PODCAST · education
The LSAT Simplified: A Hey Future Lawyer Podcast
by Hey Future Lawyer
Think the LSAT is a beast? Think again. In this podcast, Ben Parker and friends show you how the LSAT can actually be easy. We cut through the BS of traditional LSAT studying, offering clear, practical strategies and no-nonsense advice to help you master the exam without the fluff. Whether you’re just starting out or looking to fine-tune your approach, join us as we simplify complex concepts and pave a straightforward path to law school success. The LSAT is easy when you know how to approach it.Subscribe, rate, and review, and send in questions to be answered to our show by emailing [email protected] our full LSAT prep platform as well as our free course at HeyFutureLawyer.
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Is It Too Late to Study for the LSAT This Summer? (Honest Answer) (Ep. 60)
Ben kicks off the episode with Madeline, who has just finished her first year of law school (1L). She breaks down why spring semester felt so much harder than fall — not because of the coursework alone, but because job interviews, appellate briefs, oral arguments, and finals all collided at once. (0:00) Despite the chaos, she kept mostly normal hours, backing up Ben's core point that focused, consistent study beats logging endless unfocused time — whether you're in law school or prepping for the LSAT.The conversation moves into Madeline's summer associate position at a major regional civil firm in Lexington, Kentucky, and her fall 2L course lineup — Federal Courts, Administrative Law, Election Law, a judicial clerkship, and Law & Economics. (18:00) They also get into how to pick law school classes strategically: professor reputation and schedule fit matter more than the subject itself, and tenured professors tend to coast more than their non-tenured counterparts.The back half is all about LSAT and application timing. (38:00) Ben makes the case that starting LSAT prep in May for a fall 2027 start is already cutting it close, then reads and dismantles a combative Instagram comment from a T14 student arguing that applying in October has no cost. Ben explains the rolling admissions decay model — offers go out September 1st and diminish from there. They close with a live breakdown of SMU's early decision program, showing why most applicants should avoid it: you surrender all scholarship negotiating leverage in exchange for, at best, a marginal aid package.For more LSAT strategy and admissions guidance, visit heyfuturelawyer.com — and grab a spot in the free monthly class at heyfuturelawyer.com/free-class.
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Brutally Honest Law School Personal Statement Advice (Ep. 59)
In this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer podcast, Ben Parker breaks down what actually makes a law school personal statement work. Instead of treating the essay like a vague exercise in “being authentic,” Ben explains why the real goal is to convince admissions officers that you will be a strong addition to their law school class.Ben reviews listener-submitted personal statements and points out the most common mistakes applicants make: focusing too much on family background, writing about hardship without connecting it to action, using vague buzzwords, and confusing a diversity statement with a personal statement.The episode also looks at a sample Yale Law School personal statement and explains why it works better. The big lesson: strong personal statements are usually clear, specific, action-driven, and focused on what the applicant has actually done.Ben closes by reminding applicants that essays matter, especially in a competitive admissions cycle, but LSAT score and GPA still drive a huge part of the process. A polished personal statement cannot make up for underperforming numbers, so applicants should keep their priorities straight.Links mentioned:Hey Future Lawyer: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com Win the Summer LSAT Sale: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/sale Submit a personal statement for the podcast: [email protected] Yale Law School Sample Application Materials: https://admissions.law.yale.edu/apply/JD_Sample_Application_Materials.pdf
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The 2025 Law School Employment Data Is Out, And Some Schools Look Way Better Than Expected (Ep. 58)
Ben Parker breaks down the newly released 2025 ABA law school employment data and what it says about the current state of legal hiring. The big picture is surprisingly positive: BigLaw placement has grown over the past decade, private law jobs are up, public interest placement has doubled, and law graduate unemployment is meaningfully lower than it was ten years ago.Ben also digs into the law schools with the biggest BigLaw gains over the last decade, including USC, UCLA, Howard, Florida, Washington and Lee, Boston College, SMU, BYU, Wake Forest, and Texas A&M. He explains why trend data matters, why one-year employment spikes can be misleading, and why applicants should look beyond rankings when evaluating law school outcomes.The episode also includes a fake LSAT weakener question to show how Ben approaches arguments in a reading-first, common-sense way. The main takeaway: most LSAT mistakes are really comprehension mistakes, and students improve when they stop passively reading and start actively engaging with what the argument is actually saying.In the mailbag, Ben answers whether taking the LSAT more than twice is a red flag and explains why your highest score matters far more than the number of attempts. He also reviews a law school personal statement and shows why vague, buzzword-heavy essays usually fail to make an applicant look compelling.Links mentioned in this episode:Hey Future Lawyer: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com Free LSAT Class: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/free-class Employment Trends: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/employment-trends Law School Outcomes: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/outcomes
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The Truth About LSAT Logical Reasoning Most Students Get Wrong (Ep. 57)
This episode of the Hey Future Lawyer podcast dives into LSAT logical reasoning strategies, using a custom-made practice question to demonstrate how to think through arguments step by step. Ben Parker emphasizes that success on the LSAT is not about memorizing tricks or “indicator words,” but about strong reading comprehension and actively engaging with each sentence. He walks through a paradox-style question, showing how to identify assumptions, evaluate answer choices, and avoid common traps.A major theme throughout the episode is the importance of thinking critically rather than relying on flawed LSAT advice, especially from online forums like Reddit. Ben critiques incorrect reasoning from other test-takers, highlighting how overthinking, nitpicking, or misunderstanding the question type can lead to wrong answers. He reinforces that LSAT questions always have a correct answer and that clarity comes from understanding the argument, not debating it endlessly.The episode also includes law school admissions advice, covering topics like application timing, LSAT score strategy, and evaluating scholarship offers. Ben explains why applying early in the cycle can significantly impact results and why applicants should focus on total cost of attendance rather than just scholarship amounts. He also stresses the importance of having clear career goals before committing to law school.Finally, the episode features critiques of bad LSAT prep advice and weak personal statements, offering blunt but practical feedback. Ben argues that many students struggle due to fundamental reading issues rather than LSAT-specific skills and encourages focusing on real understanding over shortcuts. He closes by reviewing a sample personal statement, explaining why it fails to effectively “sell” the applicant and what law schools are actually looking for.Study LSAT with us at HeyFutureLawyer.com
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There Are No Shortcuts on the LSAT (Here’s What to Do Instead) (Ep. 56)
In this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer Podcast, Ben Parker breaks down one of the biggest problems in LSAT prep today: bad advice. Using real examples, he walks through why so many popular strategies, from overcomplicated question types to memorization-heavy approaches, actually hold students back instead of helping them improve.Ben explains what the LSAT is really testing and why most students struggle after weeks of studying. If you’ve ever felt stuck, overwhelmed, or like you’re putting in the work but not seeing results, this episode will help you understand exactly what’s going wrong and how to fix it.He also dives into LSAT timing and the admissions cycle, making it clear why starting late can seriously impact your outcomes. With limited test dates before applications open, having a clear and effective study plan is more important than ever.At the end of the day, the message is simple: there are no shortcuts on the LSAT. But if you focus on the right things, improving is much more straightforward than most people think.👉 Ready to study the right way? Check out everything at HeyFutureLawyer.com
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New Law School Rankings Just Dropped… And They Make No Sense (Ep. 55 w/ Madeline)
The new U.S. News Law School Rankings are officially out, and in this episode, we break down what actually matters and what does not. If you are choosing a law school based on rankings alone, this conversation will completely change how you think about the process.We walk through some of the biggest surprises in the 2026 rankings, including Stanford landing at #1, Chicago’s placement, and why schools like WashU and Vanderbilt may be ranked higher than their real-world employment outcomes would justify. This episode focuses on cutting through the noise and understanding what these rankings actually represent.More importantly, we explain why rankings are often a poor proxy for career outcomes. Instead of focusing on small ranking differences, you should be looking at employment pipelines like BigLaw placement and federal clerkships. To explore this data yourself, check out our full outcomes breakdown here: 👉 https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/outcomesWe also discuss how applicants should think about law school decisions in 2026 and beyond. Whether your goal is elite outcomes, minimizing debt, or maximizing flexibility, this episode gives you a clearer framework for making the right call.When you're ready to start improving your LSAT score and opening up better law school options, check out everything we offer: 👉 https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com
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Your Law School List Is Probably Terrible (Ep. 54)
In this episode, Ben breaks down the launch of Hey Future Lawyer’s new Law School Recommender Tool and explains how applicants should actually choose where to apply and where to attend. Instead of chasing arbitrary law school rankings, he argues for an outcomes-first approach built around BigLaw placement, federal clerkships, debt, scholarship leverage, and career goals.Ben also explains why the usual safety / target / reach framework can push people toward bad decisions, why many applicants are picking schools backwards, and why applying early and applying broadly matters more than ever in the current law school admissions cycle. He also talks through how he thinks about prestige vs. minimizing debt, including the tradeoff between taking a full ride at a lower-ranked school or paying more at a stronger school for better job security.Later in the episode, he answers listener questions on USC vs. BU, waitlist strategy, scholarship negotiation, and whether law school rankings actually reflect legal hiring reality. He closes with a live personal statement critique and explains what admissions officers really care about when they read an essay.Links mentioned: Hey Future Lawyer: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com Law School Recommender Tool: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/law-school-recommender Law School Outcomes page: https://www.heyfuturelawyer.com/outcomes Podcast email: [email protected]
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The Biggest LSAT Mistakes Everyone Makes (And Why Most Prep Advice Is Wrong) (Ep. 53 with Madeline)
In this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer podcast, Ben Parker and Madeline draw on over a decade of combined LSAT teaching experience to break down the most common mistakes students make while preparing for the exam. They discuss how many popular LSAT strategies are based on “received knowledge” rather than real teaching experience and explain how instructors’ perspectives evolve after working with thousands of students.The conversation focuses on the idea that the LSAT is far simpler than many prep companies make it seem. Ben and Madeline argue that students often overcomplicate the test with rigid frameworks, formal logic systems, and overly mechanical strategies that distract from the real skill being tested: understanding what you read and determining what logically follows from it.They also discuss why accuracy should come before speed in LSAT preparation and why many students sabotage their progress by chasing timing tricks instead of building genuine comprehension. The episode explores how strong LSAT performance comes from consistent practice, thoughtful review, and learning to engage directly with arguments rather than relying on memorized shortcuts.Throughout the discussion, Ben and Madeline challenge common LSAT myths and explain how a reading-first, common-sense approach can dramatically simplify the test. The episode offers practical insights for students who feel stuck, as well as a clearer framework for how to study effectively and avoid the traps that derail most LSAT prep journeys.Study LSAT with us at HeyFuturelawyer.com
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Overrated vs. Underrated Law Schools in 2026 (Ep. 52)
Study LSAT with us at HeyFutureLawyer.comIn this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer podcast, Ben Parker breaks down Hey Future Lawyer’s new LSAT score guarantee and explains the logic behind it. He walks through the actual conditions, including study volume, consistency, accuracy, class attendance, and official score thresholds, while making the broader point that most LSAT students are not failing because of strategy, but because they are not doing enough quality work consistently.Ben also dives into one of the biggest mistakes law school applicants make: trusting U.S. News rankings too much instead of focusing on real employment outcomes. He highlights underrated law schools like Cornell, USC, Fordham, Illinois, and Houston, while also calling out overrated schools whose rankings may create expectations that the job placement data does not support. If you care about BigLaw, federal clerkships, scholarship leverage, and law school ROI, this section is packed with practical takeaways.The episode also includes quick listener mail on LSAT retakes and return on investment, along with a personal statement review at the end. Ben critiques an essay in real time, explaining what law schools actually want from a personal statement, why vague interest narratives often fall flat, and how applicants can present themselves as stronger, more compelling admits.
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How She Finished 1L With Straight A’s (Ep. 51 with Madeline)
Study LSAT with us at HeyFutureLawyerIn this episode, Ben Parker and Madeline Jesson break down what law school is actually like after 1L starts. Madeline shares what it was like to earn very strong first-semester grades, why that first semester matters so much, and how quickly law school can shape summer job opportunities, scholarships, and long-term career trajectory.They also unpack why law school is often harder than people expect, especially because grades are curved, finals are high-stakes, and there is very little room to recover once the semester begins. The conversation explains how law school exams work, why so many students misunderstand the curve, and why strong first-semester performance can create a major advantage that keeps compounding.A big part of the episode focuses on the connection between LSAT prep and law school success. Ben and Madeline argue that the reading skills, discipline, study habits, and self-awareness you build while preparing for the LSAT transfer directly into 1L performance, especially when it comes to handling dense reading, staying consistent, and doing difficult work even when you do not feel like it.They also give practical law school advice for incoming students, including how to think about exam strategy, why practice essays matter more than “fake studying,” and why simply memorizing doctrine is not enough. Madeline explains how to listen for clues from professors, use supplemental materials effectively, and avoid wasting time on study methods that feel productive but do not actually improve performance.Later in the episode, Ben and Madeline discuss law school debt, scholarships, BigLaw odds, regional schools versus T14 schools, and how students should think about balancing cost against job outcomes. They also react to a listener question about choosing between a full-ride at a strong regional school and paying more for a higher-ranked school, with a candid conversation about risk tolerance, salary expectations, and the realities of legal hiring.The episode wraps with a live personal statement review, where Ben and Madeline critique an admissions essay in real time. They talk through what makes a law school personal statement persuasive, common mistakes applicants make, and how to write an essay that actually shows why a law school should want you.
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Applying for Fall 2027 Law School? Your LSAT Timeline Is Probably Wrong (Ep. 50)
Study LSAT with us at HeyFutureLawyerThis episode is a blunt, practical breakdown of LSAT and law school admissions timelines, with a big emphasis on the idea that “starting now” is usually not early at all if you want optimal outcomes. Ben argues that the real goal is not just “going to law school,” but using the LSAT to control where you get in and what you pay, so you avoid six-figure debt for mediocre outcomes.A core theme is that LSAT prep is skill-building, not cramming. He pushes back on the common “I’ll study for 1–2 months and just grind 8 hours a day” plan, saying it usually fails because quality matters more than raw hours, and most people realistically need 3–6 months, often 4–5, with extra buffer for life disruptions.Ben also explains why you should plan to take the LSAT multiple times. He frames score variance as a major factor and says the smartest move is to give yourself enough administrations to catch a “good day” score, because a few points can swing you from regional offers to much stronger options and scholarships.On the admissions side, he argues applying early has become more important in competitive cycles, and he treats September 1 as the ideal target, with later months representing a steady drop-off rather than a clean cutoff. He rejects the “polished November app beats rushed September” framing, insisting the real best case is a polished early application, which requires starting LSAT prep and application work earlier than most people want to.The mailbag reinforces the show’s stance against spending months on “theory” before doing real questions. Ben’s answer is that the fastest path is immediate real LSAT questions plus serious review, with “theory” kept minimal, because a lot of traditional prep is productivity theater that does not move scores.The episode closes with a personal statement teardown that doubles as an admissions lesson. Ben critiques a draft for leading with weak facts and negative framing, then pivots into strategy: personal statements should persuade schools you’ll be a strong addition to their class, not just explain “why law school.” He also takes a hard stance against 3+3 and 4+3 pipelines, calling them bad deals that reduce leverage and can inflate cost.
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Goodbye Online LSAT: The Security Problem That Broke The System (Ep. 49)
Study LSAT with usThis episode of the Hey Future Lawyer Podcast kicks off with Ben Parker explaining a major LSAT shift: starting August 2026, the LSAT moves back to in-person testing. He gives quick context on how remote testing became normal during COVID, and why that convenience is now ending.Ben digs into the real driver behind the change: test security. He breaks down how remote testing created new cheating avenues, including remote “ringer” test-takers and the recording of live test content, which becomes a huge problem when LSAC needs to reuse questions.He also explains the behind-the-scenes logistics most students never think about. Online testing windows forced LSAC to create far more test forms per administration, and compromised forms made that workload even worse, which is part of why in-person testing relieves pressure.From the student perspective, his takeaway is simple: the move is mostly an inconvenience, not a game-changer. You may have to travel to a Prometric center, and he points out that some states have very limited site availability, which could create scheduling bottlenecks.Next, Ben switches to the NALP Class of 2024 National Summary Report, using it to cut through internet myths about lawyer pay. He emphasizes that medians matter more than averages, because Big Law salaries skew the “mean” upward and can mislead people about typical outcomes.He walks through how salaries differ by job type, showing the big gap between private sector outcomes and public-interest, clerkship, and government roles. The theme is clarity: you cannot “choose” a high-paying track just by wanting it, and career plans should be based on real employment data, not TikTok and Reddit vibes.He closes with a practical LSAT strategy Q and A: how to review questions you got wrong. His core message is that review quality beats volume, and that copying stems and making performative wrong-answer journals can distract from the only thing that matters: understanding exactly why the right answer is right and the wrong answers are wrong.
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What Not To Do In A Personal Statement (Epstein Files Edition) (Ep.48 w/ Madeline)
Study LSAT with us at HeyFutureLawyer.comIn this episode, Ben and Madeline jump into a question almost every LSAT student fixates on: when you should actually retake the LSAT. They react to a popular LSAT company’s retake advice, agree with most of it, and roast how obvious and poorly written it is, while still pulling out the core takeaway: if you have points left on the table and those points change your admissions or scholarship outcomes, retaking is usually the right move.A big theme is “stop gambling.” Ben and Madeline talk about the slot-machine mindset, where someone keeps taking official LSATs hoping a higher score just appears, without changing preparation. They push a much simpler standard: don’t take the LSAT until your practice scores are where you want them, and if you retake, do it with a real plan instead of wishful thinking.They also hit the money angle hard. Beyond admissions, they stress that higher LSAT scores often translate into better scholarship offers, which can dramatically change your debt and your life after graduation. Ben goes on a mini rant about how many applicants misunderstand student loan interest and underestimate how brutal it is to carry big law school debt into average-paying legal jobs.Then the episode shifts into a real applicant scenario: a high-GPA student with a low-150s LSAT weighing offers from Lewis & Clark and Gonzaga, plus a waitlist at Seattle. Ben and Madeline walk through the real cost of attendance, explain why “outside scholarships” rarely move the needle, and argue that taking a year to raise the LSAT even modestly can be the difference between manageable debt and a long financial grind.Finally, things get weird and entertaining: they read and dissect an infamous personal statement connected to the Epstein files, supposedly from a former Olympian trying to get into Harvard Law. It becomes a brutal lesson in why elite “facts” do not save bad writing, why trying to sound smart backfires, and why law school admissions is still a writing-and-precision game, especially for non-native English speakers.
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Night Law School While Running a Business? A Lawyer’s Unfiltered Take (Ep. 47 w/ Nick Cohen)
Study LSAT with Us at Hey Future LawyerNick Cohen on LinkedInMatador Solutions Nick’s Email- [email protected] Injury Law GroupNick Cohen joins the Hey Future Lawyer Podcast to break down an unconventional path to becoming an attorney while building a fast-growing legal marketing business. Nick is a partner at Cohen Injury Law Group in Los Angeles and the COO of Matador Solutions, a marketing partner and think tank serving more than 175 law firms nationwide.We dig into why Nick chose a night program at Loyola Law School, what his weekly schedule looked like while working full-time, and why part-time students often end up more efficient and less cutthroat than the typical “1L culture” you hear about. Nick also gives the real trade-offs of night school, including the extra year, the lack of “summers off,” and why the financial upside can still make it the smartest choice.Nick explains how small law firms actually get clients, why referrals are only one side of the game, and what “bottom-of-funnel” marketing looks like for lawyers who need high-intent cases coming in the door. We also talk about why so many firms get burned by snake-oil marketing vendors, how realistic timelines matter, and why “results in 3 months” is often a red flag.On the law student side, Nick shares a no-nonsense approach to performing well in law school: crystal-clear writing, clean structure, and focusing on what actually moves the grade instead of spinning out on details. He’s strongly anti study groups, but gives a smarter alternative: one partner who thinks differently, independent prep, and then a targeted checklist review that catches blind spots.Finally, we talk AI in the legal industry: what’s real, what’s hype, what tools still aren’t ready, and why “being human first” will become a major differentiator as tech accelerates. Nick closes with practical advice for aspiring lawyers: do not go to law school unless you feel good about a legal career, consider night programs for cost control, pay attention to bar pass rates, and choose schools that align with where you want to practice.#HeyFutureLawyer #LawSchool #NightSchool #LoyolaLaw #LSAT #PreLaw #LawStudent #LawFirmMarketing #LegalMarketing #PersonalInjuryLaw #SmallLawFirm #Entrepreneurship #SEO #GoogleAds #AI #LegalTech #CareerAdvice #LawSchoolAdmissions
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Law School Admissions or Financial Natural Selection: Why Not Both? (Ep.46)
Study LSAT With UsBen Parker kicks off this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer Podcast on January LSAT score release day with a blunt message: treating a low LSAT score like “no big deal” is one of the most expensive mistakes a pre-law student can make. He frames it as “financial Darwinism” or “natural selection,” arguing that the consequences are predictable, avoidable, and largely driven by choices about prep, timing, and accountability.He walks listeners through why low scores tend to funnel applicants into lower-outcome schools that can be financially predatory, especially when combined with late-cycle applications and full sticker tuition. To make it concrete, he uses an example of a bottom-tier law school and breaks down the cost of attendance, bar passage risk, likely employment outcomes, and what repayment actually looks like when you stack high debt against modest salaries.From there, Ben shifts into the psychological side: the “comfort” culture that tells applicants they just need one yes, and how that mindset can become toxic when it ignores hard data. He argues that law school is only a “good deal” in two situations: you either get strong employment outcomes that justify the debt, or you keep debt low enough that a normal salary still leaves you financially free.The episode also dives into Ben’s core LSAT philosophy: high scores are simple, not easy. His thesis is that most students waste time on prep that feels productive, but does not move the needle, and that consistent daily work beats almost everything else. He shares anecdotes from score release day messages, including a student who improved significantly by doing a large volume of real questions with consistent review, and contrasts that with students who study for months and barely move because they are stuck in “comfortable” methods.
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LSAT Practice Tests vs Drilling (Ep. 45 with Madeline)
Ben sits down with Madeline, an LSAT instructor turned 1L, to talk about what actually works when you’re trying to raise your LSAT score and set yourself up to win in law school. They start by dismantling common “lawyer-adjacent” advice and replace it with a simple, repeatable plan: practice that mirrors the real test, disciplined review, and consistency that builds stamina.A big theme of the episode is momentum. Madeline explains why taking time off after a real LSAT can quietly cost you points, and why “maintenance studying” can be the difference between staying sharp and backsliding. Ben adds practical frameworks for staying in motion, including when it makes sense to retake and how to think about your realistic score range.They also zoom out to the admissions landscape. Using real school data as an example, Ben and Madeline show how much more competitive top outcomes have become in the last decade and why that changes how you should plan your timeline. If you’re aiming for scholarships, full rides, or just the strongest options possible, this conversation makes a strong case for treating the LSAT like the highest ROI lever in the entire process.The episode closes with law-school perspective: Madeline explains why the LSAT is the best training you can do before 1L, not just for reading and logic, but for discipline, resilience, and study habits. If you’re in the LSAT grind or deciding whether to retake, this is the mindset reset you want.👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Necessary vs Sufficient Isn’t Your Problem: Reading Is (Ep. 44 with Autumn Lockett from Gradmissions)
Ben Parker opens with a rapid-fire LSAT mailbag and a blunt reminder that the LSAT is a skills test, not a knowledge test. If you’re coming from a background like medicine and wondering whether you should “learn content” first, Ben breaks down why the information you need is already on the page and why real progress comes from doing questions, reviewing hard, and tightening your reading.Next, Ben tackles study schedules and timing for the 2027 law school cycle, including why you should plan for multiple LSAT takes and why spreading study across more days usually accelerates improvement. He also explains why “question type studying” can turn into a security blanket that feels productive but delays the reps that actually move your score.Then Ben goes in on the “wrong answer journal” trend, why the framing is backwards, and how chasing patterns can waste time without changing what you should do next. The focus stays the same: understand the passage or stimulus better, predict more, and let answers reveal what you missed.Finally, Autumn from Gradmissions is back on the pod. If you want admissions help, you can connect with her here: https://www.gradmissions.org/contact. And if you want to check out all our LSAT prep, head to heyfuturelawyer.com.
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Why Most LSAT Prep Is Junk Food (And What Actually Works) (Ep. 43)
Ben talks through why he disappeared for a couple weeks, plus a quick PSA after getting flattened by a brutal flu. He uses that as a springboard into what he has been thinking about going into 2026, including how hard it is to market a product that actually requires uncomfortable work.From there, the core argument is simple: meaningful LSAT improvement is mostly about doing real questions and reviewing them, not binging theory. He frames a lot of mainstream LSAT prep as “intellectual junk food” that feels productive but does not move scores, especially when it encourages people to hide from timed practice or treat sections like a race.Ben then reads (and expands on) a Reddit post he wrote about how to use timed sections as daily training. He emphasizes “timed, not rushed,” solving questions instead of attempting them, letting the section auto submit, and using accuracy benchmarks to detect when someone is rushing or getting sloppy.He also explains why full blind review is overrated for most students and shares his preferred alternative: redo only the questions you missed or felt uncertain about before checking answers. That leads into a plug for HeyFutureLawyer.com’s “Rewind Review” feature, designed to keep review honest by mixing in a few correct questions so you cannot mindlessly change everything.The episode broadens into law school ROI and why LSAT score choices become life choices. Ben argues that applying with a low score is often a decision to take on unnecessary debt, and he backs it up with applicant score distribution talk and examples of how scholarships swing with even modest LSAT gains.Finally, Ben reads a few listener emails: one success story from a student who hit the mid 160s and got admitted with strong scholarship leverage, and then a few admissions scenarios where he focuses on outcomes, cost, and career goals rather than rankings. He closes with a blunt takeaway: the easier business model is selling comfort, but he is committed to selling results, even when that means telling people “no” or pushing them to delay applying and fix the LSAT first.👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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The Law School Scholarship Game Is Changing, and Most Applicants Have No Idea (Ep. 42)
In this mailbag-style episode of the Hey Future Lawyer Podcast, Ben Parker breaks down two things most applicants are missing: what it actually takes to hit a mid-160s or higher LSAT, and why “business as usual” in law school scholarships is getting disrupted. He opens with a blunt promise about standards, then pivots into a practical, incentives-based explanation of how law schools price tuition and why that pricing model is under pressure.Ben explains why full rides and large scholarships may shrink this admissions cycle, tying it to shifts in how law school can be financed and why lenders will not bankroll outcomes that do not pencil out. Using examples like Vanderbilt and a lower-ranked regional school, he shows how schools use LSAT and GPA to “bid” for high numbers while charging the weakest applicants the most, then argues that model breaks when loans are not freely available.From there, Ben answers listener questions about plateauing in the mid-160s, how to structure studying (drilling vs sections vs full practice tests), and what actually matters most: the quality of review and the thinking process behind each question. He also talks candidly about application strategy for someone sitting at a strong GPA with a 166, including whether to apply broadly, whether to wait a cycle, and how much a higher LSAT can change outcomes.The episode closes with a behind-the-scenes look at messages Ben gets from applicants considering high-risk law school plans, including non-ABA options and “path of least resistance” decisions. It’s a frank conversation about law school ROI, bimodal salaries, avoiding catastrophic debt, and what a realistic plan looks like if you want a stable legal career.👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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A 1L Explains Big Law Pressure, Grades, and Daily Life (Ep. 41 with Sam)
👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyerIn this episode, Ben Parker sits down with Sam, a 1L at Seton Hall Law who earned a full scholarship after taking the LSAT seriously and approaching prep the right way. Sam shares her background, why she chose law school after working in corporate marketing, and what the transition into 1L life has actually been like.The conversation dives deep into what law school really demands day to day, from time management and study habits to maintaining sleep, exercise, and sanity during the semester. Sam breaks down her weekly routine, how much she actually works compared to a 9–5 job, and why discipline matters more than motivation.Ben also gives blunt LSAT advice early in the episode, explaining why the exam is a skills-based test, how most people study incorrectly, and what actually leads to 160s and 170s. They connect the dots between LSAT skills and law school success, including reading, logic, and active studying.The episode wraps with an honest discussion of law school outcomes, scholarships, Big Law pressure, and why minimizing debt gives students far more freedom after graduation. This is a must-listen for anyone considering law school, studying for the LSAT, or trying to decide whether the investment is really worth it.
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3.9 GPA, 152 LSAT And A Potential Life Ruined (Ep. 41)
Check out everything here!In this episode, Ben breaks down an email from a 3.9 GPA applicant sitting on a 152 LSAT who is determined to apply this cycle anyway. He walks through why that choice could cost her hundreds of thousands of dollars, using real numbers from schools like Toledo and Michigan State to show how debt to income works in the real world.You will hear a frank discussion of why the LSAT actually does define your options, why "not wanting to wait" is baby thinking when six figures are on the line, and how self deception around practice test scores destroys outcomes. Ben also explains how law schools really use numbers, why being "above median" is not a magic ticket, and what a mature application strategy should look like.Later in the episode, Ben pivots to scholarship trends in the new loan landscape and why full rides are already getting scarcer. He unpacks how private lenders change the incentive structure, what that means for both "suckers" and stars in the class, and how to protect yourself from being the one who gets skinned to fund somebody else's free ride.If you want your own admissions plan to survive contact with reality, this one is required listening. Ben closes by inviting listeners to send in essays and questions for future roast segments so you can fix your strategy before it fixes you.
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The Emperor Wears No Clothes: Should LSAT Accommodations Exist for Learning Disabilities? (Ep. 40)
Ben opens this episode by examining the rapid rise of LSAT accommodations and asking whether the emperor wears no clothes when people claim that extra time creates fairness. He uses recent research to show how time based accommodations change the nature of the LSAT and reduce its ability to predict first year law school performance.He walks through findings that extended time LSAT scores tend to overpredict law school GPA and explains why this happens when timing pressure is removed from a skills based exam. Ben then connects these results to broader cultural trends in higher education, where diagnoses of ADHD, anxiety, and depression have accelerated and accommodations have become routine at elite universities.From there he looks at how the same shift is appearing in the workplace, with younger employees expecting accommodations as a normal part of their environment. Across the episode he returns to one core question. If accommodations significantly alter the LSAT, should they exist for a test designed to measure reading skill, reasoning, and processing speed under constraint.He closes by acknowledging the tension between the philosophical concerns and the practical reality. Even if accommodations change the test, they can meaningfully boost admissions results and scholarship outcomes, which means students must understand the incentives driving the system.Links referenced Professor Derek T. Muller, Access to Democracy https://www.accessdemocracy.com/post/what-do-time-accommodations-do-to-the-predictive-value-of-lsat-scores-for-legal-educationThe Atlantic, “Accommodations in Higher Education” https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2024/12/college-student-accommodations-rise-disability/678803Tannenbaum Helpern, “The ADA Generation’s Impact on Employee Requests for Accommodations and Leave Based on Disabilities” https://www.thsh.com/resources/the-ada-generations-impact-on-employee-requests-for-accommodations-and-leave-based-on-disabilities👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Don’t Listen to Grandma: The Real Rules of LSAT Prep and Law School Admissions (Ep. 39)
👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyerIn this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer Podcast, Ben breaks down everything pre-law students need heading into Thanksgiving—how to handle unsolicited advice, how to respond to relatives who don’t understand the LSAT, and how to avoid rushing into law school prematurely. He explains why applying late cripples scholarship chances and outlines what actually determines long-term law school ROI.Ben also gives a sneak peek at Black Friday LSAT deals, the limited admissions-consulting spots he’s opening, and major updates to the HeyFutureLawyer drilling algorithm. He walks through the science behind adaptive drilling, why “question-type drilling” creates fake mastery, and how score ranges—not single scores—should guide when you take the LSAT.This episode dives deep into law school outcomes, debt-to-income ratios, and the data behind which schools actually place grads in BigLaw and federal clerkships. Ben previews the 10 worst law schools in America (by debt-to-income), and explains how predatory pricing, weak placement, and bad advice can wreck a student’s financial future.Finally, Ben answers an overflowing mailbag—LSAT timelines, whether to retake, GPA addenda, T14 chances, letters of recommendation, and whether law school is worth it for accounting majors or URM applicants. If you’re trying to make smart, data-driven decisions about the LSAT and law school, this episode gives you the frameworks you need.
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99th Percentile LSAT at 20: My Full LSAT Journey & New Calculators That Change Everything (Ep.38)
👉 Find everything here: linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer In today’s episode, Ben breaks down two major new tools on HeyFutureLawyer.com—our law school Outcomes Calculator (heyfuturelawyer.com/outcomes) and our brand-new ROI Calculator (heyfuturelawyer.com/ROI-calculator). Ben walks through how to use each tool, the data behind them, and the surprising “hidden gem” law schools that outperform their rankings in real employment outcomes. He also explains why national rankings often mislead applicants and how location, clerkships, and regional markets shape actual career opportunities.You’ll also hear the full story of how Ben scored in the 99th percentile twice before turning 21, including the messy parts—bad early diagnostics, studying inconsistently, being naturally strong in reading-based sections, and hitting ceilings with parallel reasoning. Ben shares how COVID changed his study routine, how he adopted an “hour-per-day” method he later taught to thousands, and why the LSAT ended up being a turning point despite thinking he’d never be a lawyer.In the final segment, Ben reflects on growing up with a speech impediment, thinking law wasn’t an option, nearly pursuing STEM, and eventually discovering the LSAT through boredom in a mandatory Indian history class. The episode wraps with thoughts on discipline, obsessiveness, and the odd path that turns a 19-year-old college kid into a full-time LSAT teacher.
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Cornell Law Over “T20”? UC Irvine Over Your Dream School? The Data Says YES (Ep. 37)
and only one test left—is a losing play. He breaks down LSAT “ranges” vs a single “score,” and why hitting the top of your range radically changes both admissions outcomes and scholarships.We map law school decisions on a simple X-Y axis: job outcomes vs. total cost. Ben shows how late apps get worse on both, and why rankings (T20/T50) are a terrible proxy compared to ABA 509 employment data and real starting salaries.Big picture: the law-school industrial complex is wobbling. With loan policy shifts and banks caring about ROI, many mid-tier schools will struggle, full-rides will tighten, and the minimum viable LSAT will creep up—making patience and a higher score the best financial move.Ben walks through a real listener case study (151→159) and outlines the tradeoffs: rush a 159–162 now, or take months to reach 165–168+ and unlock better schools and far better aid. He also shares practical LOR tips—get them on file early, ask more people than you need, and don’t over-submit.We close with what’s next: a free class on “How to Study Smart for the January LSAT (and beyond)” on Wednesday, Nov 19, plus a Black Friday promo preview. If you want big-law options or low-debt public-interest paths, the play is simple: wait, study right, and apply with your best LSAT.👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Want a 170+? Here’s How the Best LSAT Students Actually Study (Ep. 36 w/ Madeline)
👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyerIn this episode, Ben Parker and Madeline dive deep into the science of learning — and what actually works when it comes to improving on the LSAT and beyond. Drawing from the research-backed insights of Make It Stick: The Science of Successful Learning, they unpack how most people study the wrong way, why “feeling productive” isn’t the same as learning, and what to do instead.Ben and Madeline break down the book’s key takeaways — from why learning should feel effortful, to how spaced repetition and active recall beat re-reading or highlighting every time. They connect each principle directly to LSAT prep, explaining how common traps like aesthetic note-taking or passive review waste time, and how strategies like deliberate practice, prediction, and consistent engagement actually build comprehension and endurance.Throughout, they challenge popular LSAT myths, arguing that real progress doesn’t come from memorizing question types or tricks, but from improving your ability to read and think critically. For anyone serious about score growth — or mastering any complex skill — this conversation delivers a grounded, no-nonsense roadmap for studying smarter, not just harder.
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Law School Reality Check: The Grind Hits Madeline in 1L (Ep. 35)
In this episode, Ben welcomes Madeline back after her brief break from the podcast to catch up on law school life and dive deep into what it’s really like surviving 1L. Madeline talks about the initial adrenaline of starting law school fading into the grind of outlines, memos, and long nights—especially as she works through her first big legal writing assignment on the “attractive nuisance doctrine.” She and Ben discuss how hard it can be to stay motivated once the novelty wears off and how law school, like LSAT prep, ultimately rewards consistency over bursts of enthusiasm.The two go on to explore why so many people fail to study for the LSAT seriously—despite being able to commit to grueling law school workloads—and what that says about human nature, discipline, and delayed consequences. From there, Ben and Madeline get into law firm recruiting trends, the growing absurdity of BigLaw timelines, and how regional markets like Kentucky operate completely differently from New York or D.C.Later, the conversation takes a sharp turn into controversial LSAT topics: grade inflation, A+ GPAs, and why accommodations and remote testing may be distorting score distributions. Ben doesn’t hold back on his critique of extra-time policies, while Madeline offers thoughtful pushback and perspective from her own legal education. The episode wraps with Madeline reflecting on preparing for finals season, how LSAT habits translate to law school success, and why consistency and foresight beat last-minute cramming every time.👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Toxic Positivity, Illiteracy, and the LSAT: The Hard Truth Future Lawyers Need to Hear (Ep. 34)
In this episode, Ben Parker kicks off with an update on law school admissions data, revealing a massive 31.6% surge in applicants and what that means for 2026’s “worst cycle ever.” He explains why higher applicant volume paired with fewer applications per person creates a uniquely competitive cycle and warns listeners to apply broadly—or better yet, wait until next year. Ben also discusses which undergraduate majors tend to score highest and lowest on the LSAT (based on LSAC data), why correlation doesn’t equal causation, and why he rejects the idea that philosophy or logic-heavy majors inherently make you better at the LSAT.From there, he dives into deeper reflections on LSAT performance, effort, and self-deception. He calls out the myth of “bad test takers,” arguing most low scorers simply don’t put in consistent effort or lack reading discipline. Ben explores how reading comprehension, not logic, drives success, and goes so far as to say that people scoring below 150 are often “functionally illiterate”—not as an insult, but as a wake-up call to the skills that law school actually demands. He introduces his company’s upcoming LSAT guarantee program, explains how it will only reward students who genuinely do the work, and critiques “toxic positivity” in modern LSAT culture for shielding students from the truth about effort and accountability.Later, Ben discusses why last-minute LSAT tutoring rarely works, the importance of giving yourself multiple test attempts, and LSAT score variance (the real “test day drop” myth). He explains why Hey Future Lawyer is now focusing marketing toward next-cycle students rather than November testers. He then answers a Reddit question about whether different LSATs vary in difficulty, debunking that idea by explaining LSAC’s scaling system and how “harder” or “easier” sections balance out.The episode closes with two meaty segments: first, Ben reads an in-depth listener email about student loan reform and the political implications of the new federal loan limits—offering a nuanced breakdown of how the changes might pressure bottom-tier law schools and reshape the industry. Finally, he critiques a listener’s personal statement, analyzing line by line what works, what doesn’t, and why real-life action is far more persuasive than abstract reflection. His ultimate message: results matter more than rhetoric—both in essays and in life.👉 Find everything at linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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The 2026 Law School Cycle Is BROKEN — 33% More Applicants, Same Seats (Ep. 33)
In this episode, Ben Parker dives into the latest LSAC applicant data showing a massive 32.9% year-over-year increase in law school applications—making the 2026 admissions cycle the most competitive in history. He explains why more applicants and stagnant class sizes mean that even strong candidates will find it harder to secure spots and scholarships. Ben also breaks down LSAT score distribution trends, revealing that while top scores are slightly up in raw numbers, the overall percentile landscape is tightening.Ben then turns his attention to the misinformation epidemic on Reddit, dissecting a post that claimed to offer “tips” for earning a T25 full scholarship. He explains why much of the advice circulating online is dangerously misleading, emphasizing that law school admissions remain overwhelmingly numbers-driven, with LSAT and GPA medians determining nearly everything. Through a humorous yet blunt critique, he reminds listeners that “exceptions don’t disprove rules” and urges applicants to prioritize real prep over Reddit myths.The episode also features a live personal statement “shred”, where Ben reviews a listener’s essay in real time—critiquing structure, tone, and strategy. He advises applicants to focus on demonstrating competence, maturity, and initiative, rather than trauma-dumping or rehashing undergrad experiences. The segment highlights how to transform an average essay into one that communicates strength, purpose, and readiness for law school.Ben closes by reaffirming his belief that most applicants don’t take the LSAT seriously enough—and that disciplined study, not short timelines or magical thinking, separates high scorers from the rest. As always, he keeps it brutally honest, mixing humor, data, and tough love to help future law students cut through the noise and make smarter admissions decisions.All my LSAT resources, classes, and free guides: linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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How the LSAT Industry Is Keeping You Stuck (and What to Do Instead) (Ep. 32)
In this episode, Ben Parker dives into one of the most controversial debates in LSAT prep: the formal logic approach versus the intuitive reading approach. Ben argues that most LSAT students are taught to overcomplicate the test by memorizing symbols, contrapositives, and diagramming rules, when in reality the LSAT is a test of reading comprehension—not logic. Using real Reddit exchanges, LSAT examples, and hilarious analogies (from sheep and mammals to group projects gone wrong), he breaks down why conditional reasoning is far simpler than most test-takers think.Ben explains that confusion on the LSAT doesn’t come from misunderstanding “logic” but from misunderstanding language. He discusses how diagramming became an LSAT habit leftover from the old Logic Games section and why it’s now holding people back. Instead of translating the test into symbols, Ben advocates for reading to understand—what he calls the “intuitive way”—and offers practical advice for how to apply this mindset across Logical Reasoning and Reading Comp.The episode also explores why people get defensive about this topic, the LSAT industry’s role in perpetuating unnecessary complexity, and how Hey Future Lawyer’s philosophy differs from traditional prep companies. Ben closes with a look ahead at how he’s building a better LSAT prep system—one that treats students like intelligent readers, not logic robots—and invites listeners to submit their personal statements for live feedback on the show.👉 https://linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Student Loan Changes Could Kill Law Schools — Here’s the Math (Ep. 31)
In this episode, Ben dives into the upcoming Jumpstart Your January LSAT prep package, why it might be a smart move for students targeting the January LSAT, and how poor planning around prep timelines hurts applicants. He highlights the financial stakes tied to LSAT scores and reminds listeners that applying late in the cycle often costs both admissions chances and scholarship money.The conversation then shifts to the student loan changes shaking legal education. Ben lays out why many lower-ranked law schools may be on the brink of closure, arguing that private lenders won’t bankroll institutions with poor job placement and bar passage outcomes. He critiques Santa Clara’s recent “scholarship” strategy, showing how it ignores the reality of living expenses and reveals the deeper cracks in the system.Ben also shares insights from the Miami LSAC Forum, reflecting on the culture of bad admissions advice, the illusion of prestige, and the importance of focusing on substance over appearances. He warns students against banking on transfers and explains why investing in the LSAT is a far more reliable route.Finally, the episode touches on Texas’ push to move away from ABA accreditation, the record-breaking 47,000 registrations for the November LSAT, and listener Q&As about scoring plateaus and running out of practice tests. With his usual mix of blunt realism and humor, Ben breaks down the shifting landscape of law school admissions and LSAT prep.👉 https://linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Law School Applications Are Surging: What the Data Really Shows (Ep. 30 with Madeline)
This episode opens with updates from Hey Future Lawyer, including a free upcoming LSAT session and the start of the October group. Then, Ben and Madeline dive into life as a 1L. Madeline shares that while law school has its challenges, it feels more like a marathon than a sprint, with manageable ups and downs. The conversation highlights the importance of stamina, time management, and avoiding excuses—parallels that carry over directly to LSAT prep.From there, the discussion moves into the realities of legal careers, illustrated with an anecdote about the demanding nature of big law. Ben emphasizes the trap of procrastination and wasted screen time, urging listeners to take responsibility for their LSAT prep rather than rationalizing avoidance. Both he and Madeline agree that consistent effort—even small increments of daily progress—pays off over time.The episode then shifts to admissions data, starting with Belmont Law’s 50% application increase and LSAT registration numbers that suggest another competitive cycle. They warn against overinterpreting single data points but agree that the general trend is toward rising difficulty in admissions. The pair stress that applying early and with strong numbers is crucial, cautioning against rushing an application when waiting a cycle could mean better schools and better scholarships.Finally, Ben and Madeline field listener emails, covering topics like how to explain gaps on a resume, whether score preview is worth buying, and the trade-offs between applying early versus waiting for a higher LSAT score. They critique the LSAC’s practices around score preview and release dates, and they warn against overreliance on Reddit or TikTok admissions advice. The message is clear: strong numbers and solid essays win, but self-awareness and patience are just as important for long-term legal career success.https://linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Law School Bloodbath: 20+ ABA Law Schools Set to Close?! (Ep. 29)
In this episode, Ben Parker breaks down why the 2026 law school admissions cycle is shaping up to be one of the most chaotic ever. Applications are way up, LSAT scores are rising across the board, and competition for top schools is reaching unprecedented levels. Students will need higher scores and stronger resumes than ever before to stand out.A major factor is the recent elimination of GradPLUS loans, which previously allowed students to borrow unlimited amounts for law school. Ben explains how this change disrupts the entire system: lower-tier schools lose their financial lifeline, mid-tier schools face shrinking enrollments, and even elite schools must rethink scholarship strategies. While wealthy institutions with billion-dollar endowments may weather the storm, many smaller schools simply won’t survive.Ben doesn’t hold back in calling out schools like California Western, digging into their financials to show how quickly they could collapse without endless federal loan dollars. He predicts that 20–30 law schools could close in the near future, with even more disappearing over the next decade. In his view, this contraction may actually be good for students, since fewer people will end up saddled with crushing debt for degrees that don’t pay off.Alongside these big-picture predictions, the episode also features practical LSAT advice. Ben shares why running out of time is normal for test-takers in the 150s, why you shouldn’t stress about finishing every question, and why starting LSAT prep early is the smartest move you can make. He also reads listener emails, including one student who jumped from a 153 to a 166 in just four months, proving that disciplined prep can transform outcomes even in this brutal cycle.To wrap things up, Ben critiques a listener’s personal statement. He praises the strong start, offers targeted edits to cut fluff and highlight achievements, and explains how to avoid drawing attention to weaknesses like resume gaps. His blunt but constructive feedback makes the essay far stronger and offers lessons for anyone writing their own law school personal statement.https://linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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121
Life After the LSAT: What 1L Year Really Looks Like (Ep. 28 with Madeline)
In this episode, Ben Parker and Madeline dive deep into the realities of law school, LSAT preparation, and how the two intersect. Madeline, now a 1L on a full scholarship, shares her first impressions of law school workload, time management, and how her LSAT skills have translated into her studies. Ben and Madeline explore whether certain reasoning abilities are truly teachable, or if some people simply “have it or don’t” when it comes to logic and comprehension.They also connect LSAT logic to legal doctrines, especially how conditions, intent, and legal elements appear in torts and criminal law. Madeline explains how law professors rarely frame concepts as “sufficient” or “necessary conditions,” but LSAT training helps her interpret the language more clearly. The two discuss the broader debate over LSAT question types, shortcuts, and heuristics, concluding that true success comes down to strong reading and reasoning rather than over-categorization.From there, the conversation shifts toward the financial side of law school. Ben and Madeline tackle the controversial new federal loan changes — what they mean for lower-tier law schools, student debt, and the predatory cycle of borrowing. They argue that studying for the LSAT is the highest ROI investment a student can make, often worth thousands of dollars per hour in scholarship value, compared to the crushing mathematics of student loans.Finally, they answer a listener’s question about retaking the LSAT after a disappointing test day performance, emphasizing strategy, timing, and the importance of applying early in the law school cycle. Madeline shares her own admissions experience, including acceptances to UVA and Georgetown, and reflects on how applying early helped her gain opportunities that might not have been possible later in the cycle. Together, they reinforce that a high LSAT score and early, strategic applications remain the most powerful tools for future law students.Explore all our LSAT resources here: linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Law School Admissions Myths That Reddit Gets Completely Wrong (Ep. 27)
This episode kicks off with a reminder that law school applications open on Labor Day, making it the perfect time to cut through the noise surrounding admissions. Ben highlights how online forums—particularly Reddit’s r/lawschooladmissions—often spread misinformation. He critiques the echo chamber of anxious applicants who exaggerate the difficulty of getting into law school and perpetuate myths about what really matters in the admissions process.From there, the conversation turns to one of the biggest misconceptions: applying early doesn’t matter. Ben strongly disagrees, pointing out that both schools and consultants downplay the importance of timing for their own incentives. He explains why November is already late in the cycle and how LSAT variance means that relying on a single sitting can tank an otherwise strong application. Numbers—specifically LSAT and GPA—remain the driving force in admissions, no matter what law schools or consultants claim.The episode also challenges the narrative that soft factors like work experience, essays, or “employability” outweigh the numbers. While it’s true that being a weirdo can sink you, Ben makes clear that most applicants are not finished products—and law schools don’t expect them to be. Instead, what matters is showing potential backed by LSAT and GPA medians, which directly tie into rankings, bar passage, and employment outcomes.Finally, Ben critiques a real personal statement submitted by a listener. He stresses that law schools don’t care about your “why law” story or your childhood insecurities; they want to see evidence that you’ll kick ass in law school and beyond. Essays should frame applicants as strong, capable, and compelling—not as works in progress.https://linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer
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119
LSAT RC Isn’t Hard—Here’s Why You’re Making It Harder (Ep. 26)
In this episode, Ben dives deep into LSAT Reading Comprehension, breaking down why it isn’t about gimmicks or shortcuts—it’s about real understanding. He explains how dense, poorly written passages trip students up and why slowing down, reading actively, and focusing on comprehension will transform your score. Ben also gives actionable tips like using three guiding questions for active reading, identifying the main point as your “North Star,” and resisting the temptation to skim or over-highlight.Beyond RC strategy, Ben shares insights into mindset and preparation. He stresses that success on the LSAT isn’t about innate brilliance but about perspective, accountability, and consistent practice. Using analogies from sports and his own lacrosse days, he illustrates how you “win in practice, not on game day.” He also warns against lazy shortcuts like chasing thesis statements or reading between the lines—what matters is what the text actually says.The episode rounds out with a listener email about burnout, where Ben offers practical advice on balancing study time, prioritizing accuracy over speed, and avoiding exhaustion while juggling life commitments. He finishes with a candid critique of common mistakes in law school personal statements—like clichés, resume dumps, or passive trauma narratives—and emphasizes writing essays that show real action and growth.📌 Find more free LSAT help and resources here: linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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Will the Online LSAT Survive? Cheating Scandals Explained (Ep. 25)
In this episode, Ben unpacks LSAC’s recent announcement suspending the online LSAT in mainland China due to rampant cheating scandals. He explains how organized companies were openly selling proxy test-taking services for thousands of dollars, why that creates long-term risks for students, and what it could mean for the future of online testing. Ben also speculates on whether this move could eventually push the LSAT back to being fully in-person.From there, the episode turns into a mailbag, answering pressing LSAT questions from students. Topics include whether a 20-point score jump in a month is realistic, whether October or November is the better retake date, and how to handle regrets about not applying for accommodations. He offers direct advice on score preview, rushing applications, and managing study anxiety.The episode closes with practical reminders, including a PSA to disable Grammarly before the LSAT writing section. It’s a mix of breaking LSAT news, strategy insights, and straightforward answers to common test prep dilemmas.🎧 Listen to this episode and more by visiting linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer.
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August 2025 LSAT Recap (Ep. 24)
In this August 2025 LSAT recap, Ben Parker breaks down the test in a way you won’t find anywhere else—focusing on actionable strategy, not internet clickbait. He tackles the curve myth, explains why “the test is getting harder” is an illusion, and exposes the truth about LSAC’s heavy reuse of old questions. You’ll learn why obsessing over predicted topics is a waste of time, why human psychology skews test-day perception, and how to avoid the post-LSAT freakout.Ben also explains why you should always register for consecutive LSATs, how to think about your score range realistically, and the massive difference law school rank makes in career outcomes. You’ll get his take on proctors (in-person vs. remote), the false security blanket of topic predictions, and why some study habits are pure “goofball” territory. Finally, he answers listener questions on score withdrawal strategy, mental fatigue during full PTs, and timing your law school applications for maximum results.If you’re serious about law school admissions, this is required listening. 🎯 Study with us & join a free class → https://linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer
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Trump’s Big, Beautiful Bill Just Changed Law School Forever (Ep. 23)
In this episode, Ben returns to the mic after a short break to dive into the ramifications of the newly enacted "Big, Beautiful Bill," a sweeping legislative package signed into law during Trump’s second term. Rather than explore the bill's political implications, Ben focuses squarely on what the bill means for law school access, student loans, scholarships, and legal education's return on investment (ROI). His central thesis is blunt: most law schools were already a poor investment, and the changes this bill brings may finally end the harmful cycle of overborrowing for underwhelming outcomes.Ben explains that the bill eliminates Grad PLUS loans and imposes a federal borrowing cap of $50,000 per year (up to $200,000 total) for law and medical students. This effectively prevents students from using federal loans to finance overpriced, low-ROI law schools. He predicts that private lenders will step in only for students attending top-tier schools with proven career outcomes. This new reality could collapse the tuition-subsidized scholarship model, where weaker students paid full freight so stronger candidates could attend for free.Throughout the episode, Ben critiques the legal education system for enabling predatory pricing by bad law schools propped up by government-backed loans. He argues that while fewer students may now be able to attend law school, this is a feature, not a bug. He contends that the new system will filter out students who never should have gone in the first place — many of whom would graduate with insurmountable debt and limited job prospects.He also addresses the criticism that these changes reduce access for first-gen and low-income students. Ben counters that anyone with a high LSAT score can still attend law school debt-free, as long as they target schools that offer full-ride scholarships. In his view, the real injustice was the illusion that all law schools were created equal — a narrative that lured many students into financial traps. He closes by encouraging critical thinking over credentialism and opens the door for respectful, data-backed debate.https://linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
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115
Why Your LSAT Score Isn’t Improving (And How to Fix It) (Ep. 22)
In this mailbag episode, Ben answers a wide range of questions from LSAT students, diving into common struggles like score stagnation, timing issues, and study habits. He emphasizes that untimed score improvements are normal, but consistent mistakes under time pressure often come from rushing or passivity during the test. Ben encourages students to focus on intentional problem-solving rather than guessing or relying on "comfortable" answers, which he argues leads to ineffective learning.He addresses issues like getting stuck between two answer choices, advocating for making decisions based on articulated reasoning rather than vibes. He points out that LSAT success hinges on clarity of thought and active engagement with the material—not just exposure to questions. Ben also reiterates the importance of treating the LSAT like a free-response test and warns against the trap of passive review, where students don’t fully absorb what they got wrong.Later, he tackles timing concerns, particularly for students with accommodations. His advice: timing problems are usually comprehension problems in disguise. The way to speed up is by deeply understanding the questions, not by rushing.Want help figuring out why your score is stuck? Join Ben’s live classes or start self-studying with the full curriculum at HeyFutureLawyer.com. You'll get on-demand help for every LSAT question and access to the same strategies discussed in this episode.
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Berkeley Dipshits, Big Debt, and Brutal Truths About Law School (Ep. 21)
In this episode—recorded just days before heading off on a honeymoon—Ben dives deep into the economic and ethical realities of law school costs, especially for students offered conditional scholarships. He walks through the implications of taking partial versus full scholarships, with a heavy emphasis on understanding law school grading curves and the potential for losing aid due to GPA requirements. Using Chapman Law School as a case study, he breaks down employment stats, debt load projections, and the questionable return on investment many students face.Ben also takes a strong stand on accommodations for the LSAT, defending his controversial position with his usual mix of data, directness, and dark humor. He critiques the current accessibility landscape, arguing that standardization is, by design, meant to sort—not level—a playing field. Expect blunt takes on everything from ADHD accommodations to the American Disabilities Act.The episode closes with a candid, detailed listener email about law school admissions strategy. Ben provides practical feedback on GPA addenda, political involvement, branding for public interest careers, and how law schools really view applicants with activist resumes. As always, his focus is on outcomes and cutting through the noise that surrounds law school decision-making.Explore our full set of free resources, podcast episodes, live classes, and more at 👉 https://linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer
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Don’t Go to Law School Before Listening to This (Ep. 20)
Ben Parker opens the episode with some big life news—he’s getting married this weekend! But before he signs the marriage license, he’s recording a series of podcast episodes to help guide future law students through the chaos of the LSAT and legal education. He starts with the first of four LSAT truths that Hey Future Lawyer is built around: the LSAT matters—a lot. From determining which law schools accept you, to how much you pay, to what jobs you can get post-grad, it’s a pivotal piece of your future.He explores how law school outcomes are closely tied to your LSAT score, dispels myths about lower-tier schools, and criticizes passive LSAT learning strategies like video watching and endless note-taking. Instead, Ben argues that real progress comes from active engagement with questions and honest self-assessment. His analogies to basketball, functional literacy, and even biting your coworkers (yes, really) keep things both hilarious and harshly real.Finally, Ben touches on the harsh reality of lawyer salaries, debunking the myth that all lawyers make six figures. He emphasizes that most new attorneys make modest incomes, and only those in big law break into the top compensation brackets. But those roles come with serious lifestyle trade-offs. The episode wraps with personal reflections, a shoutout to his uncle stuck abroad, and a reminder to play the game with your eyes wide open.👉 Visit linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer for our free LSAT course, essay help, and more!
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Do NOT Say This in Your Law School Personal Statement (Even If It’s True) (Ep. 19)
In today’s episode, Ben kicks things off with what might be the most unforgettable personal statement of all time. From vulgar mantras like “shut the f*** up” to reflections on paralegal work and courtroom chaos, Ben gives a brutally honest breakdown of what works—and what absolutely doesn’t—when it comes to law school essays.Next, Ben dives into the recent changes to the Grad PLUS loan program, explaining why this might actually be good news for future law students. He breaks down how government lending has propped up overpriced, low-ROI law schools for far too long—and what the new caps could mean for tuition, accessibility, and the future of legal education.Finally, it’s a mailbag lightning round: LSAT retake strategy, proctoring complaints, reading comprehension struggles, character & fitness disclosures (including punching a cop?!), and more. As always, it’s unfiltered, practical advice for people serious about crushing the LSAT and law school admissions.👉 Visit our Linktree for live classes, full-length practice tests, and our full free LSAT course.
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111
The #1 Mistake Rushing Law School Applicants Make (Ep. 18)
In this episode, Ben kicks things off with an in-depth discussion of what it actually means to "apply early" to law school and why September 1st is a critical date. He unpacks how rolling admissions work, the advantages of submitting your application at the start of the cycle, and why applying early gives you access to more scholarships and better offers—provided you're a competitive applicant by then. Ben also dives into why late applications—like those in November or January—aren't ideal if you're trying to maximize your outcome.He uses real data from the University of Colorado to show how law school choice impacts career outcomes and salary potential. Through detailed case studies, Ben contrasts applying with a 160 LSAT score versus waiting a year to apply with a 170, emphasizing the long-term financial and professional consequences. He encourages students to think less about starting law school quickly and more about setting themselves up for long-term success.Ben takes on questions about the usefulness of blind review, breaking down why he thinks it’s a misunderstanding of how to study effectively for the LSAT. He argues that students should focus on accuracy rather than rushing or trying to out-game timing mechanics. His core message is that mastery leads to speed—not the other way around. Ben also discusses accommodations on the LSAT and his critical perspective on their long-term usefulness, especially in legal practice.The episode closes with advice to struggling students, encouragement for high-scoring beginners, and a push to stop overcomplicating LSAT prep. His advice: do questions, get them wrong, learn from your mistakes, and repeat. It’s a candid, data-driven, and occasionally irreverent dive into the real mindset and strategy behind smart LSAT prep and law school admissions.Start prepping the right way with our free LSAT course and get all your law school questions answered. Visit linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer for free resources, classes, and more.
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110
Behind the Scenes: Real-Time Law School Essay Edits (Ep. 17 from 2024)
In this episode, we're reuploading a live law school admissions strategy session originally recorded on June 12, 2024. If you missed it the first time around, here’s your chance to catch up on everything we covered—no fluff, just direct advice.I walk through several sample personal statements and diversity statements, highlighting exactly what works and what doesn’t. You'll hear real-time edits, tips for standing out, and common mistakes that tank otherwise solid essays.Whether you’re just starting your admissions journey or deep in the writing process, this session will give you clarity on how to craft a compelling narrative for law schools. Tune in to get an insider's perspective on what makes an essay pop.🎯 Ready to get serious about your law school apps?Visit linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer for free resources, essay reviews, and upcoming strategy sessions.
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109
The Real Reason Top LSAT Students Still Retake (Ep. 16)
In this solo mailbag episode, Ben dives deep into LSAT score variance and why so many test-takers misunderstand their performance. He makes the case for not canceling your June LSAT score, even if it felt rough, and explains why one or two points can make or break your admissions and scholarship chances.Ben also unpacks how law schools really view extracurriculars, volunteer hours, and softs—and why most applicants are nowhere near as “unimpressive” as they fear. He talks candidly about law school debt, which schools are actually worth six-figure loans, and why a school like Cal Western is financially dangerous.Later in the episode, Ben gives tailored advice to high-achieving applicants, including one with a 4.0 and 170+ LSAT, discussing whether to retake and how to optimize personal statements for big law goals. Finally, he reassures a student working hard toward a 175+ that long prep times aren’t a red flag—and may even predict success in the legal field.👉 Ready to get serious about the LSAT? Start now with our free course and resources: 📍 linktr.ee/HeyFutureLawyer
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108
Cornell Law Grad Exposes the Truth About Law School Rankings (Ep. 15 with Troy Anderson)
Check out everything HFL is up to!Troy's Email- [email protected]'s InstagramIn this episode, Ben sits down with Troy, a recent Cornell Law grad who shares his journey from scoring a 151 on his first LSAT to achieving a 174. Troy explains how his background in logic and philosophy helped his early progress, but also how the jump from the 160s to the 170s took months of slow, deliberate work. He emphasizes that consistent study and a deep understanding of the test—not just brute force—are what helped him break through.Troy also shares his law school admissions journey, explaining why he ultimately chose Cornell over other elite schools. He breaks down the school's underrated placement power in big law, clerkships, and top public interest roles. He discusses the importance of outcomes-based rankings and warns against relying on reputation or USNWR rank alone, especially when scholarship money is on the table.Ben and Troy tackle deeper issues in the LSAT and pre-law space, including the impact of accommodations on score inflation, the removal of logic games, and the declining predictive power of the LSAT. They agree that the test needs to be harder and more writing-based to reflect actual law school skills. Troy also gives invaluable writing tips for future lawyers, like eliminating passive voice and making every sentence persuasive.The episode closes with a raw and honest conversation about the law school “grift”—the myth that any law school at any price is a good investment. Troy talks about his free mentorship program for underrepresented applicants and how he vets students to ensure long-term success, not just short-term admissions. Both he and Ben agree that transparency and strategic planning are essential in a landscape filled with misleading advice.
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107
Why You're Failing LSAT Logical Reasoning (And How to Fix It) (Ep.14)
Check out everything HFL is up to!In this episode, Ben Parker delivers a no-nonsense deep dive into LSAT Logical Reasoning. He explains why Logical Reasoning is two-thirds of your score on the 2025 LSAT and argues that most students fail not because the logic is hard—but because they aren't reading carefully. Ben walks through a fake LSAT-style argument to demonstrate how simple the underlying logic really is, and how test-takers often confuse correlation and causation when they should be attacking assumptions.He discusses the psychology of LSAT struggle, calling out the passive study habits and feel-good but ineffective strategies pushed by much of the prep industry. Ben stresses that the LSAT is a reading test, first and foremost, and challenges listeners to take their prep seriously—treating every question like it’s a high-stakes decision.Later in the episode, Ben critiques a popular admissions consulting email line by line, fact-checking and calling out myths around early application timing, optional essays, personal statement themes, resume length, and whether you should disclose where else you’re applying. The section is brutally honest and packed with admissions insight few others are willing to say out loud.Finally, Ben hops onto Reddit to give raw, unfiltered advice to students navigating LSAT prep, career tradeoffs, and whether to quit a summer job to focus on studying. This is a must-listen for serious LSAT preppers and law school applicants ready to level up.
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106
Reddit Is Ruining Your Law School Admissions Strategy 🤡 (Ep. 13)
Get the Free HeyFutureLawyer LSAT CourseIn this candid mailbag-style episode, Ben answers a wave of Instagram DMs sparked by graduation season and summer LSAT prep. He starts by dispelling myths about GPA requirements for law school, emphasizing that while a high LSAT can compensate for a low GPA, it doesn’t erase concerns entirely. He explains how law schools report medians—not averages—making the extremes (both low and high scores) less impactful than applicants think. If you have a 2.5 GPA and a high LSAT, you still face an uphill battle, and law schools will expect a compelling reason for your academic underperformance.Ben also takes aim at Reddit, especially the /r/lawschooladmissions crowd, arguing that it fosters misinformation and anxiety. He cites examples of high-scoring applicants who bombed the cycle—not because their numbers were off, but because of awkward vibes, bad writing, or just poor strategy. Ben underscores that admissions are about more than stats; law schools also want people who can write, communicate well, and not be weird in an interview.Next, Ben offers brutally honest feedback to people who messaged him with questions ranging from whether they can take the LSAT as a Bangladeshi student to whether they should apply with a 2.6 GPA and a 162 LSAT. He argues that such profiles scream “not ready” and warns against rushing into law school without improving those numbers. For high schoolers deciding between top undergrads like Columbia and Brown, Ben explains that the decision should come down to happiness and GPA maximization, not marginal prestige differences.Finally, Ben covers rising LSAT registration fees and closes the episode with a promise to pivot back to practical LSAT skills, including Logical Reasoning walkthroughs—his way of re-centering on actionable value for his listeners.
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105
Big Law Propaganda Boy? 🤔 Let’s Set the Record Straight! (Ep. 12 with Fan Mail)
Get the Free HeyFutureLawyer LSAT CourseIn this episode, Ben Parker dives into the importance of planning to take the LSAT more than once. He breaks down the concept of score variance, explaining how even high-scoring students can see a fluctuation of several points from test to test. Ben emphasizes that it's mathematically unrealistic to assume you'll hit your peak score on a single test day, and the smartest approach is to take the LSAT early enough to give yourself multiple attempts.Ben also responds to a critical email from a listener who accused him of having a transactional and reductive approach to legal education. He defends his stance on viewing education as an investment and discusses the often misunderstood reality of big law careers. Ben argues that while big law can be perceived negatively by some, it remains one of the most direct paths to financial security for those who prioritize high earnings.Later in the episode, Ben shares some practical LSAT advice on reviewing Reading Comprehension (RC) sections, explaining why doing fewer passages but at a higher accuracy rate is more beneficial than rushing through all four. He also addresses a student's concerns about struggling with Logical Reasoning (LR) and offers insights on how to assess progress accurately rather than focusing solely on occasional good performances.Ben wraps up by critiquing a problematic GPA addendum, highlighting the common mistake of over-explaining and providing excuses rather than demonstrating growth and accountability. He underscores the importance of presenting yourself professionally and realistically when applying to law schools.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Think the LSAT is a beast? Think again. In this podcast, Ben Parker and friends show you how the LSAT can actually be easy. We cut through the BS of traditional LSAT studying, offering clear, practical strategies and no-nonsense advice to help you master the exam without the fluff. Whether you’re just starting out or looking to fine-tune your approach, join us as we simplify complex concepts and pave a straightforward path to law school success. The LSAT is easy when you know how to approach it.Subscribe, rate, and review, and send in questions to be answered to our show by emailing [email protected] our full LSAT prep platform as well as our free course at HeyFutureLawyer.
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