• Most Lawyers Fake Success and Clients Know It
    Apr 22 2026

    Many lawyers try to project success. Fewer actually build it.

    In this episode, Michael Liner discusses the gap between how lawyers present themselves and how real legal value is created. From luxury marketing to surface-level branding, he explains why many approaches fail to build trust or attract the right clients.

    The conversation explores what clients actually care about, how authenticity influences decision-making, and why systems and service matter more than image.

    If you are building a practice and questioning what really drives growth, this episode offers a clear perspective.

    Follow and subscribe for more conversations on how lawyers build practices that work in the real world.

    Michael Liner - Liner Legal Youtube

    Neal Goldstein - Watch The Episode and Subscribe!

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    45 mins
  • He Left Defense Law After This Case Changed Everything
    Apr 15 2026

    Scott Peterson spent seven years on the defense side before making a decision that changed his career.

    It was not driven by money or opportunity. It came from a moment where the work no longer aligned with who he wanted to be.

    In this episode, Scott explains what pushed him to leave and what it actually takes to build a plaintiff-side practice. He talks about the risk most lawyers underestimate, the emotional weight of the cases, and the discipline required to choose the right work.

    There is also a clear look at why many lawyers struggle when they go out on their own, especially when they bring a defense mindset into a contingency-based practice.

    This is a grounded conversation about risk tolerance, case selection, and building a practice that reflects how you want to live and work.

    Follow and subscribe for more episodes focused on how lawyers actually build sustainable careers.

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    41 mins
  • Lawyers Are Trained to Think - Not to Build a Practice
    Apr 8 2026

    Most lawyers follow the same path and still end up feeling like something is missing.

    In this episode, Neal sits down with Alycia Kinchloe to talk about what law school doesn't teach and why that gap creates problems later in your career.

    Alycia shares how stepping into leadership early exposed a lack of training in managing people, running systems, and building a business. That experience led her to pursue an MBA and rethink how she approached her practice.

    They discuss the role of emotional intelligence in client work, especially in family law, and why being heard often matters more than legal outcomes. The conversation also explores how relationships drive long-term growth, why most referrals come from trust, and how community involvement plays a role in building a sustainable practice.

    Alycia also breaks down how she structures her life to reduce burnout, including sleep discipline, physical activity, and setting personal guardrails that keep her aligned.

    This is a practical conversation about building a legal career that actually works for you.

    Follow the show for more conversations like this. Watch That One Lawyer Podcast

    Alycia Kinchloe Contact

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    39 mins
  • The Real Reason Lawyers Are Miserable and Don't Know It
    Apr 1 2026

    A lot of lawyers look successful on paper. That does not mean they are happy.

    In this episode, Neal sits down with Jordan Ostroff to talk about what is really going on behind the scenes for many attorneys. Burnout, pressure, and chasing the wrong definition of success are more common than most people admit.

    Jordan breaks down why so many lawyers are stuck playing someone else's game and what happens when you finally question it. The conversation covers billing models, delegation, firm structure, and how to build something that supports your life instead of consuming it.

    They also get into the mental health side of the profession and why the adversarial nature of law creates unique challenges that many lawyers never address.

    This is a direct and honest conversation about what needs to change if you want a career that actually feels worth it.

    Follow and subscribe for more episodes focused on helping lawyers build practices and lives they actually want.

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    33 mins
  • Criminal Defense Lawyer Explains Why Most Cases Take 8 Months and Still End in a Deal
    Mar 25 2026

    Most people think criminal cases move quickly.

    They don't.

    In this episode, Michael Kotek explains what really happens after an arrest and why most cases take six to eight months before they reach any kind of resolution. From pretrial conferences to discovery and delays, the process is slower and more complex than clients expect.

    That gap between expectation and reality is where many lawyers lose control of the client relationship.

    Michael shares how to manage that tension, why trust matters more than tactics, and how real outcomes are often negotiated rather than won in dramatic fashion. He also talks about the human side of criminal defense, and why caring about your client is what separates a good lawyer from a great one.

    If you're a lawyer trying to build a practice or handle cases more effectively, this episode gives you a clear look at how the system actually works.

    Follow the show for more conversations with lawyers who are doing the work at a high level.

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    36 mins
  • What No One Teaches About Law
    Mar 18 2026
    This is a conversation about the part of practicing law that no one really prepares you for. Not the cases. Not the textbooks. The reality. The pressure, the expectations, and the moments that stay with you longer than they should. We talk honestly about what it feels like to be in it — and why so many lawyers struggle with things that aren't talked about nearly enough. If you're a lawyer, thinking about becoming one, or just curious about the profession, this is a conversation worth hearing.
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    14 mins
  • The Real Cost of Skipping the Work in Your Legal Career
    25 mins
  • Why So Many Lawyers Struggle With Depression, Alcohol, and Burnout
    Mar 4 2026

    The legal profession demands excellence. But what is the hidden cost of that demand?

    In this episode, Neal sits down with Patrick Krill, lawyer and board certified addiction counselor, to explore burnout, perfectionism, alcohol culture, and mental health in law.

    Patrick co authored the landmark 2016 national study of 13,000 lawyers that revealed elevated rates of depression, anxiety, and problem drinking. They discuss what the data showed, why so many lawyers ignore early warning signs, and how fear driven perfectionism quietly erodes both performance and well being.

    They also talk about law school pressure, comparison culture, loneliness in the profession, work family conflict, and what law firm leadership can do to create meaningful cultural change.

    If you are a lawyer who has ever felt exhausted, isolated, or unsure how to sustain this career long term, this conversation is for you.

    Follow and subscribe to That One Lawyer Podcast for more conversations that challenge the profession and help lawyers build healthier careers.

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    46 mins