 Week 5 Sep 20, 2005

Only five contestants remain to be divided into teams to take opposing sites in a case challenging the qualifcations of a winning race horse.

EP6 Week 6 (Series Finale) Sep 27, 2005

TBA

EP7 Week 7 Oct 08, 2005

Freedom of the press vs. privacy. A conservative religious straight man's picture is posted on a gay web site, and he sues. The case provides the backdrop for the three remaining lawyers to be cut to two.
7.3| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 28 July 2005 Ended
Producted By: 20th Century Fox Television
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The Law Firm is an hour-long reality television, nontraditional court show series that premiered on NBC on July 28, 2005. In the series, twelve young up-and-coming trial lawyers competed for a grand prize of $250,000. At the end of each show, attorney Roy Black decided which two competitors were the weakest and needed to be dismissed, using the catchphrase "The verdict is in. You're out." The series was cancelled by NBC after two weeks on the air due to weak ratings.

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Reviews

patrickcoristine We missed a few shows but had really gotten hooked on it after a couple of episodes. However this last episode (9/21/05) we really did not like the winning team being placed on the chopping block. In the apprentice the winning team is exempt, in survivor the winning team is exempt, and I could go on. In The Law Firm what is the point of being on the winning team.Chris made the decision not to take the risk of putting the weak client on the witness stand. His team won, a risk that paid off. Would Mr. Black have kept Chris on the team had he let the witness take the stand and subsequently lose the case. So if you lose you have just as good a chance of staying on as the winner. Now why are they working so hard to win? I am teaching my kids to be winners but your show is teaching them that losing is as good as winning "not".Does Aileen stay because she is the last female left? Americans like to win we don't like to win and lose at the same time. You win to win nobody wins to lose. For us this show has lost all credibility and we will no longer be loyal viewers.
mr internet I actually like the show, and look forward to it. However it's demeanor is SO much a copy of The Apprentice, I am not sure how they actually get away with it or why they need to. You can almost tell Black want's to say YOU'RE FIRED. I was so sure the story about the dog was going to be a hoax and George was going to turn out to be an actor... his comments and he is so animated and funny without trying to be, not sure if I am laughing with him or at him 'BIG DOG COMING' ...if this show get's the press it deserves I reckon it could be a legendary tag line ..I haven't laughed so hard in a long time. My only advice is they keep the lighter cases in there as much as possible. Also with the grand prize being $250k I am surprised it is with not more or that the winning attorney doesn't get a job with black (maybe there will be a twist at the end). Also they do miss one element of The Apprentice they should add, and a bit more about the lawyers, sort of a mini-biog. We don't get to know enough about their backgrounds before they start. \or is it just me...
Asteri-Atypical Even though Roy Black says "you are here to serve your clients" it was clear how much a game of "winning" this was for this group of newbie lawyers. The ethic was not one of doing what's right and arguing on any ethical basis but employing tricks to "win".Moreover, this group of people is quite petty and bickering. Such is sadly in keeping with some of the negative impressions the public has of attorneys.It was amazing how unprofessional some of these supposed "professionals" were. For people who were supposedly trained to speak for a living they were surprisingly unskilled. Maybe they can look up some local Toastmasters clubs.Lastly, I'll point out that the judges seemed somewhat "scolding" in their comments in the middle of the trials. I personally haven't been in many trials but I can't envision most judges speaking to the attorneys in a manner like one would address freshmen law students.All in all, there's some remedial entertainment value here. It seems a bit contrived and unreal and it follows the hackneyed "reality show" format a bit much for my tastes but it's mildly interesting to see the attorneys put together their cases then argue them. Not as good as CourTV but what do you expect from one of the Borg (aka Major Networks)?
UCCF The Law Firm has a nice premise: young attorneys trying real cases and getting the boot if they screw up. The last one gets a big firm job or a wad of cash, whatever.Unfortunately, this is what the Law Firm is: evidence that, without Donald Trump, the Apprentice would have already folded. Roy Black is a terrific trial lawyer, but he's got the camera presence of a lump of wet moss. His emotionless delivery and bizarre arm movements were bad enough, but his attempts to build drama at the end before "dismissing" a candidate were laughable. What this show lacks -- the thing that really drives the Apprentice -- is the boardroom scene where the candidates face off and get grilled by the Donald. A couple of isolated comments like "he could have done better" or "I made a mistake" just aren't going to cut it. Black's got to get in there and start grilling them, hard.To make things worse, we learned almost nothing about the candidates, except of course that they all plan to win and think the people around them are a bunch of idiots and losers. None of them particularly stood out as a good lawyer or even an interesting personality. When someone got "dismissed", I didn't really care -- I had no vested interest in any of the competitors.And the real problem is, it's impossible to do justice (so to speak) to an actual case when it only gets 15-20 minutes of actual camera time. This show would work a lot better if they'd come up with one big case, split them into teams, and let them work through the various aspects as the weeks went by. Then, at the end, the final two would get to try the case (one on each side), and the winner of the case would win the competition.In short, don't waste your time. I'd like to think this show is evidence that the reality TV craze is headed for the dumpster at last, but I'm sure that more dreck will be right behind it.Rating: 0 out of 10.