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Kim Kardashian Bar Exam & Psychic Fraud Story

They Lied to Me’: Kim Kardashian Breaks Down After Bar Exam Fail — Slams Psychics and Vows to Become a Lawyer on Her Own Terms

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Posted: 12th November 2025
George Daniel
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They Lied to Me’: Kim Kardashian Breaks Down After Bar Exam Fail — Slams Psychics and Vows to Become a Lawyer on Her Own Terms

LOS ANGELES — Nov. 11, 2025 — Kim Kardashian has sworn off psychics after failing her latest California bar exam, accusing self-proclaimed clairvoyants of giving her false hope and promising she would pass.

The 45-year-old billionaire entrepreneur and Kardashians star vented on TikTok, calling the psychics she met “pathological liars.”

“All the f*ing psychics we’ve met are full of st,” Kardashian said, surrounded by her family. “Every one of them told me I’d pass the bar. Don’t believe anything they say.”

Her clip sparked a viral debate over faith versus accountability, with many fans applauding her honesty while others questioned why celebrity culture keeps turning to psychics for validation.

Kim Kardashian studying for the bar exam in a bikini.

Kim Kardashian studying for the bar exam in a bikini.


Bikini, Books & Bar Prep

Just hours after the rant, Kardashian shared a photo of herself studying in a tiny bikini, a thick law textbook open across her lap. The caption read: “Back at it.”

Her followers praised her determination, noting that she has spent nearly six years chasing a legal career inspired by her late father, attorney Robert Kardashian Sr. She passed the “baby bar” on her fourth try in 2021 but has yet to conquer the full California exam — widely considered the toughest in the United States.


From Psychic Promises to Legal Reality

Kardashian’s frustration has reignited public discussion about psychic accountability and what the law actually says about clairvoyant claims.

In the U.S., most psychic readings are legally classified as entertainment, but making promises tied to money, health, or legal results can breach consumer-fraud statutes.

“Guaranteeing success in exchange for payment is a deceptive business practice,” said a Los Angeles consumer-protection lawyer.

The best-known example remains Miss Cleo, the 1990s TV psychic whose hotline collapsed after the Federal Trade Commission accused operators of misleading customers; more than $500 million in debt was later forgiven.

Today, many states require clear disclaimers that psychic services are “for entertainment purposes only.” Californians who feel defrauded can file complaints with the FTC or local prosecutors — though few do, fearing ridicule.


How to Earn a Law Degree from Home — Like Kim Kardashian

Instead of enrolling at a traditional university, Kardashian studies through California’s Law Office Study Program (LOSP) — a little-known path that lets students train under a licensed attorney or judge while studying remotely.

Participants must complete four years of supervised work, pass the First-Year Law Students’ Exam (“baby bar”), and then the California Bar Exam itself.

Only a handful of states — California, Virginia, Vermont, and Washington — allow this apprenticeship model, sometimes called “reading the law.” Students record hours, submit reports, and meet curriculum standards identical to in-person law schools.

For those outside these states, ABA-approved online law schools such as Purdue Global, Concord Law School, and St. Francis School of Law offer accredited distance programs that culminate in the same licensing exam.

Legal educators warn, however, that flexibility doesn’t mean ease. “There are no shortcuts,” said one professor. “Whether you’re studying from home or at Harvard, you have to master the same law.”

Kardashian’s determination has already spiked searches for “how to get a law degree from home” and “California law apprenticeship program.”


Hollywood Backlash Over All’s Fair

Kardashian’s outburst arrived as her Disney+ legal drama All’s Fair faced brutal reviews, debuting with just 4 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.

Industry insiders told Entertainment Newswire that the criticism may have ironically boosted engagement. “Once the memes hit, episode views doubled overnight,” said one production source.

The series — starring Kardashian as a glamorous divorce attorney — also features Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash, Sarah Paulson, and Glenn Close. Producers describe it as “campy fun,” insisting it was never meant to be taken seriously.


Inside Kim’s Legal Mission

Beyond TV cameras, Kardashian’s studies connect directly to her ongoing justice-reform work. She has helped secure clemency for several non-violent offenders through partnerships with attorneys and advocacy groups like #Cut50.
By combining her celebrity platform with legal training, she hopes to influence policy around sentencing and prison reform — the same motivation that first drew her to law in 2019.
Search interest for “Kim Kardashian prison reform cases” has spiked alongside her renewed bar-exam focus, reflecting how closely fans now link her fame with social impact.


Kim’s Next Move

Despite disappointment, Kardashian plans to retake the bar in 2026. Passing would allow her to represent clients in California and expand her criminal-justice reform work helping prisoners earn early release.

“Hard work is the only thing that counts,” she posted later. “Not magic. Not predictions. Just effort.”


🧑‍⚖️ Frequently Asked Questions About Earning a Law Degree

1. Can you really become a lawyer without going to law school?
Yes — in some U.S. states like California, Virginia, Vermont, and Washington, aspiring lawyers can take the Law Office Study or Reading the Law route. This means you train under a practicing attorney or judge instead of attending traditional law school. Kim Kardashian is following this path in California.


2. How long does it take to earn a law degree from home?
Most law apprenticeships take about four years of supervised study before you can sit for the state bar exam. Online or hybrid law schools, meanwhile, typically require three years for full-time students or four to five years part-time.


3. Is an online law degree recognized for the bar exam?
It depends on where you live. California is currently the only state that allows graduates of fully online law schools to sit for the bar. Other states may require attendance at an ABA-accredited institution or in-person coursework. Always check your state bar’s rules before enrolling.


4. How much does it cost to get a law degree from home?
Costs vary widely. A traditional U.S. law degree can exceed $150,000, while apprenticeship or online programs may cost between $15,000 and $50,000 total. Apprenticeships can be far cheaper but demand strict time commitments and self-discipline.

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About the Author

George Daniel
George Daniel has been a contributing legal writer for Lawyer Monthly since 2015, specializing in consumer law, family law, labor and employment, personal injury, criminal defense, class actions and immigration. With a background in legal journalism and policy analysis, Richard’s reporting focuses on how the law shapes everyday life — from workplace disputes and domestic cases to access-to-justice reforms. He is known for translating complex legal matters into clear, relatable language that helps readers understand their rights and responsibilities. Over the past decade, he has covered hundreds of legal developments, offering insight into court decisions, evolving legislation, and emerging social issues across the U.S. legal system.
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