The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>How many of you are attending the DRI Annual Meeting in Chicago in a few weeks?
As you may recall, our editor, Jim Dedman, plans the annual Mecklenburg County Bar’s Halloween CLE each year. This year, it’s called “Halloween CLE III: The Law of Clowns, Ghostbusters, and Scary Movies.” That’s right; there is literally a component on clown law. You can learn more here.
Our favorite legal tweet of the week is one of our own, as we feel our colleague Lindsay Joyner deserves some additional recognition for being named one of Columbia, South Carolina’s Best & Brightest!
Congratulations to GWB’s own Lindsay Joyner (@lajoyner) on being named one of Columbia’s 2017 Best & Brightest! pic.twitter.com/r4iXjVwR5Z
— Gallivan White Boyd (@GWBLawFirm) September 20, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>Rest in peace, Grant Hart of the band, Hüsker Dü. In 1986, the band released Candy Apple Grey, which featured the single “Sorry Somehow,” written by Grant Hart. It features our favorite rock lyric about subpoenas. Read more about him here.
Our favorite legal tweet of the week comes from the North Carolina Bar Association, a committee of which recently addressed the Oxford comma debate. Behold that tweet below!
Final count: 10 pro, 2 con, 2 abstentions. @JimDedman @brandonjhuffman it’s been decided. #oxfordcomma #myncba pic.twitter.com/M9SNbTE7jg
— Joyce Brafford (@Joyce_Brafford) September 14, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>Headline: “Man says selfie proves McDonald’s coffee burned him.”
If you use Twitter, you might be aware of #PracticeTuesday, a hashtag dedicated to legal and practice tips. Well, our editor, Jim Dedman, enjoys the discussion so much that he crated his own #PracticeTuesday playlist, which features such gems as George Harrison’s “Sue Me, Sue You Blues,” INXS’ “Mediate,” and “The Trial of the Century” by the French Kicks. If you enjoy #PracticeTuesday or Spotify, we recommend that you investigate further. We’ve embedded the playlist below for easy access.
It’s been a while since we’ve selected a favorite tweet of the week. In fact, it’s been some time since we’ve posted an episode of Friday Links. That said, Our favorite legal tweet of the week comes from GWB’s own Stuart Mauney who celebrated his 30th anniversary with Gallivan, White, & Boyd, P.A. yesterday. Congratulations, Stuart!
30 years ago today I started my legal career w/ @GWBLawFirm Privileged to have been part of GWB journey! Thanks to all the GWB family.
— C. Stuart Mauney (@stuartmauney) August 24, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>Our tweet of the week comes from one of our firm’s partners who offers his views on the perils of a multi-jurisdictional practice.
So @JimDedman takes me to a NC BBQ joint. I ordered a side order of hash. Waitress: “What’s hash?” A different world up north.
— Ron Tate (@sccounsel) April 13, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>If you like, you can read Texans for Lawsuit Reform Foundation’s new report, “The Story of Asbestos Litigation in Texas & Its National Consequences.”
Remember on “L.A. Law” when Rosalind Shays stepped into the empty elevator shaft, sending her to her death? That episode aired 26 years ago in March of 1991. By the way, with all of these sequels and reboots, how come the networks have not revisited “L.A. Law”? The series ended in May of 1994, and despite the fact that the cast reunited briefly for a television movie in 2002, no one meaningfully discusses this show these days. We here at Abnormal Use were definitely fans of the show back in the day (although we never purchased – or even knew about – “L.A. Law: The Computer Game” – which you can read about here).
Did you catch GWB’s own Lindsay Joyner on television in South Carolina this week? If not, let us direct your attention to our tweet of the week!
Coming up next on GDC, find out about an important adoption affair happening this weekend! @BrittConwayNews pic.twitter.com/tG9GQnW44I
— WACH FOX (@wachfox) March 30, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>Did you see that many of Prince’s albums returned to Spotify this past weekend? (But most of the albums by The White Stripes have vanished).
Did anyone listen to the “Stranglers” podcast, which finished its twelve episode season this past week? We have some complicated thoughts on the podcast, which sought to reexamine the investigation into the Boston Strangler murders, but we’re still processing them. We’ll keep you posted on this front. Share your thoughts, too, if you have any!
Our favorite tweet of late comes from #AppellateTwitter.
Idiosyncratic #appellate tip: Right after OA, I make a chart of all cases the panel has from hearing, and see how quickly they’re coming out
— Raffi Melkonian (@RMFifthCircuit) February 15, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>Anyone at NCBA headquarters in Cary today for the “Post-Judgment Collections” CLE?
Our legal tweet of the week addresses the issue of service by email – a perilous topic indeed. We’re not always fans of service by email, but we understand this tweet.
OC – who still uses AOL email – is refusing to stipulate to electronic service because “a lot of emails go to my spam that I am unaware of” pic.twitter.com/06LvKldjHJ
— Lawyer Cat* (@LawyerCat_) February 3, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>Who is going to the DRI Product Liability Committee seminar in Las Vegas in February? Our editor, Jim Dedman, will be there, and if you see him, be sure to say hello.
So, apparently, the new Star Wars film, coming in December, is called The Last Jedi. We’re not quite certain what to think about that.
Very good news: The latest album by Japandroids arrives today. Miss this at your peril!
By the way, we here at Gallivan, White, & Boyd, P.A. and the Abnormal Use law blog are pleased to announce that Duffie Powers and Michelle Yarbrough have been elected as shareholders and Zach Weaver has been elected as a partner.
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>If you’re in Charlotte, North Carolina next week, and you’re curious about music law, you might be interested in the Inn of Court event on Wednesday. Here’s the info:
“I fought the law, and the law won,” a rock band once proclaimed. At our next meeting, we will learn about the law of music from both a music performer and a rock musician turned lawyer. Entertainment lawyer and former disc jockey Coe W. Ramsey of Brooks Pierce’s Raleigh office represents radio and television stations, musicians, new media companies, and others in nearly every area of entertainment law. Before practicing in the area of workers compensation at Cranial Sumner & Hartzog, LLP in Raleigh, Michael Connell played guitar in The Connells, a power pop band that recorded 8 albums and toured the world. At this event, Coe will teach us the basics of music law and forming a band, while Michael will offer his practical insights on the rock world from the perspective of a musician and performer.
The event takes place next week on the evening of Wednesday, January 18, 2016 at Draught in Charlotte. For more details and to register, click here.
A recent tweet by our editor reveals the perils of new legal technology.
The court reporter emailed to alert me that I’d left my Apple Pen at opposing counsel’s office after a long, long day of depositions. Alas!
— Jim Dedman (@JimDedman) January 13, 2017
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>
We were saddened to learn of the death of actress and writer Carrie Fisher this week. Of course, we knew her mostly as Princess Leia. But we enjoyed her work in When Harry Met Sally, The Blues Brothers, and Hannah and Her Sisters, as well. Her mother, Debbie Reynolds, died the following day. We can’t imagine what their family must be enduring right now. Above, by the way, is a copy of Star Wars #65, published more decades ago than we would like to admit. We bought more than a few issues of that series back in the early 1980’s.
Rest in peace, Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds.
Well, it’s the last Friday of the year, and this is our last edition of Friday Links for 2016. We can’t say that we’re disappointed to see this year end. It’s been a doozy. We here at Abnormal Use and Gallivan, White, & Boyd P.A. hope that you all have a festive and safe New Year’s Eve tomorrow night.
The Avett Brothers are playing a New Year’s Eve show here in Charlotte tomorrow night, and we negligently failed to purchase tickets. Alas.
Did anyone get a new iPad Pro for the holidays?
Read about “The Ten Most Ridiculous Lawsuits of 2016.”
For our favorite legal tweet of late, we direct you to the following excerpt from a cross examination.
I’ll take this opportunity to, again, share my favorite time I KILLED IT on cross exam. pic.twitter.com/jdI1rpcpxQ
— Criminelle Law (@CriminelleLaw) December 4, 2016
The post Friday Links appeared first on Abnormal Use.
]]>