In this episode, Ben Parker dives into the latest LSAC applicant data showing a massive 32.9% year-over-year increase in law school applications—making the 2026 admissions cycle the most competitive in history. He explains why more applicants and stagnant class sizes mean that even strong candidates will find it harder to secure spots and scholarships. Ben also breaks down LSAT score distribution trends, revealing that while top scores are slightly up in raw numbers, the overall percentile landscape is tightening.
Ben then turns his attention to the misinformation epidemic on Reddit, dissecting a post that claimed to offer “tips” for earning a T25 full scholarship. He explains why much of the advice circulating online is dangerously misleading, emphasizing that law school admissions remain overwhelmingly numbers-driven, with LSAT and GPA medians determining nearly everything. Through a humorous yet blunt critique, he reminds listeners that “exceptions don’t disprove rules” and urges applicants to prioritize real prep over Reddit myths.
The episode also features a live personal statement “shred”, where Ben reviews a listener’s essay in real time—critiquing structure, tone, and strategy. He advises applicants to focus on demonstrating competence, maturity, and initiative, rather than trauma-dumping or rehashing undergrad experiences. The segment highlights how to transform an average essay into one that communicates strength, purpose, and readiness for law school.
Ben closes by reaffirming his belief that most applicants don’t take the LSAT seriously enough—and that disciplined study, not short timelines or magical thinking, separates high scorers from the rest. As always, he keeps it brutally honest, mixing humor, data, and tough love to help future law students cut through the noise and make smarter admissions decisions.
All my LSAT resources, classes, and free guides: linktr.ee/heyfuturelawyer
Published on 4 weeks ago
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