Sunday, April 23, 2023

SCOTUSblog off of Twitter

Not only are they not paying the $8 for the blue check, they have left Twitter altogether.  

Reuters covers how law firms are dealing with the new pay-for-the-blue-check program on Twitter:


While many law firms may be lukewarm to Twitter, some individual lawyers have amassed large followings, using the platform for self-expression, networking and business development.

Are they willing to pay for a checkmark?

Those who have the blue badges include former Manhattan U.S. attorney Preet Bharara, now a partner at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr (1.7 million followers); Hogan Lovells appellate partner Neal Katyal (837,500 followers); Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan founder John Quinn (50,600 followers); and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison appellate chair Kannon Shanmugam (13,000 followers).

Lest you think the list is limited to the elite alone, Michael Avenatti (aka Federal Correctional Institution, Terminal Island inmate number 86743-054) also has a blue check – and 612,200 followers.

None responded to my requests for comment, though I don’t know if Avenatti can actually get text messages in prison.

Class action watchdog Ted Frank of the of the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute (20,000 followers) also has a blue check. When I asked him about it, he offered this response via email: “I recently purchased a phenomenal fish appetizer at a Chinese restaurant in Virginia for $12, making that at least 150% as important a story. Would be happy to give that a review.”

This is an example of why Ted Frank is good at Twitter.

Still, plenty of lawyers with big followings are checkmark-free. For example, former U.S. attorney general Eric Holder, now senior counsel at Covington & Burling, has 559,300 followers and no blue mark. He declined comment via a firm spokesman.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very few people care. Gone, but not remembered.

Twitter is a useful app. People will either find a better one or continue to use it. The uproar is funny. Musk purchased it and can do as he pleases. My money is on him figuring out a way to make more money with it because he is willing to make major changes on a moments notice until he figures out what works.

Anonymous said...

Twitter is pure toxicity

Anonymous said...

What social media space that allows for anonymous commentary is anything but toxic?

Dumb fuck.

Anonymous said...

LOl good one 12:21