• The ChatGPT Privacy Trap Lawyers Aren't Talking About | Miami Litigation Explained (Ep 12)
    Apr 24 2026
    Are your ChatGPT conversations discoverable in court? What happens when a judge shows sympathy and opposing counsel tries to disqualify her for it? Is NOT using AI about to become legal malpractice?

    Miami trial lawyers break it all down in this episode of Courtside. ⚖️ Topics covered: → Why local counsel matters more than you think → The aggressive culture of South Florida litigation → AI in the courtroom — certification requirements & hallucinated cases → ChatGPT privacy: work product or third-party disclosure? → The humanity of judges & why that matters → How winning cases get lost (bad facts, hiding the ball) 🎙️ Courtside is a legal podcast hosted by Miami trial lawyers giving you an inside look at litigation, culture, and the future of law. 🔔 Subscribe for new episodes every week.

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    45 mins
  • Trial by History — AI, Juries, and Justice in Miami's Most Famous Courtroom | Courtside (Ep.11)
    Apr 10 2026
    What do Al Capone, a would-be presidential assassin, and artificial intelligence have in common? They all found their way into one courtroom.

    In this episode of Courtside, Etan sits down with the Honorable Scott Silverman — former circuit court judge, current arbitrator and mediator with JAMS, and Chief Historian of the 11th Judicial Circuit — inside the very courtroom where history was made.

    They explore the fascinating history of the Miami-Dade courthouse, from Al Capone's perjury trial to the assassination attempt on FDR. Then the conversation pivots to the future: can AI ever replace human judgment in a courtroom? And what are we losing as the legal profession moves further from human connection? From courtroom history to the question of humanity in an AI-driven world, this episode is unlike any other. Disclaimer: Courtside episodes are for general information only and are not legal advice.
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    36 mins
  • Trial vs. Appeal — The Decisions Behind the Decisions | Courtside (Ep. 10)
    Mar 20 2026

    What do trial lawyers miss in the heat of the moment—and why can those decisions determine what happens on appeal?

    In this episode of Courtside, Etan and Jose sit down with appellate attorney Deija Lifshitz to explore the differences between government and private practice, how appellate thinking shapes litigation strategy, and why preserving issues for appeal can make or break a case.

    They discuss jury perception, the hidden role of appellate counsel during trial, malpractice pressure, and the often-overlooked importance of jury instructions. The conversation also touches on where the profession may be heading, including the early role of AI in shaping how cases are analyzed and decided.

    From courtroom tactics to the structure of legal decision-making, this episode examines how cases are actually won—and how lawyers think beyond the moment.

    Disclaimer: Courtside episodes are for general information only and are not legal advice.

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    44 mins
  • Mayor Seth Salver on Live Local & Bal Harbour’s Future | Courtside (Ep. 09)
    Feb 27 2026

    What happens when a state housing law overrides local control — and a small coastal community faces the prospect of millions of additional square feet of development?

    In this episode of Courtside, Etan and Jose sit down with Bal Harbour Mayor Seth E. Salver to unpack Florida’s Live Local Act, the Bal Harbour Shops dispute, and what’s at stake for residents. They discuss how Live Local reshapes zoning and approvals, the real incentives behind “affordable housing” proposals, infrastructure strain, and the tension between Tallahassee’s legislative authority and municipal governance.

    From transparency and public service to density, FAR transfers, and the long-term character of one of South Florida’s most unique communities, this conversation explores how housing policy plays out on the ground — and why Bal Harbour is pushing back.

    Disclaimer: Courtside episodes are for general information only and are not legal advice.

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    41 mins
  • Diss Tracks, Defamation & Presidential Power | Courtside (Ep. 08)
    Feb 13 2026

    What happens when rap rivalries collide with defamation law—and when presidential tariffs collide with the Constitution?

    In Episode 8 of Courtside, Etan and Jose break down the Drake v. UMG dispute over Kendrick Lamar’s diss track “Not Like Us,” exploring whether calling someone a “pedophile” in a song can ever qualify as defamation per se—or whether context and artistic expression protect even the sharpest lyrical attacks. They compare the case to Elon Musk’s “pedo guy” litigation and examine how courts decide what a reasonable listener would believe.

    Then the conversation pivots to presidential tariffs and constitutional authority. Are tariffs taxes? Can the executive branch impose sweeping trade measures under emergency powers? And how does statutory interpretation shape the boundaries between Congress and the President?

    From diss tracks to trade wars, this episode explores how context, language, and power define liability.

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    18 mins
  • Law Firm Culture, Team Dynamics, and Client Results | Courtside (Ep. 07)
    Jan 30 2026

    Does law firm culture actually matter — or is it just marketing fluff?

    In this episode, we dig into one of the most uncomfortable questions in the legal profession: are the firms that reward aggression, intimidation, and “bulldog” behavior actually delivering better results for clients?

    Drawing on real law-firm experiences, team-sport analogies, and high-stakes examples from outside the legal world — including Boeing, Tylenol, and Zappos — the conversation explores how culture is really formed, what behaviors firms reward (and punish), and whether strong culture improves performance rather than softens it.

    This isn’t about being “nice” it’s about accountability, intensity, teamwork — and why law is a team sport, even when clients think they’re hiring a lone gladiator.

    Conversation with MF&H partners, Etan Mark and José Ferrer.

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    12 mins
  • Self-Driving Cars, Robotaxis, and the Next Wave of Lawsuits | Courtside (Ep. 06)
    Jan 18 2026

    What happens legally when a self-driving car causes harm—and no human was driving?

    In this episode of Courtside, we dig into AI liability through a series of real-world scenarios and uncomfortable hypotheticals: a Waymo ride with no driver, passengers with no real ability to intervene, what “emergency response” looks like when there’s no human to call 911, and why the terms you clicked through may matter more than you think.

    We also look ahead: Tesla robotaxi-style fleets, self-driving semis, and why the future of these cases may come down to data trails and “black box” forensics—changing how lawyers investigate, prove fault, and value cases.

    Guest: Ashley Robinson

    Key topics

    • Waymo liability: pedestrians, property, and passenger injuries • Waivers, assumption of risk, and arbitration clauses • “Kill switch” / what passengers can do when things go wrong • Why the next era of litigation is data + forensic tracing

    Disclaimer: Courtside episodes are for general information only and are not legal advice.

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    26 mins
  • Parking “Gotcha” Fees: Exploitation, Privacy & Class Actions with Charlie Garabedian | Courtside (Ep. 05)
    Jan 2 2026

    You pay for parking in good faith — estimate your time, use the app, go about your day. Then, days later, a letter arrives in the mail with a photo of your car and an “invoice” for $90–$115 because you overstayed by a minute or two.

    Is that legal? How are private parking operators getting drivers’ home addresses? And what happens when hidden arbitration clauses and data access collide with federal privacy law?

    In this episode, we sit down with MF&H litigator Charlie Garabedian, who is leading putative class actions against private parking operators that use license-plate cameras, mass-mail penalty invoices, and allegedly access DMV records in ways that may violate the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act (DPPA).

    We dig into: — How these systems track entry/exit times and auto-generate “gotcha” fees — The difference between a lawful ticket and a private invoice — Why arbitration clauses on tiny parking-lot signs may be unenforceable — The consumer privacy implications of pulling DMV data — Why these cases resonate so strongly with the public

    As Charlie explains, these aren’t minor annoyances — for many people, a $115 charge means choosing between paying a notice and paying for groceries. And under the DPPA, improper access to protected driver information can trigger minimum statutory damages of $2,500 per violation.

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    28 mins