Archive for the ‘Marilyn Milian’ Category

Forum Guest: Judge Marilyn Milian

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

Judge Marilyn Milian, the first Latina Judge to host a nationally syndicated television court show, presides over the courtroom that launched the entire court show genre. Milian brings to the bench extensive experience including ten years as a prosecutor, under former Attorney General Janet Reno, and seven years as a judge presiding over everything from small claims cases to death penalty litigation.

 

People’s Court is a one-hour nationally syndicated reality based court show featuring real litigants, real cases and real justice. People’s Court draws on ordinary people who have filed grievances in civil court and have opted to have their cases heard and mediated by Judge Milian.

Save The Date! April 25th Forum Event With Judge Marilyn Milian and Judge Alex Ferrer!

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

The Forum on Law, Culture, and Society is excited to announce our next Forum Event. Seating for this event is limited, please use this link to register!
Courtrooms as TV Entertainment: A Conversation with Judge Marilyn Milian from “The People’s Court,” and Judge Alex Ferrer of “Judge Alex.”
Date(s): 04.25.07 Wed
Time: 8:00 p.m.
Location: One Time Warner Center
Sponsor: Forum on Law, Culture, & Society. With support from Time Warner and Entwistle & Cappucci LLP.

Program Description:
Judge Marilyn Milian of “The People’s Court” and Judge Alex Ferrer of “Judge Alex” headline the Fordham Law School Forum on Law, Culture & Society’s April 25 program, Courtrooms as TV Entertainment.

The conversation will tune in to the phenomenon of daytime TV courtrooms: how they affect our culture and what they say about those judged- and those transfixed- by TV judgments.

In conversation with Thane Rosenbaum, the Forum’s Director, and in viewing some clips from their shows, the judges will weigh in on why daytime TV courtrooms reflect the public’s fascination with the legal system. Why do viewing audiences revel in the lives of ordinary people fighting over ordinary things? Is it that we seek the daily moral lesson, immediacy, and finality that comes from watching a court case resolve itself before the next commercial break? Are participants seeking their 15 minutes of fame, or are they perhaps longing for their private misdeeds and pain to be aired, and cleansed, by the American public?

Fordham Law School’s Forum on Law, Culture, & Society is made possible through the generous support of Time Warner and Entwistle & Cappucci LLP.

After each Forum, the conversation continues in cyberspace via pod-casting and an interactive blog at: fordhamlawandculture.blogspot.com, also accessible via www.fordhamlawandculture.org.