Media Law Post #2

Ryan Smith

  1. What did you learn about the Supreme Court that you didn't already know?

    At the very beginning of the article, it states that the Supreme Court was going to meet for the first time on February 1st, 1790, but they had to delay it to the next day because of scheduling conflicts. While not a very important detail compared to the rest being discussed, this blurb at the very beginning added a slight comedic hook to encourage me to read the rest and may have done so for others as well.

  2. What is the most important take-away point about the Supreme Court?

    While it's something that I've already known for a long time, I think the most important take-away when learning about the Supreme Court is that it's an incredible risky move to make by going there. You want to take your case to smaller courts first to get the outcome you need and only only go to the supreme court as an absolute last resort. If you fail at the Supreme Court, then there's nothing else you can do and you've wasted your chance with your case.

  3. What was the most surprising thing you learned?

    Something that I completely didn't, but in hindsight maybe should've seen coming was that there were only 6 Supreme Court justices at the very beginning of the Supreme Court compared to now. I did some research and found out that the amount of justices fluctuates every once in a while whereas there are always only 100 senators. I thought that the number of justices was a static number just like I knew the amount of senators was static, but it was even more surprising to me to find out that there were only 6 at the beginning since that's only a fraction of what we've had recently.

  4. How did the video change the way you thought of the Supreme Court?

    Since I chose the second option
    "Read this overview about the Supreme Court created by the History Channel", I didn't watch Part 1 and 2 of the video and can't answer this question properly.

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