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From Law to Content in the New Media Marketplace: The Starr Report Disrobed
Book chapter   Open access

From Law to Content in the New Media Marketplace: The Starr Report Disrobed

Fedwa Malti-Douglas and Daniel M. Filler
Popular Culture and Law, pp 325-360
2006
url
https://europepmc.org/articles/pmc6172948View
Accepted (AM)Open Access (License Unspecified) Open

Abstract

Starr Team Trial Lawyers Jackson's Interview Unmediated Form Fair Game Important Indictment York Times Bestseller List Specialized Law Libraries Legal Documents Popular Legal Culture Judge Targets Primary Legal Materials Judicial Opinions Presidential Impeachment Monica Lewinsky Personal Copy Legal Materials Mass Media Marketplace Phone Sex Starr Report Court Filings Phoolan Devi Protect Minority Interests Entertaining Content Retail Law
In the past, people primarily learned about law through intermediaries (most often journalists). Trial lawyers are often told to repeat terms, phrases, and ideas to insure that the jury notices and recalls important details and points. As a result of new technology, and the changing nature of information marketing, the public now has far greater access to functional legal materials, ranging from judicial opinions to court filings to trial arguments to legislative history. The Starr Report used far more than just evidence to make its case; it used artifice. Malti-Douglas's critical reading of the Starr Report provides insights into how an advocate makes a compelling case. The Starr Report Disrobed also considers the fluidly shifting narrative viewpoint employed by the authors of the Starr Report. When the public receives its understanding of the law directly, legal writers' marketing style and literary approach become essential to understanding how law will gain (or lose) its legitimacy.

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