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The Practice

 The Practice
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The Practice
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Law Procedural by David E. Kelley about the "sleazy" Boston law firm of Donnell, Young, Dole & Fruttnote Initially known as Robert G Donnell and Associates, eventually known as Young, Frutt & Berluti, known for their high quotient of scummy clients and ethically questionable tactics. However, each of the characters at some point reveals having their ideals, with long speeches defending what they do and how they do it.In its original form, it was a straight series of literate and intelligent courtroom dramas. Around the middle seasons, the show shifted substantially towards criminal drama, often featuring the now almost reputable firm being plagued by its dirtier former clients. In the last seasons, the show started focusing more on the characters' personal lives, both in and out of court (see One of Our Own), and developing increasingly far-out plots with criminally insane clients rather than just sleazy ones, a move that did not prove popular with audience or critics.This shift ended in a conclusive Retooling in the last season. The network gave David E Kelley an ultimatum, either drastically reduce the cost of the series per episode or face cancellation. Kelley chose to fire most of the main cast, including the lead character, and replaced them with James Spader as Alan Shore. What resulted was a partial return to form in the vein of the earlier seasons, albeit at the total expense of most of main characters (what happened to most of the departing members was never given an explanation). Near the end of the final season, Kelley was given the choice of either continuing the show or developing a spin-off around the Alan Shore character. What resulted ultimately became a Poorly Disguised Pilot for its Spinoff, Boston Legal.
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2024-04-04T15:38:10Z
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2024-04-04T15:38:10Z
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Dropped link to AllyMcBeal: Not a Feature - ITEM
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Dropped link to Blackmail: Not a Feature - ITEM
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DBTropes
 The Practice / int_1152876e
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Faux Yay
 The Practice / int_1152876e
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Faux Yay: Inverted by recurring character Joey Heric. Joey is an openly gay narcissistic Serial Killer who enjoys unnerving female prosecutors by making sexual advances on them.
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 The Practice / int_13d7a65e
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The Artifact
 The Practice / int_13d7a65e
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The Artifact: Rebecca was only a receptionist for the first two seasons, but after she became a lawyer, Lisa Gay Hamilton's spot in the credits still featured her answering a phone for two additional years. Even after it was updated (and featured her with the short haircut she adopted early in the second season, instead of the long hair she had during the first), the sound effect of a ringing phone accompanied her image until the end of the sixth season.
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 The Practice / int_146f8df0
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Situational Sexuality
 The Practice / int_146f8df0
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Situational Sexuality: Invoked by a guard when Lindsey is briefly imprisoned, during her orientation the (female) guard recommends that she pick up a dental dam from the infirmary "in case you get involved with anyone, better safe than sorry".
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 The Practice / int_14beeefd
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Darker and Edgier
 The Practice / int_14beeefd
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Darker and Edgier: David E. Kelley conceived the show as something of a rebuttal to L.A. Law, for which he wrote, and its romanticized treatment of the American legal system.
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 The Practice / int_1520ad7e
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Jumping Off the Slippery Slope
 The Practice / int_1520ad7e
comment
Jumping Off the Slippery Slope: In one episode, Jimmy defends a childhood friend, a business owner who was sued for outing a gay employee with AIDS. The friend initially appears sympathetic, voicing concerns about the other employees’ safety, with said employees reacting to the news not with disgust or hate, but sympathy for the plaintiff. Nonetheless, Jimmy’s friend loses all sympathy when, halfway through the episode, in a private discussion with Jimmy, he delivers a vitriolic homophobic rant that reveals what he really thinks of LGBTQ+ people.
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 The Practice / int_17dbe19a
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Internalized Categorism
 The Practice / int_17dbe19a
comment
Internalized Categorism: Since he was a child, Bobby has wanted to be a high-powered lawyer, like the kind at the practice his dad worked as a janitor. He also hates them with every fiber of his being. This roiling self-hatred is one of his several personal issues that regularly push him to breaking point.
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Full-Frontal Assault
 The Practice / int_18ce8f1d
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Full-Frontal Assault: Helen Gamble fatally shoots George Vogelman while she is completely naked.
 The Practice / int_18ce8f1d
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The Practice / int_18ce8f1d
 The Practice / int_1a8dc238
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Underestimating Badassery
 The Practice / int_1a8dc238
comment
Underestimating Badassery: A lot of the high-powered and corporate law firms go into cases assuming they can push DYD&F around and easily steamroll them. They still assume it after high-profile wins over cigarette companies, gun manufacturers and the federal government.
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 The Practice / int_1badfb3a
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The Heart
 The Practice / int_1badfb3a
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The Heart: Jimmy
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The Practice / int_1badfb3a
 The Practice / int_1d9af117
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Gender-Equal Ensemble
 The Practice / int_1d9af117
comment
Gender-Equal Ensemble: Averted until the very last season, which had three men and three women. Until then, the show had always had a majority female cast. It was the most extreme toward the end of the seventh season, in which only three of the ten credited cast members were men.
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 The Practice / int_1f6983f7
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Ambiguous Situation
 The Practice / int_1f6983f7
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Ambiguous Situation: Frequently, as the show often doesn't reveal whether or not the defendant actually is guilty.
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 The Practice / int_2828fd9a
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Promotion to Opening Titles
 The Practice / int_2828fd9a
comment
Promotion to Opening Titles: A lot of people forget that Jimmy wasn't in the title credits until the fourth episode of the six-episode first season, when he actually joined the practice, and was a guest star before that. Lucy also got one midway through Season 3 after a stint as a guest, and Richard Bay got one in Season 5 after recurring in most of Season 4.
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Bland-Name Product
 The Practice / int_2b5ea43c
comment
Bland-Name Product: Zig-Zagged. Characters would occasionally be seen drinking out of what were obviously Coke or Diet Coke cans, but with the logo either obscured, covered or turned away from the camera.
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 The Practice / int_2d363f63
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Frame-Up
 The Practice / int_2d363f63
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Frame-Up: In the episode "Hammerhead Sharks", the defendant turns out to have gotten set up, as he insisted, by the real killers.
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Ax-Crazy
 The Practice / int_2d4fa515
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Ax-Crazy: George Vogelman, a cross-dressing stalker who became obsessed with Elenor after a blind date, she rejected him and he killed a woman in order to frame her. Elenor tries to say she will help him and he has an insanity defense for what he has done, however he tries to kill her and is shot and killed by Helen.
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 The Practice / int_301c4238
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Mama Didn't Raise No Criminal
 The Practice / int_301c4238
comment
Mama Didn't Raise No Criminal: Skip's mother assumes Lucy is a slut who seduced him and inspired his wire fraud to pay for an engagement ring, without any evidence, since she apparently can't fathom that her son was capable of this otherwise.
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 The Practice / int_3036294e
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Scary Black Man
 The Practice / int_3036294e
comment
Scary Black Man: Eugene could be very frightening, especially when in Tranquil Fury, and he wasn't above threatening people, he even beat up two of his own clients.
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All Psychology Is Freudian
 The Practice / int_31fa019d
comment
All Psychology Is Freudian: In "Free Dental" a psychiatrist gives a Freudian explanation of how the defendant's crush fetishnote Becoming sexually aroused by seeing bugs stepped on. arose. This scene happens in 1999, when Freudianism had been abandoned by virtually all American psychiatrists for more than forty years.
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 The Practice / int_3322dd48
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Hollywood Law
 The Practice / int_3322dd48
comment
Hollywood Law: Creator David E. Kelley, despite himself being a lawyer, gets lots of details wrong (or perhaps discards them for dramatic purposes). In "Line of Duty", Bobby learns from his prosecutor girlfriend that the police will be raiding a drug house-one which his drug dealer client runs. So he warns the client to get out, and all but tells him there is not only an informant in his organization, but also his name. Instead of fleeing said drug dealer client was packing up when the police arrived, and four officers were murdered, plus their informant. When the police discover what he did, Bobby is charged with reckless homicide, and in his defense he argues that his legal duty to represent the client covered warning of an impending arrest. The judge agrees. Not even close. Though attorneys must zealously represent all clients, this has to stay within the bounds of the law. Unsurprisingly, warning a drug dealer he was about to be arrested isn't legal, but makes you an accessory after the fact to his crimes. It's also really unlikely that he would be charged with only reckless homicide, since that warning caused four police officers' murders, and that of the informant (remember, tipping him off was accessory after the fact) meaning he could be convicted of felony murder. The judge dismisses the case because she can't be sure of what Bobby was thinking when he tipped off his client. However, there is more than enough evidence for a trial, and such issues must be left up to the jury. The standard for ordering a case bound over for trial (probable cause) is much lower than to convict someone (beyond a reasonable doubt). The attorneys are frequently seen holding conversations with the witnesses or accused while they're on the stand, without any line of questioning. This is even lampshaded in "The Case Against Alan Shore" when Alan calls the firm out for this and asks if the judge is going to say anything, but receives no response. In "Checkmate" Joey Heric, the defendant who is going pro se, gets called as a witness by prosecutor Helen Gamble. The judge allows it over his entirely correct objection that this violates the Fifth Amendment because he "opened the door" by saying he killed the victim in self-defense during his opening statement, which is supposedly testimony. This is not the case however, and no reasonable judge would permit it. Any subsequent conviction could be overturned. Bobby and Helen are in a relationship while both are still taking cases against each other. Later Lindsey and Helen are housemates and close friends while doing the same thing. In both cases, it would be unethical due to the potential bias they could have towards each other. Though it's unclear if the judges know of this sometimes, they never bring it up among themselves either until one case where Judge Hiller says it would be fine while in reality, they don't allow this. Lawyers are frequently shown meeting with the judges privately in their chambers, which is not allowed. True, it still happens sometimes, but often it's arranged right in front of the opposing counsel without objections.
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 The Practice / int_3577923b
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Murder by Mistake
 The Practice / int_3577923b
comment
Murder by Mistake: The firm once tried and failed to save a client from being executed for this kind of murder.
 The Practice / int_3577923b
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The Practice / int_3577923b
 The Practice / int_3763bcf8
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False Rape Accusation
 The Practice / int_3763bcf8
comment
False Rape Accusation: In "Rape Shield" a young White woman who'd made two previous unfounded accusations says a Black man had raped her in her home. According to him, she had invited him there to have sex. Due to rape shield laws however her past can't come in, so he's convicted in spite of the fact that he's almost certainly innocent.
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 The Practice / int_38b05ae7
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Poorly Disguised Pilot
 The Practice / int_38b05ae7
comment
Poorly Disguised Pilot: The eighth season spends several episodes setting up the law firm and characters which will be the focus of its spinoff Boston Legal.
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 The Practice / int_38d02d44
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Batman Gambit
 The Practice / int_38d02d44
comment
Batman Gambit: Once Bobby coincidentally saw the firm's client doing something incriminating, called Lindsay, and left a message about it on her answering machine. Helen rooms with Lindsay, so she hears the message, saves it, and gets the judge to admit it as evidence. As Lindsay and Bobby discuss their next move that evening, she realizes Bobby made the "mistake" to screw over their guilty client. He doesn't confirm or deny, just looks guilty. Ellenor is defending a mentally impaired man, and his friend offers to testify and say anything she needs instead of the damaging truth. She tells him she doesn't want a liar's testimony. The prosecutor (Bay) happens to overhear the argument, and forces the friend to testify. The friend's testimony is a) not what he told Ellenor during their argument, and b) absolutely devastating to the prosecution's case. As Ellenor sits there, stunned, the client tells her that him and the friend cooked up the whole scheme. Ellenor's visibly impressed.
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The Smart Guy
 The Practice / int_3946634e
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The Smart Guy: Lindsey
 The Practice / int_3946634e
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The Practice / int_3946634e
 The Practice / int_3bc88a7f
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Foregone Conclusion
 The Practice / int_3bc88a7f
comment
Foregone Conclusion: The episode "Man and Superman" revolves around a wrongful death suit filed by a widow against a mental patient who believes he's Superman and the hospital he lives in. The man leapt from a high window and landed on her husband, killing him. Everyone involved knows she's going to win, and the conflict of the episode is between Jimmy, who represents the patient, and the lawyers representing the asylum, as they try to pin the blame on each other.
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Surprisingly Realistic Outcome
 The Practice / int_3ed23024
comment
Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: In "Brother's Keepers", luckless attorney Harland Bassett pulls a TV courtroom ploy by having another woman impersonate the defendant, his niece. The judge cites him for contempt, since this is a fraud on the court. Even so, she gets acquitted because the witness continues identifying the wrong person.
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 The Practice / int_401d4116
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Broken Aesop
 The Practice / int_401d4116
comment
Broken Aesop: Deliberately invoked in one episode. Eugene defends a man for robbery but it's clear from the beginning that he assumed his client was guilty and simply poked holes in the prosecution's case until it fell apart, and didn't even bother to get his client's side of the story. At the end of the episode his client is acquitted, and it turns out he really was innocent. In a later episode Eugene gets an almost identical case, and having learned from the previous one, assumes his client's innocence and takes his side of the story. However, this client is not only guilty but a liar, and cheerfully admits it to him just before taking the stand. The guilty client also gets off. The two contradictory messages of "Don't assume your client is guilty" and "He almost certainly is guilty" fit the themes of the show pretty well—the system is broken, and there are no easy answers.
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 The Practice / int_41d0640b
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Hello, Attorney!
 The Practice / int_41d0640b
comment
Hello, Attorney!: Most of the characters, though Jimmy and Ellenor were notable aversions (and even they might qualify as Hollywood Ugly). Originally Bobby Donnell was going to be a heavy set, unattractive, sleazy lawyer type, but Dylan McDermott's audition changed David E Kelley's mind about who the character should be, so Bobby Donnell's original conception was split between Bobby and Jimmy.
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 The Practice / int_4dc88e20
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Stop Being Stereotypical
 The Practice / int_4dc88e20
comment
In "Blowing Smoke" the defendant is a black police officer charged with murdering another black man he claims was trying to rob a corner store. His ex-girlfriend reveals he often disparaged black people with racial slurs (though not all-she's also black). In defense, he claims this only applied to the black criminals who he'd dealt with on the job. [[note]]In case you were wondering, it turns out he probably did commit murder, but because the dead guy hurt a friend of the cop, not racism.[//note]]
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The Big Guy
 The Practice / int_500ecfb7
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The Big Guy: Ellenor
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 The Practice / int_51640e80
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Bond One-Liner
 The Practice / int_51640e80
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Bond One-Liner: In "Avenging Angels" a man lights his daughter's killer on fire while he's in the hospital after posing as the orderly delivering a meal. First he poured gasoline on the victim with "Will it be orange juice or gasoline with your eggs?" Then the medical staff rush over and the killer says "Better check his temperature. He's burning up."
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 The Practice / int_524f94d3
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Rape as Backstory
 The Practice / int_524f94d3
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Rape as Backstory: Jamie Stringer, a young female lawyer who joins in season seven, reveals she'd been date raped in "Burnout" by a man who drugged her after taking a case where a young woman alleged not being hired as a result of being a rape victim. At first she claims to have gotten over it, but later breaks down in conversation with Lucy, who counsels rape victims.
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 The Practice / int_52a8d3dc
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Pyromaniac
 The Practice / int_52a8d3dc
comment
Pyromaniac: In "Fire Proof" an Italian-American businessman is charged with arson and felony murder due to a confessed pyromaniac serial arsonist claiming he'd been hired to burn the guy's warehouse for insurance fraud, which later killed the night watchman. He openly admits to masturbating while watching his fires, as they sexually arouse him, and is a huge creep all around. The jury acquits the businessman, and he later admits to Lindsey he'd made the fraud scheme up, setting the fire just for his usual kicks. He figured that he'd get caught, so instead first turned himself in and became the state's witness to get a deal.
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 The Practice / int_545f8c91
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Abortion Fallout Drama
 The Practice / int_545f8c91
comment
Abortion Fallout Drama: Rebecca mentions having an abortion once to Eugene, and seems unhappy about it, or has mixed feelings.
 The Practice / int_545f8c91
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 The Practice / int_5466745d
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Clear Their Name
 The Practice / int_5466745d
comment
Clear Their Name: Ellenor, Eugene and Jimmy struggle to do this for a death row inmate in Pennsylvania, facing an uphill battle even when they find new evidence casting doubt on his conviction. They eventually succeed.
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 The Practice / int_54856973
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Accuse the Witness
 The Practice / int_54856973
comment
Accuse the Witness: Used several times. It even becomes something of a trademark of the titular firm, code-named "Plan B." During the Ally McBeal cross-over DYD&F employ this strategy against the woman's psychiatrist, unbeknownst to the lawyers at Cage & Fish. When Bobby goes up to give his closing the psychiatrist pulls out a gun and commits suicide. As it turns out, Donnell's assertions were actually correct and he did kill the client's husband, but the incident leaves everyone (Bobby and Eugene in particular) extremely shaken. In one instance this helps them win a murder trial and get them sued. Genuinely believing their client's innocence, they accuse the victim's brother in bad faith and he sues them for defamation. They win the suit, but it turns out some time later that their client was guilty after all. And it's used against them in the final series when Alan Shore sues the firm after being fired despite bringing in many clients and millions of dollars; he points out that their accusations that he damaged their integrity and lowered the ethical standards they expected him to abide by can't help but seem a little rich given how frequently they accuse perfectly innocent people of murder in order to acquit the actual guilty party.
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Law Procedural
 The Practice / int_54a85cfa
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Law Procedural
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 The Practice / int_56635771
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Recurring Character
 The Practice / int_56635771
comment
Recurring Character: Some of the firm's cases lasted several episodes — sometimes as much as two months in Real Life — so naturally the clients in those cases appeared in numerous episodes.
 The Practice / int_56635771
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 The Practice / int_56f083a1
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Likes Older Women
 The Practice / int_56f083a1
comment
Likes Older Women: Eugene's son Kendall (who's eleven) is shown as attracted to Lucy, who's around a decade older than him. He even asks Lucy on a date. She politely declines and explains she's too old for him.
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Friendly Enemy
 The Practice / int_5aa8d3d8
comment
Friendly Enemy: Prosecutor Helen Gamble. Not only does she date Bobby at one point (the relationship fails to survive its first real challenge, Bobby and Helen facing each other in court), but she and Lindsey eventually become roommates. One scene has her and Lindsey giggling, spraying each other with cream and generally having a lot of fun, when earlier that day they'd been on opposite sides of a murder case.
 The Practice / int_5aa8d3d8
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 The Practice / int_5aa8d3d8
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The Practice / int_5aa8d3d8
 The Practice / int_5d88876d
type
Chocolate Baby
 The Practice / int_5d88876d
comment
Chocolate Baby: "Baby Love" has a young (White) woman claim self-defense of her baby (she's pregnant) and herself in killing her husband. She is insistent on wanting to be tried before giving birth, claiming it's to get things over with (plus having the baby in custody otherwise). Her Black neighbor backs up her claims her husband was abusive. At the end, she's acquitted, and then gives birth to a baby whose father is clearly the neighbor, raising Eugene's immediate suspicion as to whether they conspired in killing her husband and used this fake justification so they could stay together. It's clear that she wanted to give birth after the trial because her baby being mixed race would raise such questions.
 The Practice / int_5d88876d
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1.0
 The Practice / int_5d88876d
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The Practice / int_5d88876d
 The Practice / int_60b21fa3
type
The Lancer
 The Practice / int_60b21fa3
comment
The Lancer: Eugene
 The Practice / int_60b21fa3
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1.0
 The Practice / int_60b21fa3
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The Practice / int_60b21fa3
 The Practice / int_60e49895
type
The Leader
 The Practice / int_60e49895
comment
The Leader: Bobby
 The Practice / int_60e49895
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1.0
 The Practice / int_60e49895
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The Practice / int_60e49895
 The Practice / int_61b8f9e2
type
Bunny-Ears Lawyer
 The Practice / int_61b8f9e2
comment
Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Deconstructed by Kenneth Walsh and Raymond Oz, legendary attorneys who later in life suffered a nervous breakdown and Alzheimer's respectively. Their resulting bizarre behavior not only lessened their effectiveness as lawyers, but their ability to function in daily life.
 The Practice / int_61b8f9e2
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1.0
 The Practice / int_61b8f9e2
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The Practice / int_61b8f9e2
 The Practice / int_62f9d08e
type
Freeze-Frame Bonus
 The Practice / int_62f9d08e
comment
Freeze-Frame Bonus: Season 5's "An Early Frost" has one near the end where if one froze the action and looked closely, one could see a can of Ralphs brand green beans; which would also be a Blooper due to Ralphs, long one of the most prominent grocery chains in Southern California (where "The Practice" was shot) having no presence whatsoever in Boston.
 The Practice / int_62f9d08e
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1.0
 The Practice / int_62f9d08e
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The Practice / int_62f9d08e
 The Practice / int_64713b04
type
Pedophile Priest
 The Practice / int_64713b04
comment
Pedophile Priest: This trope caused Bobby to turn his back on the Catholic faith.
 The Practice / int_64713b04
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1.0
 The Practice / int_64713b04
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1.0
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The Practice / int_64713b04
 The Practice / int_65f5c15d
type
Designated Victim
 The Practice / int_65f5c15d
comment
Designated Victim: Lindsay has been attacked, stalked, and harassed by multiple serial killers over the years. Even killers who were pursuing other characters attack her when their target isn't there.
 The Practice / int_65f5c15d
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1.0
 The Practice / int_65f5c15d
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The Practice / int_65f5c15d
 The Practice / int_661d7909
type
Maligned Mixed Marriage
 The Practice / int_661d7909
comment
Maligned Mixed Marriage: In "The Lonely People" a White racist who preaches that interracial relationships are forbidden by God is revealed to have been involved with a Black woman years ago, and fathered a son with her. He refuses to let this be used at his trial on charges he ordered a Black man murdered, even when this could be used to argue the shooter (his son) did it to impress him rather than having been ordered to.
 The Practice / int_661d7909
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1.0
 The Practice / int_661d7909
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The Practice / int_661d7909
 The Practice / int_6b05b601
type
Jerkass Has a Point
 The Practice / int_6b05b601
comment
Jerkass Has a Point: In one episode, Bobby sues the city on behalf of a former client who was wrongfully convicted of rape and spent fifteen years in prison. During cross-examination Kenneth Walsh, who was the prosecutor on the case, coldly says he has no regrets for convicting the man because all the evidence indicated he was guilty. Fired up with righteous fury, Bobby tears into him and asks why when DNA testing became available he didn't re-examine the evidence, to which Walsh replies "Why didn't you?", pointing out that it was the defence attorney (i.e. Bobby's) job to secure the man's freedom if new evidence suggested he was innocent, not the prosecutor's. Bobby later admits in private that Walsh is right, and he never really fought for his client because he thought the guy was guilty too.
 The Practice / int_6b05b601
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 The Practice / int_6b05b601
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The Practice / int_6b05b601
 The Practice / int_6b2b3b59
type
The Reveal
 The Practice / int_6b2b3b59
comment
The Reveal: The end-of-episode cutaway shot to George Vogelman in a nun's habit was a very effective shock to the audience, since we had been led to believe he was innocent up to that point. Which was just not so.
 The Practice / int_6b2b3b59
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The Practice / int_6b2b3b59
 The Practice / int_6bc499da
type
Diplomatic Impunity
 The Practice / int_6bc499da
comment
Diplomatic Impunity: In "The Lonely People" a murder defendant is freed because he has diplomatic immunity as a result of his father being a Croatian diplomat. However, it comes with the caveat that he must go to Croatia, a country which he's never been in since he was three years old.
 The Practice / int_6bc499da
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1.0
 The Practice / int_6bc499da
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1.0
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The Practice / int_6bc499da
 The Practice / int_70447aa7
type
Culture Justifies Anything
 The Practice / int_70447aa7
comment
Culture Justifies Anything: An episode featured a couple taken to court because their son died and they could have saved him if they called for medical help but wouldn't because of their religion. The main characters did try to convince a jury to accept religion as an excuse to let the child die. Is there anyone surprised they lost that case? "Victim's Rights" has a Romanian Roma mother defend arranged marriages for twelve or thirteen year old girls (which she herself underwent) on the basis that its their tradition, and that some American customs offend her too.
 The Practice / int_70447aa7
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1.0
 The Practice / int_70447aa7
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1.0
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The Practice / int_70447aa7
 The Practice / int_722171e7
type
Straw Character
 The Practice / int_722171e7
comment
Straw Conservative: The show had a decidedly left-wing message, with Jimmy usually representing a token conservative viewpoint which would usually be proven wrong. Unlike most examples, he wasn't depicted as bigoted or malicious, in fact he was one of the most moral characters on the show, he was just old-fashioned and naïve. A much straighter example would be prosecutors Kenneth Walsh and Richard Bay, although they had some sympathetic moments.
 The Practice / int_722171e7
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1.0
 The Practice / int_722171e7
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The Practice / int_722171e7
 The Practice / int_7301ae04
type
Serial Killer
 The Practice / int_7301ae04
comment
Serial Killer: A few, including the Poet, an unidentified murderer who provides a handy alternate suspect for the firm to pin a couple of the more brutal murders they defend on.
 The Practice / int_7301ae04
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1.0
 The Practice / int_7301ae04
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The Practice / int_7301ae04
 The Practice / int_7426582d
type
Token Minority
 The Practice / int_7426582d
comment
Token Minority: Eugene is black, the only man of color in the main cast.
 The Practice / int_7426582d
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1.0
 The Practice / int_7426582d
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The Practice / int_7426582d
 The Practice / int_744e3311
type
Police Brutality
 The Practice / int_744e3311
comment
Police Brutality: In "Police State" when a cop is shot other officers first shoot the suspect while unarmed, then blatantly torture him later.
 The Practice / int_744e3311
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1.0
 The Practice / int_744e3311
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The Practice / int_744e3311
 The Practice / int_76db0ef5
type
Slobs Versus Snobs
 The Practice / int_76db0ef5
comment
Slobs Versus Snobs: Downplayed, the Practice was a small, run-down office in a dingy area of Boston, while a number of their civil actions were against big, skyscraper-based law firms staffed with snooty Harvard educated lawyers. As well as this, a good chunk of the main characters had lower-class backgrounds (Eugene and Rebecca were inner-city blacks, Bobby and Jimmy were working class Catholics from immigrant families). They were not above playing up their image to the primarily working class Boston juries.
 The Practice / int_76db0ef5
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 The Practice / int_76db0ef5
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The Practice / int_76db0ef5
 The Practice / int_786bf97f
type
Real Life Writes the Plot
 The Practice / int_786bf97f
comment
Real Life Writes the Plot: Both Kelli Williams (Lindsay Dole) and Cameryn Manheim (Ellenor Frutt) were pregnant during season 5, and this got written into the show. The circumstances even mirrored their own: Williams was pregnant with her husband's child (Lindsay also by Bobby), Manheim from sperm donation (the same thing done with Ellenor).
 The Practice / int_786bf97f
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 The Practice / int_786bf97f
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The Practice / int_786bf97f
 The Practice / int_7b454a57
type
White Sheep
 The Practice / int_7b454a57
comment
White Sheep: With the exception of his parents, Jimmy's family is mostly made up of pretty unpleasant people; he defends two separate cousins for discriminatory firings on different occasions.
 The Practice / int_7b454a57
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1.0
 The Practice / int_7b454a57
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The Practice / int_7b454a57
 The Practice / int_7cf2f728
type
Boomerang Bigot
 The Practice / int_7cf2f728
comment
Boomerang Bigot: In "Blowing Smoke" the defendant is a black police officer charged with murdering another black man he claims was trying to rob a corner store. His ex-girlfriend reveals he often disparaged black people with racial slurs (though not all-she's also black). In defense, he claims this only applied to the black criminals who he'd dealt with on the job. [[note]]In case you were wondering, it turns out he probably did commit murder, but because the dead guy hurt a friend of the cop, not racism.[//note]] In "The Lonely People" a racist who murdered a Black man was revealed to be half Black himself, with the man he says ordered it being his father (who preaches interracial relationships are forbidden). He was light enough to pass for White, so no one suspected. It's implied the man embraced his (hypocritical) father's racism to get close with him, though he simply denied that his Black heritage existed.
 The Practice / int_7cf2f728
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1.0
 The Practice / int_7cf2f728
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The Practice / int_7cf2f728
 The Practice / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 The Practice / int_7d89315b
comment
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: Judge Hiller delivers an absolutely scathing one to Bobby late in the fifth season after his attempts to secure reasonable doubt for a client become particularly underhanded. Even more effective because she delivers it in hushed, matter-of-fact tones, and ends by telling him that, whether he wins or loses the case, she wants him to go home that night and just hold his recently-born son.
 The Practice / int_7d89315b
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 The Practice / int_7d89315b
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The Practice / int_7d89315b
 The Practice / int_7fbb2a3
type
Nice Job Breaking It, Hero!
 The Practice / int_7fbb2a3
comment
Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: In one episode Bobby defends a woman accused of murdering her husband, although she initially seems credible when she pleads her innocence, she's caught lying on the stand and starts to look very guilty. Bobby manages to enter a plea for second degree murder at the last second (literally just before the judge reads out the verdict), only to find out that the jury's verdict was not guilty.
 The Practice / int_7fbb2a3
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 The Practice / int_7fbb2a3
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The Practice / int_7fbb2a3
 The Practice / int_80621707
type
Arranged Marriage
 The Practice / int_80621707
comment
Arranged Marriage: "Victim's Rights" has a Roma girl from Romania seek political asylum in the US to avoid arranged marriage with a boy chosen by her parents (she's twelve at the time). She loses.
 The Practice / int_80621707
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1.0
 The Practice / int_80621707
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The Practice / int_80621707
 The Practice / int_868409c
type
Broken Pedestal
 The Practice / int_868409c
comment
Broken Pedestal: Bobby's mentor, legendary lawyer Raymond Oz, lost his mind and killed his wife at the end of his life.
 The Practice / int_868409c
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1.0
 The Practice / int_868409c
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The Practice / int_868409c
 The Practice / int_8a9eb844
type
Perspective Flip
 The Practice / int_8a9eb844
comment
Perspective Flip: A legal drama told from the point of view of the sleazy defense firm.
 The Practice / int_8a9eb844
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The Practice / int_8a9eb844
 The Practice / int_8ae880f7
type
Deconstruction
 The Practice / int_8ae880f7
comment
Deconstruction: Most legal dramas focus either on prosecutors or, if they focus on defense attorneys, the client is always innocent, or at least righteous, and almost all the time, the good people go free and the bad people go to jail. In this show, as in reality, people are wrongly convicted, unrepentant criminals escape on a technicality, and sympathetic criminals rarely get special treatment.
 The Practice / int_8ae880f7
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 The Practice / int_8ae880f7
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The Practice / int_8ae880f7
 The Practice / int_92f674e5
type
Revenge
 The Practice / int_92f674e5
comment
Revenge: In "Avenging Angels" a man kills the men responsible for his daughter being murdered, using his conviction in the first case to get in the prison where the second is and killing him too.
 The Practice / int_92f674e5
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1.0
 The Practice / int_92f674e5
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The Practice / int_92f674e5
 The Practice / int_931fc523
type
Back for the Finale
 The Practice / int_931fc523
comment
Back for the Finale: Bobby Donnell makes appearances in the final couple of episodes after leaving at the previous season's finale.
 The Practice / int_931fc523
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1.0
 The Practice / int_931fc523
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The Practice / int_931fc523
 The Practice / int_94e4b975
type
Vomit Indiscretion Shot
 The Practice / int_94e4b975
comment
Vomit Indiscretion Shot: Jamie, when she sees her first dead body.
 The Practice / int_94e4b975
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1.0
 The Practice / int_94e4b975
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The Practice / int_94e4b975
 The Practice / int_9cad69bf
type
Depraved Homosexual
 The Practice / int_9cad69bf
comment
Depraved Homosexual: Joey Heric, a gay man and diagnosed narcissist who kills two different lovers, the second just to see if he can get away with doing it. Later he murders another man and frames his lover, then defends the poor guy as a lawyer, all for the fun of it (explicitly saying earlier he gets off defending fellow murderers).
 The Practice / int_9cad69bf
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 The Practice / int_9cad69bf
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The Practice / int_9cad69bf
 The Practice / int_9e0c3153
type
Punctuated! For! Emphasis!
 The Practice / int_9e0c3153
comment
Punctuated! For! Emphasis!: "There's a head! There's a head in the bag!" Also done with a single word ("Mass. A. Chu. Setts.") by the judge in the firm's first capital case, which took them from Massachusetts to California. They reused the same judge and his propensity for emphasizing Massachusetts in Boston Legal.
 The Practice / int_9e0c3153
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 The Practice / int_9e0c3153
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The Practice / int_9e0c3153
 The Practice / int_9e1f8fde
type
Good Lawyers, Good Clients
 The Practice / int_9e1f8fde
comment
Good Lawyers, Good Clients: Averted; many clients actually are guilty, while with others, it's never proven one way or the other. Very rarely does the firm actually represent the innocent (although often times the firm will make the distinction that while their clients are guilty they really don't deserve to go to prison). In one episode of note, Eugene defends a client without any consideration for his guilt or innocence, refuses to put him on the stand or to believe in him. The client gets acquitted, but snaps at Eugene because he refused to believe in his genuine innocence.
 The Practice / int_9e1f8fde
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 The Practice / int_9e1f8fde
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The Practice / int_9e1f8fde
 The Practice / int_a0db7803
type
It's Personal
 The Practice / int_a0db7803
comment
It's Personal: Quite often. The main cast is often called upon to defend their friends and family, and their relationship with DA Helen Gamble makes it so that their courtroom fights are intensely personal affairs.
 The Practice / int_a0db7803
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1.0
 The Practice / int_a0db7803
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The Practice / int_a0db7803
 The Practice / int_a1d48853
type
Stupid Crooks
 The Practice / int_a1d48853
comment
Stupid Crooks: A huge number of clients were pretty dumb, lines such as "How can it be stealing if it's for someone else?" being commonplace.
 The Practice / int_a1d48853
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 The Practice / int_a1d48853
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The Practice / int_a1d48853
 The Practice / int_a305d1c5
type
A Fool for a Client
 The Practice / int_a305d1c5
comment
In "Checkmate" Joey Heric, the defendant who is going pro se, gets called as a witness by prosecutor Helen Gamble. The judge allows it over his entirely correct objection that this violates the Fifth Amendment because he "opened the door" by saying he killed the victim in self-defense during his opening statement, which is supposedly testimony. This is not the case however, and no reasonable judge would permit it. Any subsequent conviction could be overturned.
 The Practice / int_a305d1c5
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The Practice / int_a305d1c5
 The Practice / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 The Practice / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: Played straight and inverted almost constantly. If the firm is defending a psychopath, they'll almost always get him off; if it's clear someone is innocent, you can bet they're going to jail.
 The Practice / int_a70223
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 The Practice / int_a70223
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The Practice / int_a70223
 The Practice / int_aa07ca54
type
Obfuscating Disability
 The Practice / int_aa07ca54
comment
Obfuscating Disability: The defendant in "Checkmates" turns out to not be so mentally disabled as he seemed at the end, having come up with a smart plan for getting himself off murder charges.
 The Practice / int_aa07ca54
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1.0
 The Practice / int_aa07ca54
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The Practice / int_aa07ca54
 The Practice / int_abb9ebaa
type
Dramatic Pause
 The Practice / int_abb9ebaa
comment
Dramatic Pause: The time between the words "we find the defendant," and the actual verdict grew continually longer as the series progressed.
 The Practice / int_abb9ebaa
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 The Practice / int_abb9ebaa
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The Practice / int_abb9ebaa
 The Practice / int_ae2ae3
type
I Won't Say I'm Guilty
 The Practice / int_ae2ae3
comment
I Won't Say I'm Guilty: It happens frequently. In one episode, the defendant reluctantly agrees to plead guilty (while still privately denying guilt), after the jury is done deliberating. The plea is accepted, and then Bobby discovers that the jury returned a verdict of Not Guilty. In two cases, prisoners who maintained they're innocent refused to say that they were guilty in hopes of gaining parole. One time the parole board granted it anyway, which they noted was probably the first time that had happened (since it's required that a prisoner confess generally as part of taking responsibility). However, in the second case he was denied and had to wait until DNA exonerated him. This is a real thing, called the innocent prisoner's dilemma.
 The Practice / int_ae2ae3
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 The Practice / int_ae2ae3
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The Practice / int_ae2ae3
 The Practice / int_b1d44353
type
Courtroom Antics
 The Practice / int_b1d44353
comment
Courtroom Antics: The show takes a lot of artistic license when it comes to trial proceedings. Lawyers frequently get into shouting matches with the witnesses, the judges, and each other. Both the prosecution and the defense attorneys get away with asking questions that would get them thrown out of a real courtroom. And of course there are the often spurious objections that the judge sustains or overrules without much rhyme or reason, which in some cases would be grounds for appeal.
 The Practice / int_b1d44353
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The Practice / int_b1d44353
 The Practice / int_b2011cae
type
Suspiciously Clean Criminal Record
 The Practice / int_b2011cae
comment
Suspiciously Clean Criminal Record: While prosecuting Russel Bakey, Helen Gamble considers it odd his record doesn't have even a speeding ticket.
 The Practice / int_b2011cae
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1.0
 The Practice / int_b2011cae
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The Practice / int_b2011cae
 The Practice / int_b5b3599d
type
Amoral Attorney
 The Practice / int_b5b3599d
comment
The whole group of main characters get one during the final season when they fire Alan (who had, up to that point, kept the whole operation afloat by being their main source of revenue) and sue him for multiple perceived instances of immoral and unethical behavior (including posing as a flight attendant and accessing the office computers to get information). Alan's whole defense comes down to, "Yes, I am an Amoral Attorney and a scumbag, but I brought this practice most of its revenue, none of these lawyers are any more ethical than I am, and I just want my slice of the pie." The court agrees, and awards Alan $2.3 million, causing the dissolution of the practice in the final episodes. Worse, during the entire case Eugene insisted that Alan's lack of ethics disgraced the firm, that the firm had integrity. While that is partly true, in regards to non-criminal cases, the firm mainly gained its reputation defending known killers and being underhanded in doing so, suggesting that Eugene is delusional and that his beef with Alan is mostly personal.
 The Practice / int_b5b3599d
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The Practice / int_b5b3599d
 The Practice / int_b6ec7566
type
Twofer Token Minority
 The Practice / int_b6ec7566
comment
Twofer Token Minority: Rebecca, a black woman who was initially the secretary and later a lawyer at the firm.
 The Practice / int_b6ec7566
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 The Practice / int_b6ec7566
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The Practice / int_b6ec7566
 The Practice / int_ba8b13ad
type
Catch-22 Dilemma
 The Practice / int_ba8b13ad
comment
Catch-22 Dilemma: Ellenor laments this trope when trying to save a man on death row in Pennsylvania. To get him off, she needs new evidence showing his innocence, which is DNA. She can't get it tested however, which is what she needs to do for that. They find a way around it and get the new evidence later.
 The Practice / int_ba8b13ad
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 The Practice / int_ba8b13ad
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The Practice / int_ba8b13ad
 The Practice / int_bb8f2da3
type
Cop Killer Manhunt
 The Practice / int_bb8f2da3
comment
Cop Killer Manhunt: In "Police State" the Boston PD go on the warpath when one of their officers is shot (he later dies). They first shoot the suspect, then torture him in the hospital, stopping the doctors treating him and forcibly removing his attorneys.
 The Practice / int_bb8f2da3
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The Practice / int_bb8f2da3
 The Practice / int_bc103f8b
type
Subverted
 The Practice / int_bc103f8b
comment
Subverted. A man named William Hinks is caught at the scene of the last of a series of brutal murders of women and confesses to all nine murders, but his confession includes incorrect details the police had given the press in order to weed out nut jobs. After almost being ruled out by an FBI profiler, Hinks speaks to a psychiatrist who comes to believe he's delusional and not a killer at all. Hinks insists he's guilty while Lindsey tries to prove his innocence, and she coaxes even more false details out of him on the stand. She posits that Hinks, chasing the notoriety of a serial killer, learnt of the location of the last murder via a police scanner, headed there and waited to be caught near the scene, whereas the prosecution argues that he was forced to rush his last murder, got caught and hit upon the idea of giving the impression of being a delusional man who merely thinks he's the killer. While they're awaiting the verdict, Lindsey gets the impression that the prosecutor's version of events is true, and Hinks tells her it is. However, the jury doesn't see through it and returns a not guilty verdict on all nine counts.
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The Practice / int_bc103f8b
 The Practice / int_bc74ef27
type
Berserk Button
 The Practice / int_bc74ef27
comment
Berserk Button: Eugene is a huge guy with an equally huge temper. One instance occurred after he'd cleared a young gang-banger of murder charges. He was riding down in the elevator with the boy and his mother, and the mother said 'If there's anything we could ever do for you...', and Eugene said "As a matter of fact, there IS!", hit the stop button on the elevator, pinned the kid against the wall and told him that he has a son about his age who goes to the same school and that he'd better not try to recruit him into the gang, or ELSE! Alan Shore also pushed Eugene's button as well. One notable example came after Eugene was named to a well-earned judgeship. Alan opened the door to the courtroom and disrupted the trial in progress by yelling, "Eugene! Buddy! How's it going?" The next time the two met up, Eugene reminded him of this and told him, "You may not respect me very much, but you WILL respect this robe!"
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The Practice / int_bc74ef27
 The Practice / int_bce68547
type
Hollywood Jehovah's Witness
 The Practice / int_bce68547
comment
Hollywood Jehovah's Witness: Rebecca is revealed as being a Jehovah's Witness right when she needs a blood transfusion. Unusually for an Informed Religion topic, the fact that no one's seen any evidence of her being a Witness becomes a plot point. The other attorneys at her firm argue that her personal practices clearly indicate that she is not a Witness and therefore should receive a transfusion. It's never confirmed whether she considers herself to be one or not.
 The Practice / int_bce68547
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The Practice / int_bce68547
 The Practice / int_beb9a361
type
Anti-Hero
 The Practice / int_beb9a361
comment
Anti-Hero: Alan, an Amoral Attorney who ends up gaining the moral high ground when he sues the practice after they (after benefiting from his skills, which bring in most of their business and keep them afloat) fire him and attempt to steal his clients.
 The Practice / int_beb9a361
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The Practice / int_beb9a361
 The Practice / int_c33ba0a8
type
Chuck Cunningham Syndrome
 The Practice / int_c33ba0a8
comment
Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: It is never explained what happened to the majority of the cast members in the interim between seasons 7 & 8.
 The Practice / int_c33ba0a8
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1.0
 The Practice / int_c33ba0a8
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The Practice / int_c33ba0a8
 The Practice / int_c673210e
type
Informed Judaism
 The Practice / int_c673210e
comment
Informed Judaism: Jamie is Jewish, but this was only established by her mentioning it. She feels guilty enough about not practicing Judaism to break up with her gentile boyfriend while noting how American Jews are fading as a distinct group.
 The Practice / int_c673210e
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The Practice / int_c673210e
 The Practice / int_c913ec99
type
Felony Murder
 The Practice / int_c913ec99
comment
In "Line of Duty", Bobby learns from his prosecutor girlfriend that the police will be raiding a drug house-one which his drug dealer client runs. So he warns the client to get out, and all but tells him there is not only an informant in his organization, but also his name. Instead of fleeing said drug dealer client was packing up when the police arrived, and four officers were murdered, plus their informant. When the police discover what he did, Bobby is charged with reckless homicide, and in his defense he argues that his legal duty to represent the client covered warning of an impending arrest. The judge agrees. Not even close. Though attorneys must zealously represent all clients, this has to stay within the bounds of the law. Unsurprisingly, warning a drug dealer he was about to be arrested isn't legal, but makes you an accessory after the fact to his crimes. It's also really unlikely that he would be charged with only reckless homicide, since that warning caused four police officers' murders, and that of the informant (remember, tipping him off was accessory after the fact) meaning he could be convicted of felony murder. The judge dismisses the case because she can't be sure of what Bobby was thinking when he tipped off his client. However, there is more than enough evidence for a trial, and such issues must be left up to the jury. The standard for ordering a case bound over for trial (probable cause) is much lower than to convict someone (beyond a reasonable doubt).
 The Practice / int_c913ec99
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The Practice / int_c913ec99
 The Practice / int_c972d624
type
Slut-Shaming
 The Practice / int_c972d624
comment
Slut-Shaming: In "Civil Right" Eugene attacks an alleged rape victim's testimony by pointing to what she wore on the night of her date with his client, implying that as she was in a revealing dress, she was "asking for it." This appears to be Eugene's go-to strategy when defending clients in rape cases, as we see him utilize the same tactics with another case near the end. He gets rebuked publicly for it by the victim, and the judge finds this all disgusting (though he can't stop such questions) and Eugene feels terrible about doing so. However, he keeps doing it in defense of his client.
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The Practice / int_c972d624
 The Practice / int_ca3a6dbd
type
Informed Ability
 The Practice / int_ca3a6dbd
comment
Informed Ability: Alan's skills as an anti-trust lawyer, which are mentioned by almost every other character. Throughout the final season (and Boston Legal), he's seen practicing a variety of fields, but he is never once shown practicing in this one.
 The Practice / int_ca3a6dbd
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The Practice / int_ca3a6dbd
 The Practice / int_cb96fad3
type
11th-Hour Ranger
 The Practice / int_cb96fad3
comment
11th-Hour Ranger: Jamie
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The Practice / int_cb96fad3
 The Practice / int_cf92fea8
type
Cassandra Truth
 The Practice / int_cf92fea8
comment
Cassandra Truth: In one episode, Rebecca defends a black man who was arrested for drug possession. Although the client is a known drug dealer with a record, he claims he was stopped and searched without cause, and it turns out that the cop who arrested him is a notorious racist who's well known for randomly stopping and searching black people in poor neighborhoods. On the stand the racist cop says that the defendant walked up to him, handed over the drugs and confessed. The judge (for obvious reasons) doesn't believe him and throws out the case. At the end of the episode, it's revealed that he did walk up and confess—he knew the racist cop would search him and find the drugs, so he turned himself in, knowing that no one would believe it and he would be released.
 The Practice / int_cf92fea8
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The Practice / int_cf92fea8
 The Practice / int_d0c13631
type
Mrs. Robinson
 The Practice / int_d0c13631
comment
Mrs. Robinson: Judge Roberta Kittleson, who admits first to having an erotic dream about Bobby, gets sued when a much younger former clerk whom she had an affair with alleges sexual harassment, after this has a relationship with Jimmy, and then it's revealed she's had affairs with many lawyers that she's older than.
 The Practice / int_d0c13631
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The Practice / int_d0c13631
 The Practice / int_d332bf54
type
Lampshaded
 The Practice / int_d332bf54
comment
Twice defense attorneys defending accused rapists happen to run into the victim while shopping, while in the second case it was lampshaded, saying Boston is a small town.
 The Practice / int_d332bf54
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1.0
 The Practice / int_d332bf54
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The Practice / int_d332bf54
 The Practice / int_d39e327f
type
What the Hell, Hero?
 The Practice / int_d39e327f
comment
These moments become increasingly common as the series goes on, and are the main contributing factor to the series' conclusion. The firm is dissolved, and the few remaining members enter different legal ranks in the hopes of rehabilitating the damage their What the Hell, Hero? moments have done to their reputations and their own sense of self-worth.
 The Practice / int_d39e327f
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The Practice / int_d39e327f
 The Practice / int_d9ce79de
type
Only Shop in Town
 The Practice / int_d9ce79de
comment
Only Shop in Town: Downplayed with law firms. There clearly are other law firms that appear and sometimes compete with Bobby's, but Bobby's firm is the only one in town that is willing to do the type of work that they do.
 The Practice / int_d9ce79de
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Practice / int_d9ce79de
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The Practice / int_d9ce79de
 The Practice / int_d9e48d0
type
Company Cross References
 The Practice / int_d9e48d0
comment
Company Cross References: In one episode, a witness claims that he knows what time a certain thing happened because he was watching Boston Public at the time. This caused a Continuity Snarl when The Practice and Boston Public had a crossover later on.
 The Practice / int_d9e48d0
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1.0
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The Practice / int_d9e48d0
 The Practice / int_da297ad2
type
One of Our Own
 The Practice / int_da297ad2
comment
One of Our Own: Bobby is a defendant in a few episodes, and one late series story arc has Lindsay on trial for murder.
 The Practice / int_da297ad2
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1.0
 The Practice / int_da297ad2
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The Practice / int_da297ad2
 The Practice / int_db015585
type
False Confession
 The Practice / int_db015585
comment
False Confession: Subverted. A man named William Hinks is caught at the scene of the last of a series of brutal murders of women and confesses to all nine murders, but his confession includes incorrect details the police had given the press in order to weed out nut jobs. After almost being ruled out by an FBI profiler, Hinks speaks to a psychiatrist who comes to believe he's delusional and not a killer at all. Hinks insists he's guilty while Lindsey tries to prove his innocence, and she coaxes even more false details out of him on the stand. She posits that Hinks, chasing the notoriety of a serial killer, learnt of the location of the last murder via a police scanner, headed there and waited to be caught near the scene, whereas the prosecution argues that he was forced to rush his last murder, got caught and hit upon the idea of giving the impression of being a delusional man who merely thinks he's the killer. While they're awaiting the verdict, Lindsey gets the impression that the prosecutor's version of events is true, and Hinks tells her it is. However, the jury doesn't see through it and returns a not guilty verdict on all nine counts. One innocent prisoner was convicted largely after he got coerced into confessing by the police due to being held without sleep for hours. It was deemed voluntary anyway, since they didn't use physical force.
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The Practice / int_db015585
 The Practice / int_dbe013f
type
TheSixthRanger
 The Practice / int_dbe013f
comment
The Sixth Ranger: Lucy
 The Practice / int_dbe013f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Practice / int_dbe013f
featureConfidence
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The Practice / int_dbe013f
 The Practice / int_dc579c91
type
Contrived Coincidence
 The Practice / int_dc579c91
comment
Contrived Coincidence: Twice defense attorneys defending accused rapists happen to run into the victim while shopping, while in the second case it was lampshaded, saying Boston is a small town. Eugene's very first case, in the show's last episode ("Cheers") is presiding over a case where Alan Shore (by then his bete noire) represents the defendant. He angrily demands to know how Alan got him assigned, and recuses himself due to being heavily biased after Alan's denial of doing anything.
 The Practice / int_dc579c91
featureApplicability
1.0
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The Practice / int_dc579c91
 The Practice / int_dca6a9d
type
Start My Own
 The Practice / int_dca6a9d
comment
Start My Own: Lindsay initially did this at the beginning of the seventh season, working in the same building as the others and more than occasionally using their library and resources. Bobby leaves the firm at the end of the seventh season to start another firm, while Jimmy leaves near the end of the eighth to start his own after the fallout from the failed case against Alan.
 The Practice / int_dca6a9d
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1.0
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The Practice / int_dca6a9d
 The Practice / int_ddeaea82
type
Miscarriage of Justice
 The Practice / int_ddeaea82
comment
Miscarriage of Justice: Five years before DNA tests became available, Bobby Donnell defended an accused murderer who was forced by Kenneth Walsh to confess. Because Bobby believed his client to be guilty, the client had to wait ten years after DNA tests became available until an innocence program has the case reopened and the real culprit was revealed to be someone who had previously confessed out of remorse for seeing an innocent man being blamed but neither Bobby nor Walsh did anything about it. Out of remorse for not requesting the DNA test as soon as it became available then, Bobby agreed to help his client sue the State. In a later episode, police pick up two men in the wrong place at the wrong time for a cop shooting. They torture one into blaming the other, after which it's used to get the latter flipping on the first. In the end though the prosecutor drops the murder charge and pleads it simply to a misdemeanor "illegal discharge of a firearm" as they realized it wouldn't hold up (still a miscarriage, but much less).
 The Practice / int_ddeaea82
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1.0
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The Practice / int_ddeaea82
 The Practice / int_df4b69d6
type
Uncomfortable Elevator Moment
 The Practice / int_df4b69d6
comment
Uncomfortable Elevator Moment: In one episode, a company hires Lindsay to represent them when a potential customer sues them for discriminating against Arabs. Lindsay and the plaintiff find themselves alone in an elevator and remain silent. Justified because she's not supposed to have any conversations with the plaintiff without the latter's lawyer being present.
 The Practice / int_df4b69d6
featureApplicability
1.0
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featureConfidence
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The Practice / int_df4b69d6
 The Practice / int_e154ff08
type
Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique
 The Practice / int_e154ff08
comment
Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique: In "Police State" the prime suspect in a cop killing's tortured, but with a twist it was to name his friend, since they know a coerced confession by him isn't admissible. When he gets implicated, this "friend" then immediately flips on him in return for dropping the charge, which was actually the goal.
 The Practice / int_e154ff08
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1.0
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The Practice / int_e154ff08
 The Practice / int_e57c714d
type
Insane Equals Violent
 The Practice / int_e57c714d
comment
Insane Equals Violent: Mentally ill people are invariably violent, mostly killers on the show. It's justified as otherwise they wouldn't be facing criminal charges that the firm defends them from.
 The Practice / int_e57c714d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Practice / int_e57c714d
featureConfidence
1.0
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The Practice / int_e57c714d
 The Practice / int_e8b49369
type
Lie Detector
 The Practice / int_e8b49369
comment
Lie Detector: The show depicted polygraphs as almost 100% accurate, and regarded passing one as the gold standard for proof of innocence. One client who was able to fool the polygraph (something laughably easy in Real Life) was described as "one in a million". Nonetheless, like in reality, polygraph results were inadmissible in court. This of course begs the question why they are inadmissible if they are supposed to be so accurate.
 The Practice / int_e8b49369
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The Practice / int_e8b49369
 The Practice / int_e8cae797
type
Freudian Trio
 The Practice / int_e8cae797
comment
Freudian Trio: Among the male characters. Jimmy was the Id, Eugene was the Superego and Bobby was the Ego. Often the ethical dilemmas would boil down to Jimmy stating the morally correct course of action, Eugene giving the legal solution and Bobby trying to decide between them.
 The Practice / int_e8cae797
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The Practice / int_e8cae797
 The Practice / int_ea08e9
type
The Team
 The Practice / int_ea08e9
comment
The Team: It started out as the Five-Man Band plus Rebecca, with the attorneys in the traditional FMB roles plus paralegal Rebecca as a Support Party Member. After she became a lawyer and Lucy was hired, it became an ensemble. The Leader: Bobby The Lancer: Eugene The Smart Guy: Lindsey The Big Guy: Ellenor The Heart: Jimmy The Sixth Ranger: Lucy 11th-Hour Ranger: Jamie
 The Practice / int_ea08e9
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The Practice / int_ea08e9
 The Practice / int_ea2e9f2d
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No Ending
 The Practice / int_ea2e9f2d
comment
No Ending: Largely because it spun off into Boston Legal.
 The Practice / int_ea2e9f2d
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 The Practice / int_ea2e9f2d
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The Practice / int_ea2e9f2d
 The Practice / int_eb6da8ef
type
Crossover
 The Practice / int_eb6da8ef
comment
Crossover: With Ally McBeal. The lawyers of DYD&F find Cage & Fish's liberal and crazy work ethic odd while Ally finds DYD&F dark, oppressive, scary and intimidating. They also did a Crossover with Boston Public and another with the short-lived Gideon's Crossing.
 The Practice / int_eb6da8ef
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The Practice / int_eb6da8ef
 The Practice / int_edd312d3
type
Münchausen Syndrome
 The Practice / int_edd312d3
comment
Münchausen Syndrome: Amoral Attorney Hannah Rose helped a client to walk away with rape by pointing out the victim had been previously diagnosed with Munchhausen, despite the dubious nature of why the doctor who made that diagnosis decided to do it.
 The Practice / int_edd312d3
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The Practice / int_edd312d3
 The Practice / int_ee7a60e9
type
One-Steve Limit
 The Practice / int_ee7a60e9
comment
One-Steve Limit: As in real life, a lot of forenames reoccur over the show. Within the main cast alone, there have been two men named Alan. There's also the near-homonyms of Helen and Ellenor, James/Jimmy and Jamie. Counting Boston Legal, there have also been two Claires in the title credits, although neither one lasted a full season.
 The Practice / int_ee7a60e9
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The Practice / int_ee7a60e9
 The Practice / int_f3626b09
type
Mercy Kill
 The Practice / int_f3626b09
comment
Mercy Kill: The crime being prosecuted in at least one episode. Another episode featured a man being prosecuted for inciting a mercy kill. Bobby himself turned off his mother's ventilator in order to end her suffering.
 The Practice / int_f3626b09
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The Practice / int_f3626b09
 The Practice / int_ffd79ba3
type
VillainousCrossdresser
 The Practice / int_ffd79ba3
comment
Villainous Crossdresser: One killer, George Vogelman, did his dirty work in a nun's habit.
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ItemName
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The Practice

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Practice
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Abortion Fallout Drama / int_5c1a9545
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Accuse the Witness / int_5c1a9545
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All Psychology Is Freudian / int_5c1a9545
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Ambulance Chaser / int_5c1a9545
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Amoral Attorney / int_5c1a9545
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Arranged Marriage / int_5c1a9545
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Beleaguered Childhood Friend / int_5c1a9545
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Better Manhandle the Murder Weapon / int_5c1a9545
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Big Secret / int_5c1a9545
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Black Widow / int_5c1a9545
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Bond One-Liner / int_5c1a9545
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Boomerang Bigot / int_5c1a9545
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Career-Building Blunder / int_5c1a9545
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Character Overlap / int_5c1a9545
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Chinese Launderer / int_5c1a9545
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Chocolate Baby / int_5c1a9545
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Clear Their Name / int_5c1a9545
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Coitus Uninterruptus / int_5c1a9545
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Common Nonsense Jury / int_5c1a9545
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Conflict Ball / int_5c1a9545
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Cop Killer Manhunt / int_5c1a9545
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Could Say It, But... / int_5c1a9545
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Crusading Lawyer / int_5c1a9545
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Crying Wolf / int_5c1a9545
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Culture Justifies Anything / int_5c1a9545
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Debate and Switch / int_5c1a9545
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Definite Article Title / int_5c1a9545
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Depraved Dentist / int_5c1a9545
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Depraved Homosexual / int_5c1a9545
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Diplomatic Impunity / int_5c1a9545
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Documentary Episode / int_5c1a9545
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Dumbass No More / int_5c1a9545
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False Confession / int_5c1a9545
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Final Season Casting / int_5c1a9545
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Framing the Guilty Party / int_5c1a9545
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Get into Jail Free / int_5c1a9545
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Go-Karting with Bowser / int_5c1a9545
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Good Lawyers, Good Clients / int_5c1a9545
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Hello, Attorney! / int_5c1a9545
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I Remember Because... / int_5c1a9545
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I Take Offense to That Last One / int_5c1a9545
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I Won't Say I'm Guilty / int_5c1a9545
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Informed Flaw / int_5c1a9545
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Informed Judaism / int_5c1a9545
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Insane Equals Violent / int_5c1a9545
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Insanity Defense / int_5c1a9545
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Job Title / int_5c1a9545
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Just Like Robin Hood / int_5c1a9545
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Karmic Thief / int_5c1a9545
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Likes Older Women / int_5c1a9545
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Maligned Mixed Marriage / int_5c1a9545
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Mama Didn't Raise No Criminal / int_5c1a9545
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Mixed Ancestry / int_5c1a9545
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Mrs. Robinson / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Münchausen Syndrome / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Murder by Mistake / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Nobody Over 50 Is Gay / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Obfuscating Disability / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Out with a Bang / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Pedophile Priest / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Phrase Catcher / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Plea Bargain / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Post-Kiss Catatonia / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Promotion to Opening Titles / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Pyromaniac / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Rape as Backstory / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Reckless Gun Usage / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Required Spinoff Crossover / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Revenge / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Series of the 2000s / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Slipping a Mickey / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Spin-Off / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Start My Own / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Suspiciously Clean Criminal Record / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Sympathetic Murderer / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
That Was Objectionable / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
The Judge / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
There Should Be a Law / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Time for Plan B / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Token Minority / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Twofer Token Minority / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Uncomfortable Elevator Moment / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Unintentionally Notorious Crime / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Vigilante Execution / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Wardrobe Malfunction / int_5c1a9545
 The Practice
hasFeature
Worrying for the Wrong Reason / int_5c1a9545