WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PODCASTS? . . . I did 51 complete episodes before getting burned out. But it was fun while it lasted!
The podcasts featured whimsy, as in "Law-Related Things That Suck: Having to Hire a Lawyer From the Yellow Pages," or "Law-Related Things That Suck: Being Followed by a Suspicious-Looking Attorney."
From there, I graduated to full-length "shows," such as Episode #37, which featured a review of Supreme Court nomination failures from 1789 to 1987 or Episode #48, a rundown on my trip to New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina.
The last three episodes were intended specifically for lawyers--a three-part examination of advanced deposition techniques that eventually became sections in my book, Deposition Checklists and Strategies.
And then . . . silence! I don't remember a particular reason why I shuttered my podcasting studio, but it's undisputable that I did. All that remains are the memories . . .



I briefly did a podcast back in my first year of college, and I recall the problem became running out of things to discuss well before the hour was up, so I started bringing in a lot of filler content. And it got more and more pathetic as time went on. Your podcast, from the episode I just listened to, was actually pretty good, as I have time, I’ll work through the archives.
Posted by: Sarah | August 17, 2012 at 05:44 AM