Berkeley J. of Entertainment & Sports Law
The Berkeley Journal of Entertainment & Sports Law (BJESL) is dedicated to providing a multifarious selection of intellectual and practical discussions from scholars, practitioners, and students on legal issues that contemporaneously impact various entertainment industries, domestically and internationally. As an interactive and electronic law review, BJESL presents a unique platform for rich discourse on legal topics regarding copyright, trademark, art, sports, film and television, communications and broadcast media, First Amendment, right to privacy, music, antitrust and unfair competition, and contracts, among others.Current Issue: Volume 1, Issue 2 (2012) Symposium Issue
Article
Essays
Creating Law Franchises on Television
David E. Kelley
In Name Only: The Portrayal of Lawyers on Television
Marshall Goldberg
I’m Not a Lawyer, But I Play One on T.V.
Camryn Manheim
Legal Ethics: Prime Time and Real Time
Deborah L. Rhode
Rumpole’s Ethics
Paul Bergman
Judge Judy’s Justice
Lawrence M. Friedman
Editorial
Introduction to Channeling Justice: Law on Television
Michael Asimow