PLAY PODCASTS
The LSAT Simplified: A Hey Future Lawyer Podcast

The LSAT Simplified: A Hey Future Lawyer Podcast

Hey Future Lawyer

163 episodesENExplicit

Show overview

The LSAT Simplified: A Hey Future Lawyer Podcast has been publishing since 2023, and across the 3 years since has built a catalogue of 163 episodes. That works out to roughly 90 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.

Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 11 min and 50 min — with run-times ranging widely across the catalogue. The publisher flags most episodes as explicit, so expect adult themes or strong language throughout. It is catalogued as a EN-language Education show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 6 days ago, with 21 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2024, with 91 episodes published. Published by Hey Future Lawyer.

Episodes
163
Running
2023–2026 · 3y
Median length
34 min
Cadence
Weekly

From the publisher

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.

Latest Episodes

View all 163 episodes

Why You Need to Register for the LSAT EARLY in 2026 (Ep. 63)

Jun 2, 202627 min

Should You Tell Law Schools About Anxiety? (Ep. 62)

May 27, 20268 min

What Law Schools Say They Want vs. What They Reward (Ep. 61 w/ Autumn from Gradmissions)

May 19, 202622 min

Is It Too Late to Study for the LSAT This Summer? (Honest Answer) (Ep. 60)

May 12, 20261h 0m

Brutally Honest Law School Personal Statement Advice (Ep. 59)

May 6, 202648 min

The 2025 Law School Employment Data Is Out, And Some Schools Look Way Better Than Expected (Ep. 58)

Apr 28, 202638 min

The Truth About LSAT Logical Reasoning Most Students Get Wrong (Ep. 57)

Apr 21, 20261h 1m

There Are No Shortcuts on the LSAT (Here’s What to Do Instead) (Ep. 56)

Apr 14, 202635 min

New Law School Rankings Just Dropped… And They Make No Sense (Ep. 55 w/ Madeline)

E

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

Apr 7, 202656 min

Your Law School List Is Probably Terrible (Ep. 54)

E

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]

Mar 31, 202656 min

The Biggest LSAT Mistakes Everyone Makes (And Why Most Prep Advice Is Wrong) (Ep. 53 with Madeline)

E

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

Mar 24, 202659 min

Overrated vs. Underrated Law Schools in 2026 (Ep. 52)

E

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.

Mar 17, 202650 min

How She Finished 1L With Straight A’s (Ep. 51 with Madeline)

E

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.

Mar 10, 20261h 23m

Applying for Fall 2027 Law School? Your LSAT Timeline Is Probably Wrong (Ep. 50)

E

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.

Mar 3, 202652 min

Goodbye Online LSAT: The Security Problem That Broke The System (Ep. 49)

E

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.

Feb 24, 202638 min

What Not To Do In A Personal Statement (Epstein Files Edition) (Ep.48 w/ Madeline)

E

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.

Feb 17, 202655 min

Night Law School While Running a Business? A Lawyer’s Unfiltered Take (Ep. 47 w/ Nick Cohen)

E

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

Feb 10, 202647 min

Law School Admissions or Financial Natural Selection: Why Not Both? (Ep.46)

E

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.

Feb 3, 202631 min

LSAT Practice Tests vs Drilling (Ep. 45 with Madeline)

E

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

Jan 27, 202656 min

Necessary vs Sufficient Isn’t Your Problem: Reading Is (Ep. 44 with Autumn Lockett from Gradmissions)

E

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.

Jan 20, 202655 min
Hey Future Lawyer 2025