by
Chip
Somodevilla/Getty
Images)
Kim
Kardashian’s
effort
to
become
a
real
life
lawyer
just
like
her
dad
has
provided
a
steady
stream
of
content
here
at
Above
the
Law.
In
2019,
Kardashian
officially
announced
that
she
was studying
to
become
a
lawyer without going
to
law
school
(seeing
as
she’s
without
a
bachelor’s
degree,
a
requirement
for
the
traditional
lawyer
route)
and
instead
studying
through
an
apprenticeship.
The
process
took
six
years
—
thanks,
COVID
—
and
now
she’s
waiting
on
her
bar
exam
results.
Because
it’s
a
Kardashian
we’re
talking
about
here,
she’s
documented
much
of
the
process
on
social
media.
She
shared
her
hatred
of
con
law,
struggles
with
evidence,
and
a criminal
law
issue
spotter that
cast
Justin
Bieber
as
a
criminal
mastermind.
She’s
complained
about
the
fact
that law
student
life
sucks,
explained
that
she
neglected
her Keeping
Up
With
the
Kardashians livetweeting
duties
to keep
up
with
torts
homework, bailed
on
summer holiday
festivities as
she continued
with
her
contracts
homework,
and
dealt
with
personalized questions
all
about
her.
She
even
has
a
favorite
law
professor
—
University
of
Washington
contracts
professor Steve
Calandrillo —
who she’s
shouted
out
on
Insta. Kardashian
even
has
her
“just
like
us”
moment,
like
when she
posted
about
shooting
tequila
while
studying
torts.
Speaking
of
Kardashian’s
test-taking
troubles,
Kim
learned
that
ChatGPT
isn’t
an
ideal
study
partner.
In
a
Vanity
Fair
lie
detector
test
(because
everyone
needs
a
gimmick
these
days),
Kardashian
dished
about
her
use
of
ChatGPT.
Kardashian
told
her
All’s
Fair
co-star
Teyana
Taylor
that
she
has
used
ChatGPT
for
“legal
advice.”
And
it
didn’t
go
great.
“When
I
need
to
know
the
answer
to
a
question,
I’ll
take
a
picture
and
snap
it
and
put
it
in
there.
It
has
made
me
fail
tests
…
all
the
time,”
Kardashian
explained.
“And
then
I’ll
get
mad
and
I’ll
yell
at
it.”
“So
she’s
a
frenemy?”
Taylor,
followed
up.
And
Kardashian
agreed,
“Yes,
a
frenemy.
And
then
it’ll
say
back
to
me,
‘This
is
just
teaching
you
to
trust
your
own
instincts.
So
you
knew
the
answer
all
along.’
“
Actually,
Kardashian
has
a
bit
of
a
parasocial
relationship
with
the
popular
AI
tool.
“But
they
need
to
do
better
because
I’m
leaning
to
them
to
really
help
me
and
she
is
teaching
me
a
life
lesson
and
then
becoming
my
therapist
to
tell
me
why
I
need
to
believe
in
myself
after
they
got
the
answer
wrong,”
Kardashian
continued.
“It’s
like
a
thing.
I
screenshot
all
the
time
and
send
it
in
my
group
chat.
Like,
can
you
believe
this
bitch
is
talking
to
me
like
this?
This
is
insane.”
Yeah,
this
is
why
law
professors
get
the
big
bucks.
Kathryn
Rubino
is
a
Senior
Editor
at
Above
the
Law,
host
of
The
Jabot
podcast,
and
co-host
of
Thinking
Like
A
Lawyer.
AtL
tipsters
are
the
best,
so
please
connect
with
her.
Feel
free
to
email
her
with
any
tips,
questions,
or
comments
and
follow
her
on
Twitter
@Kathryn1 or
Mastodon
@[email protected].
