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David B. Lat, Above the Law By David B. Lat, Above the Law David B. Lat is an American blogger and a former federal prosecutor. He is the founder and managing editor of Above the Law, a blog about law firms and the legal profession.
Lat first began blogging under the pseudonym Article III Groupie, pretending to be a woman, for the judicial gossip blog Underneath Their Robes, until he revealed his identity in a November 2005 interview with Jeffrey Toobin of The New Yorker. Afterward Lat left his job as assistant U.S. attorney to write for the political blog Wonkette. In August 2006, Lat launched Above the Law, a blog about law firms and the legal profession, for the Breaking Media network of sites. In July 2008, he became the managing editor of Breaking Media, overseeing its stable of blogs out of its New York office. In December 2009, Lat announced that he would be returning to full-time writing and editing of Above the Law, after a new CEO and executive editor joined Breaking Media. Lat’s writing has also appeared in various newspapers and magazines, including the New York Times, Washington Post, New York Magazine, New York Observer, and Washingtonian. The following is excerpted from a November 30, 2009 bigthink.com interview with David Lat: Question: How did you come to found a blog about the legal profession? David Lat: Truth of why I moved from law to media, it was a little bit accidental, actually. I had always been interested in journalism. I had been involved in journalism in high school and college, where I worked on the school newspaper at Harvard, at The Harvard Crimson. And I then, after a number of legal jobs – I clerked for a judge; I worked at a law firm and then I went to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. I found myself wanting to get back into non-legal writing. And so kind of on a lark, I started a blog anonymously because I didn’t really know how it would affect my day job. I started a blog called Underneath Their Robes, which was kind of like a People or Us Weekly, but focused on federal judges, oddly enough. So that, essentially, is how I first made the transition. I mean,
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I was doing that while balancing my day job as a prosecutor. And then eventually that blog developed a following and that was essentially my entry point into media. I’m glad I made the move from law to media. I still practice a little bit because the blogging company that my site, Above the Law, is a part of, Breaking Media, has me as its in-house counsel. So I do a little bit of legal practice, but it’s really five or ten percent of my time as opposed to 100 percent of it. And for me – everyone is different – for me, I just enjoy the dayto-day work of being a blogger more than the day-to-day work of being a practicing lawyer. But everyone’s different. Some people tell me, ‘’Oh, I would never want your job.’’ Question: What was your fascination with gossip about judges? David Lat: In terms of Underneath Their Robes, I think that that blend of law and gossip reflected two aspects of my personality. On the one hand, I can happily sit down with an issue of The Harvard Law Review. On the other hand, I can happily sit down with Us Weekly. So I think it reflected my own bifurcated personality in a way, these twin interests that I had. The other thought that I had about it was people love to talk about judges within legal circles. When they’re appearing before a judge, they want to know what the judge is like. People also look at judges a little bit like celebrities of their legal world. These are the people who are making the big decisions, who are affecting the lives of millions. And at the time that Underneath the Robes was started, certainly there wasn’t a lot of attention paid to judges as people. People would examine their rulings, for instance, or their jurisprudence, but they wouldn’t really examine them much as people. One thing I think that has changed since I started Underneath Their Robes in 2004 and today is we have been through three Supreme Court confirmation hearings-Chief Justice Roberts,
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