4.8 • 868 Ratings
🗓️ 13 February 2017
⏱️ 118 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Nathan has two recommendations this week: Cadillac Desert, a thorough history of the American West’s pursuit of freshwater by Marc Reisner, and Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes, a cooperative video game where the players work together to defuse a virtual bomb that only one of them can see and manipulate. If you squint hard, this game can almost count as LSAT prep. (1:53)
Matt in D.C. took the LSAT in February and is having post-test emotions he wants help processing; his range of feelings runs from sadness to happiness and back to anxiety. He asks the guys if they have experienced similar reactions and how they dealt with them. Nathan suggests boozing it up while Ben gets in touch with his inner Nietzsche (who knew Ben would be the darker one?!) (9:10)
Calvin attempted his second LSAT in February and found this test to be quite similar to the one in December. He does a comparison of the exams; do you agree with his assessment? (29:40)
Not to be outdone by his cohost, Ben recommends a book of his own, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari. This book was one of Obama’s Top 10 and possibly the reason behind Ben’s newfound nihilism. (32:40)
Madison is studying to take the summer LSAT with the goal of scoring a 178. She has an undergrad GPA of 3.2 from a top public university, a resume chock-full of community service hours, and a dream of attending Stanford Law School. While admiring Madison’s lofty goals, the guys encourage her to toss out her specific score idea, broaden her list of dream schools, and follow the application instructions to the letter. (37:20)
Your friendly reminder to subscribe to the Thinking LSAT Podcast is coming up…now! Please subscribe to automatically receive new episodes and updates from your favorite LSAT nerds. (53:30)
We continue working through the June 2007 LSAT. To play at home, just download the free test; work through Section 3, Question 17; and listen in as we discuss the solution in detail. (1:00:26)
Nathan continues Episode 83 with Eliza Ghanooni, a bankruptcy attorney with her own firm in Los Angeles. Ms. Ghanooni works with corporate and individual clients, including students, who need help managing their debt. (1:21:40)
*Correction from the show: the lawsuit needed to get rid of student loans is actually an adversary proceeding to declare student loan debt dischargeable, not a non-dischargeability action.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to episode 83 of the Thinking Elsat Podcast. This is Ben Olson in Washington, D.C. and Nathan Fox in Los Angeles. |
0:19.2 | How's it going, Nathan? |
0:22.4 | It's good. Seems like we've got our technical difficulties sorted out. |
0:26.0 | We're having a little bit of problems getting this thing going this morning. |
0:29.0 | But yeah, we are, we are, looks like we're officially up and running here, so I'm happy. Let's let's do this. |
0:36.3 | Cool, yeah. I think for the fourth time I heard that it was raining there. |
0:53.4 | Oh my God, it's, yeah, LA has been raining for like two months, so all of the hysteria about the drought is temporarily going to be on hold. I mean, obviously that just comes back, |
0:56.0 | you know, we get a shit ton of rain now |
0:58.5 | and then it'll be like all we need is one dry year |
1:01.7 | and then they'll be talking about the drought again. |
1:04.1 | I mean the truth is humans should just like not be living here you know without |
1:08.0 | there's just not enough water. |
1:10.1 | Yeah. |
1:11.1 | In Southern California, coastal Southern California, there's not nearly enough water, so not, certainly not enough to support the 10 million people or whatever that live down here. |
1:19.3 | Huh. Now, do you guys get your water from like Colorado? |
1:23.0 | Uh, yeah, I mean I think we get... |
1:27.0 | If you ever want to like blow your own mind, |
1:29.0 | you should check out Google Earth like satellite imagery of the border between like San Diego and |
1:34.8 | Tijuana. Okay. It's nuts how green it is in the United States and then how brown it is in |
1:40.1 | Mexico and it seems as if what happened is we just took every last drop of water |
1:45.8 | you know in that watershed and just kept it all in the United States. |
1:49.3 | Huh. There's some really I read a really good book called Cadillac Desert, okay, which was all about the giant water development projects in the southwest |
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