The LSAT Simplified: A Hey Future Lawyer Podcast

Hey Future Lawyer

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 support@heyfuturelawyer.com Access our full LSAT prep platform as well as our free course at HeyFutureLawyer.

  1. Jun 16

    How to Improve LSAT Accuracy Without Taking More Practice Tests (Ep. 65)

    Ben answers listener questions about LSAT preparation, law school admissions, artificial intelligence, and personal statements. He begins by explaining why most students take too many full-length LSAT practice tests and should spend more time completing individual sections, reviewing mistakes, and improving their understanding. For Logical Reasoning, Ben argues that students should attempt fewer questions and aim for better than 90 percent accuracy on the questions they complete. He explains why practice is for learning, not protecting your score, and why skipping every difficult question can prevent meaningful improvement. The episode also covers Reading Comprehension strategy, including the importance of predicting the passage’s main point and recognizing the author’s opinion. Ben discusses when highlighting or taking notes may help, as well as when those habits become substitutes for actually understanding the passage. Ben then addresses whether artificial intelligence will replace lawyers and whether prospective students should reconsider law school because of AI. He also answers a listener’s question about submitting transcripts from every college attended and offers broader advice about choosing a career based on the work you want to do rather than prestige or distant predictions. Finally, Ben reviews a law school personal statement and explains why applicants should focus on proving that they deserve admission rather than repeatedly explaining why they want to become lawyers. He identifies weak openings, unnecessary descriptions of feelings, AI-sounding phrases, passive storytelling, and the excessive length that makes many personal statements less persuasive. Learn more about LSAT preparation and law school admissions at https://heyfuturelawyer.com. Have a question or personal statement for the podcast? Email podcast@heyfuturelawyer.com.

  2. Jun 9

    Skipping the LSAT for a UK Law School? Don't. (Ep. 64)

    The LSAT isn't complicated — most people just don't want to do the one thing that works. In this episode, Ben Parker breaks down why the LSAT is fundamentally a reading test, one skill a mile deep, and why low scores are almost always self-inflicted rather than the fault of an "unfair" or "subjective" exam. He opens with a mailbag question from a Canadian listener weighing UK law schools to skip the LSAT entirely. Short version: it signals you were too lazy or unable to cut it, and it follows you when you try to get hired back home. From there, Ben digs into LSAT score inflation — why roughly 1 in 8 applicants now scores 170+, and how the top 31 schools could theoretically fill their entire 1L classes with 170-scorers alone. He covers the real drivers: better prep, out-of-control testing accommodations, unlimited retakes, and the removal of Logic Games (not the overhyped China cheating rings). The core lesson: the LSAT rewards slow, precise reading and daily reps, not highlighters, flashcards, or video lessons on "false dichotomy flaws." Passive prep feels safe because it avoids failure — but it's the failure on real questions that actually makes you better. Ben then tears into predatory law school pricing using real numbers from New England School of Law (ranked 168th, 1.53% big-law placement, 22% unemployment), Fordham at sticker, and Suffolk Law. The takeaway: no school is predatory in a vacuum — the price relative to the outcome is what wrecks people financially. He closes with two timely admissions updates: the LSAT moving back in person with a new registration-queue system (register early to claim the best seats), and why no, the LSAT is not getting harder or changing — that's just what underprepared test-takers tell themselves. If you're serious about breaking into the 160s and 170s, this is the no-fluff, reading-first approach that's helped thousands do exactly that. 🎯 Start free: heyfuturelawyer.com/free-class 🌐 Everything else: heyfuturelawyer.com

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About

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 support@heyfuturelawyer.com Access our full LSAT prep platform as well as our free course at HeyFutureLawyer.

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