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What Does Harvard Think of Legally Blonde

Can a sister queen from Southern California survive the rigors of Harvard Law School, overcome virulent anti-blondism, triumph in the classroom and in the courtroom, and end up getting the cute, sensitive, smart guy? In Legally Blonde, she not only scores 173 on her LSAT – she gets a 179 – a near-perfect score. In addition, the film shows that she has a 4.0 grade point average, is involved in philanthropy, and has leadership experience as president of her sisterhood. All of these things would probably be very attractive to Harvard Law School, and it would have more than one chance to fight. “It shatters the narrative that Asian identity is a unique experience,” Cowperthwaite said. “I think it`s something that mainstream art struggles with in terms of representation, reducing Asian identity to a trope or an identity. When you have a musical where every character is played by someone Asian, you suddenly have this wide variety of how Asian identity can exist in this unique Harvard environment. Elle`s other romantic relationship is with Emmett (Luke Wilson), who exists to give Elle the impulse to take herself seriously. He`s a nice addition and a good foil for Elle`s wealth (though this subplot really leads nowhere), but most of their romantic relationship takes place off-screen. That would be strange for a romantic comedy, but again: “Legal Blonde” is not a romance.

Elle Woods, the main character in Legally Blonde, a comedy about a fashion student at USC who becomes an unlikely star student at Harvard Law School, could answer the question. But like many HLS students, she faces formidable obstacles in her ascent (in pink Prada shoes) to the top: students who think she`s stupid, a professor who thinks she`s sexy, and an ambitious friend who thinks she`s not a political material for a wife. She even has to overcome the objections of her father, who says, “Honey, you don`t need a law degree. Law school is for people who are boring, ugly, and serious. And you, Button, are none of those things. Of course, the court scene is completely unrealistic and I was sad to learn that the film was shot in California. But that doesn`t take away from my admiration for the old Bend `n Snap or fashion major that inspired so many young women to study law. Xoxo her. We will always love you and your hair care knowledge.

“I think the film did a good job of capturing how bad and stupid you can feel when you start law school,” Fuller said. For Alissa Vradenburg `96, the film actually brings back memories of her time at school. As a talent manager representing actors for industry entertainment in Los Angeles, Vradenburg read the script and acknowledged the difficulties she faces in the film. But what about “Legally Blonde” who still holds when it comes to her career and professional messages? When I first saw the film as a child, I remember being dazzled by Elle`s glittering pink outfits and applauding her triumph in the courtroom as she used her knowledge of the constant interview to win a murder case. The 2001 film “Legally Blonde” starred Reese Witherspoon as Elle Woods, a woman who initially applied to Harvard Law School to win back her friend from Warner University, who broke up with her because he wasn`t serious enough. When she realizes that Warner will never think she`s good enough, she decides to become a lawyer herself and prove her enemies wrong. Legal Blonde tells the story of a student named Elle Woods, played by Reese Witherspoon. At first, she is a sister who studies fashion merchandising, but when her Harvard-affiliated boyfriend breaks up with her because she doesn`t fit the image he wants, she decides to show him that she is serious. She focused all her energy on her studies in order to accompany him to Harvard and to go to the renowned school.

Are you being asked to leave the classroom because you are not reading? NOT REAL. I don`t think I`ve ever heard of it. You`d probably be a little reprimanded and called back the next day. “The story of Elle going to Harvard is a story of white privilege,” Karina Cowperthwaite, a Harvard junior and director of the series, told NBC Asian America. “She`s blonde, beautiful, rich and white. Admissions officers look at that identity and say, “Yes, it is in it.” “I think she still doesn`t take herself too seriously, but she knows she can accomplish things she could never have done herself,” Vradenburg said.