

- #Susannah flood we the people how to
- #Susannah flood we the people trial
- #Susannah flood we the people professional
So it’s like any of us at any moment where we’ve entered a professional threshold.
#Susannah flood we the people how to
She said “I think that the joy in this season is being able to explore the faults or the ways in which these young people don’t yet know how to do what it is they’re responsible for doing. Susannah Flood who plays “Kate Littlejohn” made a good point. When you watch the show you will see that the lawyers are very young, which is great because you get to the progression from graduation from law school to getting sworn in as a lawyer. (ABC/Nicole Wilder) From L-R: WESAM KEESH, JASMIN SAVOY BROWN, BRITT ROBERTSON, SUSANNAH FLOOD, BEN RAPPAPORT, REGE-JEAN PAGE, VONDIE CURTIS-HALL Just kind of seeing people work in that kind of rhythm is both inspiring and a responsibility because you then have to represent that in its best light.” And you have to boil that down and deliver it to jury with all the technicalities involved and essentially either save lives or not, and with ten other cases on your back and five calls coming in every ten minutes. Real people’s lives, incredibly intricate complicated stories.

Just the fact they walk into this courtroom every day. And just kind of being in that environment, in a courthouse environment and feeling people work at an incredibly high level, with people’s lives in their hands every single day is an extraordinary thing, and something you kind of need to feel palpable before you can kind of take it on. Like you can turn up and watch a case with very, very few exceptions which is incredible because it is so important for justice not just to be done, but to be seen and to be done. And I didn’t know before I started working this that everyone has the right to go and just watch justice be done. “I got into contact with a couple of folks in this city and kind of went down to court in Compton, which is in experience. Regé-Jean Page spoke about his experience at one of the courthouses he sat in on for a trial. When we sat down with the cast, you could tell that all of them had done research on how the court system works, and most had either shadowed or had an actual lawyer working with them. And so I’ve been able to draw off both from my own experience and then people that I’ve worked with and went to law school with.”

I didn’t do the kind of noble work that these people do, but I do have a background in the law and some of my friends that I went to law school with are actually consultants on the show. I still am a lawyer, I still pay my bar dues but I’m hoping to never have to use them again. And so I brought those ideas to Shonda and we talked them through and ended up combining those two ideas into what has become this show. And so I thought having that dual perspective could be an interesting new way to approach a legal show. And not like in a formulaic way, but just kind of in a way that you got a richer sense of how the law works and how justice is made in America. I also wanted to do something that showed the perspective of both sides. And I thought a show set in that court with the kinds of cases that come out of that court and the lawyers that work in that court could be really interesting.
#Susannah flood we the people trial
One of them was a show set in the Southern District of New York, the Mother Court, which in legal circles is kind of the – as the judge says at the opening of the show- the highest kind of most- the highest- profile, most prestigious trial court in the United States. Paul said “I brought this idea to Shonda and I had been kind of playing around with two ideas for a while. We asked Paul Williams Davies how the idea for this type of show came about and how it would differ from the law shows already out there. We get to see both perspectives of what the prosecution and public defender have to go through in court, and all of the emotions that they deal with in their cases.Īn important aspect of the show is that a lot of the cases you will see are based on actual events. One of the reasons I enjoyed seeing the first episode of “For The People” is because we get a chance to see a different side of our Justice system that we have never seen before. I know what you guys are thinking…another “Law & Order” or “Criminal Minds”. (ABC/Image Group LA) PAUL WILLIAM DAVIES (CREATOR/EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) TOM VERICA (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER)
