Every suits episode ever: 1) Client gets in a problem that lawyers should have prevented in the first place 2) Lawyers do some illegal extortion and act like that's doing law 3) Enemy backs down instead of suing them, calling the cops, and reporting them to the bar
*If this scene would've happend in real life.* (Telephones) Reception: "Tony Giannopoulos office, this is Christina. How can I help you?" Louis: "Afternoon, I'm looking for mister Giannopoulos is he available?" Reception: "I'm afraid he's out of town." Louis: "Alright, I'll call back later." (hangs up)
This is so true. Lawyers are functionaries and they do as they are told by bankers and buy side pros. I’ve been doing it for 28 years. The best lawyers are the ones who understand what you are trying to accomplish then find a way to make it work within the legal structure.
I practiced for 23 years. When our business guys want to purchase a company, business unit, or assets, they come to us to get the deal done. We get the paper work together, do our due diligence (and others do theirs), and we make it happen. So, you are on point about that. On the other hand, when litigating a case, they come to us to handle it. We advise on best courses of action and let them know what we propose, what we can do, and the risks. Then we do what our clients want (within the bounds of propriety and the law - none of this Suits blackmail shit).
“We didn’t go to Harvard. We went to Wharton. Reality: they all went to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry subsidiaries named Harvard and Wharton where they learned how to read files without opening them.
I was thinking about this... he didn't really read the file merely knew what the file was; a balance sheet from one of their subsidiaries. Balance sheets have the word "Balance Sheet" at the top of page very clearly written and the name of the corp. typically beside or above. It actually makes sense he could know that from a very quick glance... it's like seeing an essay you wrote, if you quickly glance at the title you know full well what it is, for which class, and can likely summarize your thesis and key points... idk why i'm caught up on this...
My man took one half a second look at the file and knows that the document is a balance sheet from one of their subsidiaries...I've looked at credit card statements for longer and couldn't see how much money I owe
corporate business works like this: morning meeting meeting to discuss the last meeting another meeting summarizing a note of the meeting lunch repeat the above go home
I'm a student of finance, pursuing my MBA in finance and CFA too. From what I've studied, making valuation models drain my life force. Glad to see I'm not alone😂
@@andydrums4333 do you mind me asking..how old are you and what university are you studying in? Asking coz I am investment banking aspirant want to pursue MBA after completing my graduation
@@john-zf1yb No, that's just the enterprise value. Valuation models are used for many things. Student's in finance will probably be aware of valuation models that wants to forecast cash flow from a firm's project. To see if it creates value to the firm.
Every episode is the exact same. They think they will win, start to lose and sweat a little...Someone says something that helps Harvey or mike word associate there way to a solution for every big problem.
Exactly the reason i got bored of the series and stopped watching it midway. These clips are better though.. You get to see all the good parts rather than dragged scenes..
I enjoyed the repetitive nature of it! It became like a drug for me; Situation unfolds, everyone sweats, then feels good again when there's a solution. It worked especially well because the stakes were raised ever so slightly as it went along
Classic! I remember first seeing this when I was at university and I was so excited for my first internship in IB. So many years have past and I've now moved on to a different career after several years in IB.
@@anthonymalouf9545 1. that's trading 2. for at least 4 decades people have been saying Algorithms will replace traders. They haven't. Seems like they will not do so anytime soon
@@uscbro69 Obviously, it’s not. However, for business finance, Wharton is a superior institution. Just like Yale is slightly superior than Harvard with regards to Law but Harvard is the apex of all higher learning education. The thing about this scene that really sticks to me is the entire show they present Harvard as all or nothing. Like if you went to Columbia, Stanford, Princeton, or MIT then your not an elite student which is completely false. So when this character mentioned Wharton in that manner it, it finally gave credence to other elite Schools not named Harvard. As if you’d be perceived as a dumbass for attending John Hopkins University lol.
@@JimmyDahdoul right…he didn’t say Harvard business though, which was odd. And hes talking to a lawyer, who wouldn’t have likely gone to business school anyway. Just an odd quote all around, but I field your point.
@@uscbro69 No, he says in that scene: “We’re not lawyers. We’re investment Bankers. We send you all the paperwork.” In other words we understand corporate structures and business better than attorneys. That’s why he said we went to Wharton. …Business & Finance > Law
@@JimmyDahdoul ? You’re arguing past my point. He said we went to Wharton, not Harvard. He didn’t specify Harvard business, or Harvard law, or Harvard undergrad. And if he was talking about law, it’s weird to boast across professions. Harvard law vs Wharton business is apples to oranges
*Lawyer guy:* "Well... then it's a good thing I replaced that commissioner with my own commissioner of the FTC." *Suit guy:* "Ah, but I anticipated that. So I made plans move the dinner to another date causing your replacement to miss that dinner." *Lawyer guy:* "Oh yea? Well I had intercourse with your wife!" *Suit guy:* "Oh but I knew you would do that... so I paid a drag queen to pretend to be my wife." *Lawyer guy:* 0_0
Noel Simon Only some banks because they’re vital to the economy if they go bankrupt it would ruin the country. It’s obvious banks are going to be big because money makes the world go around and they control the flow along with the government...
@@blader3 bankers is such a vague term. MDs and partners at big banks make lots of money. The few execs have some power. A lot of bank execs in the past went into government after retiring from the bank to help shape policy that would in turn help the banks they came from. But most analysts and bankers especially at the IBD level are nobodies and the majority will get an MBA at some point and switch into some other industry. Takes a lot of sacrifice to stick with finance to the level where you're a "powerful banker"
This scene was so good I thought Suits was about Investment Bankers, which is why I started watching it. Next thing I know I watch the entire series learning it’s about Law
Rick Hoffman, the actor who plays the big guy, also played had a few seconds of screentime as an egotistic New York business man in _The Day After Tomorrow,_ and even though he wasn’t even credited for that role, he played it so memorably.
actually most of them did see it coming miles away they just didn't care because riding a bubble is very tempting. As long as bankers could make fat fees selling dogshit, they didn't care. After all, surviving a crash is easy when you've already made enough to retire (and everything gets cheaper so it's a win-win).
Not even close. Investment Bankers were the reason the crash happened and yet they were the only ones who lined their pockets while everyone else suffered. They made money before and after the crash and to add insult to injury, rather than getting charged by the government for causing the amount of damages they did, they got bailed out. The very first thing the top banker's did with the bailout was give themselves a big fat bonus.
We are already in the big crash, Inflation is a catastrophe. This CPI report is a colossal failure. To bring the housing market to a halt, the FED will have to pull all the stops. The unfortunate issue is that other markets are being decimated. If you want to stay green, you have to rely on a lot of diversification. Currently up 14% and being careful. Still a better deal than leaving it in a savings or checking account yielding 0-1 percent interest.
I completely understand the impact of choler's wisdom on personal finance-it's transformative. While I've found success in investing, especially with the guidance of my advisor, Jenny Pamogas Canaya, I still appreciate the solid foundation choler provides. His principles align with the core values of financial discipline. It's inspiring to see how various approaches, like choler's and strategic investment planning with Jenny's expertise, can complement each other.
It’s funny because this has nothing to do with what investment bankers actually do. From what I can tell, these guys are more likely a private equity firm. But “investment bankers” sounds catchier
@@Arhtass absolutely but they wouldn't be demanding meetings with the CEOs or anything. The lawyers are not involved in the runnings of the bank itself. The bank would stop using the firm if a lawyer behaved in this way.
this clip got me to watch the entire series, honestly thought the investment banker guy was the main character and litt was some cop or something lol would be dope to see a series based on them tho
Originally suits was supposed to be about bankers, but when they were developing the show during the economic crash they changed it as they thought bankers wouldn’t be very popular on American tv, you can tell by the way their shown to be so flashy and larger than life season 4 etc
Wharton's first year curriculum: How to read a file in under one second and look like a badass while reading it Second year: Punchlines to humiliate lawyers and other common earthlings
I mean he prolly read the title of the file that's why he said "Balance Sheet" cause IB guys are already aware of the Balance sheets they work on. Maybe. Never went to Wharton but yes they teach the same thing in the second year of other B-schools as well.
I think people misinterpret what the investment banker meant. Louis is a lawyer who specializes in Finance. They both attended prestigious graduate schools, albeit with different focuses. Wharton is arguably the best business school, so as it relates to dealing with financials, the IB would be the sole expert. Just what the scene shows. "You think you're the first lawyer to try and outsmart us.....we call you for the paperwork". Love Suits!
Trust me when I say this, Harvard is 100% always considered to be in it's own league when it comes to an MBA. Everyone knows Wharton, but everyone actually at these elite schools know you're splitting hairs between Stanford, Wharton, Columbia, etc. but at the end of the day everyone knows Harvard is on top.
@@revl6151 I go to Columbia. Google it. HBS is considered the best. It may not mean much in terms of ROI or a difference in what you learn. But we all know HBS is considered the top.
I'm 51 years old with no retirement plan yet,any suggestions on accumulating a million dollar portfolio within 12-18 months? I have currently saved a capital of $100k
In times like this,the best thing any American can do for him or herself is to have another source of income apart from his or her salary,invest wisely people!
I totally agree with you,Forex trading is the most profitable venture I ever invested in,I reached my goal of $500k yearly trade earnings, setting realistic goals is an essential part of trading
But successful people don't become that way over night,what most people see is a glance wealth,a great career,purpose is the result of hard work and hustle over time
@@armstrongbill6805 Starting early is the best way of getting ahead to build wealth,investing remains the priority. Forex trading has plenty of opportunities to earn a decent payout,with the right skills and proper understanding of how the market works
Anyone notice how they keep referring to investment bankers but considering the type of deals and the way they apply themselves and seem to be more buy-side than sell-side, they sound like Private equity firms or corporate raiders....or more so, a conglomerate like Berkshire Hathway
anyone notice how this guy wasn't just staring at excel sheets the whole time trying to correct #REF!? Also notice how this guy seems to be getting more than 5 hours of sleep? Maybe just C-Suite seeing as how his immediate higher up is friends with the FTC Commissioner.
So true. hahah Lawyers like this guy who practice corporate law and regulatory compliance are paper pushers. The 'paper work' jab was spot on. Though interpretation of various industry regulations can get "exciting" sometimes. If it gets to the quasi judicial bodies, even better.
Martin Nietzsche I'll have two number 9's, a number 9 large, a number 6 with extra dip, a number 7, two number 45's, one with cheese, and a large soda.
Tbh suits does NOT show how lawyers actually are, but they were pretty accurate with these bankers. Only with the top level investment bankers, of course. Majority of them just punch numbers into excel sheets.
do people ever talk like this in real life? I mean really? When I was an immature 22 year old, i was impressed by the confidence, but now I'm just disgusted by arrogance.
They love to portray them like Italians in New York back in the 90s who used to speak off the cuff without a filter, even though most of it never made sense but that's the New York way and from experience working in NYC, no one talks like this in offices or upper management, do they get cocky and arrogant? ofc they do but not too this level of bravado and confidence. It's a mix of professionalism and ball breaking but you honestly can't risk offending your clients since they are your money bags.
@@Jameslawz no reason to pin this sort of attitude in Italians this sort of bravado as been present long since. Wasn’t Trump a popular socialite in the 80s? There’s more just like him and even before him
Maybe I’m missing something from this clip and there’s some context behind here but knowing what lawyers and Investment bankers do, I’m confused as to why they are even interacting on this level.
@@rimun5235 because it's a show, not a documentary. If they needed an exoskeleton Arnold Swartzennegger to teleport in, they would do it, to move the plot along.
@@habibbialikafe339 no luis is the best finance lawyer they have. What the banker is saying is they disclosed it personally to the head of the ftc because they know him. So if a charge or accusation is ever brought to him he wont do anything because he approved it after being asked. Basically the fox is guarding the chicken coop.
Oh and there’s an error on the balance sheet you just gave me- line 52 under current liabilities shows an outstanding credit card balance of $57,211.18. It should be $57,212.18. Lol thought I wouldn’t catch that.
The show is basically a summary of a what Lawyers do which is highly exaggerated and sped up. But if Suits literally did what normal lawyers do in each episode, each Season wouldn't even Cover to complete a single case filed in the Courts and who wants to watch people reading stacks of files and then typing, editing them. 1 legal proceeding could take Years! So yes, Suits is basically a lawyers life on a constant FF 10x speed
I always wondered, what is actually in those folders. Do they recycle the papers for different scenarios and scenes? If not, it’s a colossus waste of paper.
Work-Life after graduation
Expectations: Suits
Reality: The Office
That can be a good thing depending on what you're after.
@@ImpactTurns a hole to die in
i could settle for either tbh
@@ax2k254 Well then, may I introduce you to public accounting? It’s a hole to die in with a lower barrier to entry.
You must be dumb as rock to think Suits is anything like anything.
Most unrealistic show there is.
Suits is 90% throwing down files and reading them in 2 seconds 😂
Harvy spectre laughs
And only the first page.
And Harvey telling people off then walking out of the room before they can retort.
@@rockycampbell6027 exactly
Hahahahahahahha
“We are not lawyers, we are investment bankers, we call you for paper work.” The most brutal lines ever to any lawyer!
Except that he said worden, not Wharton. Oof.
m mill no
m mill the pronunciation depends on the accent
@@a5440 he said Wharton only, that's American accent mate!
Next level: we're not investment bankers, we're private equity investors, we call you for the pitch books.
Every suits episode ever:
1) Client gets in a problem that lawyers should have prevented in the first place
2) Lawyers do some illegal extortion and act like that's doing law
3) Enemy backs down instead of suing them, calling the cops, and reporting them to the bar
4) Mike gets paranoia that he'll get caught
@@MK-zf6or lol
@@MK-zf6or 😂😂😂
Or someone will say something in conversation which will give someone else the AHA! moment on a problem they’re stuck on 🤣
Don’t forget the meetings in the toilets or Harvey saying “what the hell did you just say to me?”
This banker should be at his desk aligning logos on slides not this
lmao
this is the funniest comment I ever read , literally had me laughing for 10 minutes
We gotta keep our secrets bro... WTF are you doing..
😂😂😂cannot stop laughing
In tears lol
I like how in suits they always meet at restaurants to have a 30 second convo then leave without ordering
Episode name?
And they read folders full of papers in four seconds 😆
Good ad for Wharton.
@Karl Pilkington Fuck you.
You’ve neutralised it by praising Wharton with an EU flag against the your name
And whole suits is an ad for Harvard
Wharton marketing team at work. Product placements are so 90's
Not going to lie, I googled their Finance programs after this scene
This scene is the moment I realized the show was geared towards non-finance/law people
Hedge fund people calling themselves investment bankers 😂
@@muabyt7333 more like private equity firm
Call you for the paperwork lmao
@@ByzantineCapitalManagement
Why are you calling me law folk? I'm a finance guy lol
@@ByzantineCapitalManagement Im a banking lawyer 🙈🤩
*If this scene would've happend in real life.*
(Telephones)
Reception: "Tony Giannopoulos office, this is Christina. How can I help you?"
Louis: "Afternoon, I'm looking for mister Giannopoulos is he available?"
Reception: "I'm afraid he's out of town."
Louis: "Alright, I'll call back later."
(hangs up)
not if Sidwell expected Loius in the first place or anyone who wants to deal with Giannopoulos while he is abroad. Spanked!
And the phone call would be done by his secretary not him.
Christina: we saw you coming a mile away
what an unrealistically dramatic portrayal of business interaction
Did you mean "what hollywood thes"?
Didn’t know suits was suppose to be a documentary:P
i always play music before i talk to people, makes it more dramatic.
No one would see it if it was realistic
+yauyyb You'd be surprised. There are business interactions that are way more dramatic than this... Read into Onassis, or Howard Hughes and others...
This is so true. Lawyers are functionaries and they do as they are told by bankers and buy side pros. I’ve been doing it for 28 years. The best lawyers are the ones who understand what you are trying to accomplish then find a way to make it work within the legal structure.
Actually investment bankers can’t do shit unless their own in house lawyers approve the legal side and sign the docs
I practiced for 23 years. When our business guys want to purchase a company, business unit, or assets, they come to us to get the deal done. We get the paper work together, do our due diligence (and others do theirs), and we make it happen. So, you are on point about that. On the other hand, when litigating a case, they come to us to handle it. We advise on best courses of action and let them know what we propose, what we can do, and the risks. Then we do what our clients want (within the bounds of propriety and the law - none of this Suits blackmail shit).
@@Nikhil-hd5oi I spent the 90s at GS and have been in private credit since 2007. Speak for your own ignorance.
Thank you! I’m so happy that somebody else gets it. 👏
No, that's only m&a contract lawyers.
When you get a lawyer for a lawsuit, they're the ones planning out all the strategy.
Bobby Axelrod outsmarts Chuck Rhoades again
Can you recommend any other investment shows
@@malusimtshali1219 movies - big short, margin call
Billions
Top 5 TH-cam comments of 2020 👏🏾
😂😂
he tried to hit him with a "pls fix, thx"
Didn't have the bandwidth
gold
the truth about MBA to MBB.
“We didn’t go to Harvard. We went to Wharton.
Reality: they all went to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry subsidiaries named Harvard and Wharton where they learned how to read files without opening them.
Its elon musk bruh. He already installed brain implants in these guys. They just download the files onto their brains.
Right on! 🤣😂
I was thinking about this... he didn't really read the file merely knew what the file was; a balance sheet from one of their subsidiaries. Balance sheets have the word "Balance Sheet" at the top of page very clearly written and the name of the corp. typically beside or above. It actually makes sense he could know that from a very quick glance... it's like seeing an essay you wrote, if you quickly glance at the title you know full well what it is, for which class, and can likely summarize your thesis and key points... idk why i'm caught up on this...
@@person1858 Wow, he's fast. 😄
@@andresa2530 that's what she said
Louis always getting owned in this show. I feel bad but then laugh when it happens cause his expressions are priceless.
he's an ass, too, so he deserves it
True lol I love him
@@Merthalophor wtf he is not an ass.
If you knew nothing about lawyers and then watched suits you'd think all they do is blackmail.
Don't forget the all time classics, say "Goddamn" and "I'll sue you into the ground" every 2 sentences
My man took one half a second look at the file and knows that the document is a balance sheet from one of their subsidiaries...I've looked at credit card statements for longer and couldn't see how much money I owe
It's cause he went to Wharton.
@@emsa7esm203 Well then fuck me and call me an attorney from Harvard that you only call for the paperwork
@@adequatequality lmao
Underrated comment 😆
Probably was titled as one of the subsidiaries
they saw louis coming a mile away
john smith lol
Probably saw him in the parking lot putting change on the meter lmao
Yes, because he's on the top floor.
john smith hes not hard to miss
corporate business works like this:
morning meeting
meeting to discuss the last meeting
another meeting
summarizing a note of the meeting
lunch
repeat the above
go home
Don't forget spreadsheets
Real investment bankers be like: Ah shit, here we go again. (remaking valuation models)
I'm a student of finance, pursuing my MBA in finance and CFA too. From what I've studied, making valuation models drain my life force. Glad to see I'm not alone😂
@@andydrums4333 hello, what do you mean by valuation models?
@@andydrums4333 do you mind me asking..how old are you and what university are you studying in? Asking coz I am investment banking aspirant want to pursue MBA after completing my graduation
@@shubhamkondedeshmukh2673 I think they evaluate what a company is worth
@@john-zf1yb No, that's just the enterprise value. Valuation models are used for many things. Student's in finance will probably be aware of valuation models that wants to forecast cash flow from a firm's project. To see if it creates value to the firm.
This scene felt something akin to a video game event......mostly that guy being in the way for Louis to get upstairs
Every episode is the exact same. They think they will win, start to lose and sweat a little...Someone says something that helps Harvey or mike word associate there way to a solution for every big problem.
#Spoileralert lmao
Exactly the reason i got bored of the series and stopped watching it midway. These clips are better though.. You get to see all the good parts rather than dragged scenes..
well when mike goes to prison it gets good again
Thus has happened for 9 years
I enjoyed the repetitive nature of it! It became like a drug for me; Situation unfolds, everyone sweats, then feels good again when there's a solution. It worked especially well because the stakes were raised ever so slightly as it went along
Classic! I remember first seeing this when I was at university and I was so excited for my first internship in IB. So many years have past and I've now moved on to a different career after several years in IB.
Olaf Stasiek Why did you move on if you don't mind me asking?
they are on a structural decline.
th-cam.com/video/vbuborn14Mc/w-d-xo.html
IB is boring as hell and sucks away your life. I for sure don't want to sacrifice my life for my job
@@anthonymalouf9545 1. that's trading 2. for at least 4 decades people have been saying Algorithms will replace traders. They haven't. Seems like they will not do so anytime soon
This is probably the most badass scene in the show. Especially, the way he put Harvard grads and lawyers in their place.
Wharton isn’t superior to Harvard though lol. That line didn’t really land
@@uscbro69 Obviously, it’s not. However, for business finance, Wharton is a superior institution. Just like Yale is slightly superior than Harvard with regards to Law but Harvard is the apex of all higher learning education. The thing about this scene that really sticks to me is the entire show they present Harvard as all or nothing. Like if you went to Columbia, Stanford, Princeton, or MIT then your not an elite student which is completely false. So when this character mentioned Wharton in that manner it, it finally gave credence to other elite Schools not named Harvard. As if you’d be perceived as a dumbass for attending John Hopkins University lol.
@@JimmyDahdoul right…he didn’t say Harvard business though, which was odd. And hes talking to a lawyer, who wouldn’t have likely gone to business school anyway. Just an odd quote all around, but I field your point.
@@uscbro69 No, he says in that scene: “We’re not lawyers. We’re investment Bankers. We send you all the paperwork.” In other words we understand corporate structures and business better than attorneys. That’s why he said we went to Wharton. …Business & Finance > Law
@@JimmyDahdoul ? You’re arguing past my point. He said we went to Wharton, not Harvard. He didn’t specify Harvard business, or Harvard law, or Harvard undergrad. And if he was talking about law, it’s weird to boast across professions. Harvard law vs Wharton business is apples to oranges
*Lawyer guy:* "Well... then it's a good thing I replaced that commissioner with my own commissioner of the FTC."
*Suit guy:* "Ah, but I anticipated that. So I made plans move the dinner to another date causing your replacement to miss that dinner."
*Lawyer guy:* "Oh yea? Well I had intercourse with your wife!"
*Suit guy:* "Oh but I knew you would do that... so I paid a drag queen to pretend to be my wife."
*Lawyer guy:* 0_0
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 you should have been script writer for this scene
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Aha I knew that you knew that I knew that you knew.
I outsmarted your outsmarting.
Made me think of Seinfeld:
"Well I had sex with your wife!"
... his wife is in a coma
😂 oh shit man thanks for that
lawyer: I am tough.
Banker: Wait 1 min. My assistant will show you way out.
its like Harvey spectre of investment banking. lol
Bankers are more powerful tho they're literally too big to fail
Noel Simon Only some banks because they’re vital to the economy if they go bankrupt it would ruin the country. It’s obvious banks are going to be big because money makes the world go around and they control the flow along with the government...
it would probs be bobby axlrod from bilions
@@blader3 bankers is such a vague term. MDs and partners at big banks make lots of money. The few execs have some power. A lot of bank execs in the past went into government after retiring from the bank to help shape policy that would in turn help the banks they came from. But most analysts and bankers especially at the IBD level are nobodies and the majority will get an MBA at some point and switch into some other industry. Takes a lot of sacrifice to stick with finance to the level where you're a "powerful banker"
All investment bankers are cocky and confident(most)
This show had the best punchlines ever. Sad that it went downhill on the last two seasons and ended that way.
Oh boy investment banking is not this interesting in reality.
Being a lawyer isn't as interesting as that
Ps. DB is not a BB
id love to tell a lawyer to fuck off instead of turning comments at 1am on a saturday
How do you know@ not me
Only when you're not target and reasonably hate your job at a non-BB
@@MrAlcoholicKoala "pls fix thx" and "do you have bandwidth" thats when your sanity starts to fade
This scene was so good I thought Suits was about Investment Bankers, which is why I started watching it. Next thing I know I watch the entire series learning it’s about Law
Rick Hoffman, the actor who plays the big guy, also played had a few seconds of screentime as an egotistic New York business man in _The Day After Tomorrow,_ and even though he wasn’t even credited for that role, he played it so memorably.
Biggest damn waste of paper I have ever seen!
Brought a weapon, but enough ammunition to get them litt up.
I just finished season 1 of suits and rewatching this clip after knowing Louis's personality is hilarious.
it feels so good to see a lawyer getting outsmarted by any non lawyer.
we call u for our paperwork.
we saw u a mile away. so satisfying.
After all that he STILL validated his parking..... for an investment banker he’s sure got strength of character.
I feel this scene is straight out an anime scene where we should be hearing the main characters voices in their heads
This is one of my favourite clips from the series
A lot of egos like this one were destroyed in the last crash. No one saw that coming a mile away!
Raheel Akhtar so true xD
Michael Burry did, and he made bank
Declan West sure, that was one guy and not an investment banker...
actually most of them did see it coming miles away they just didn't care because riding a bubble is very tempting. As long as bankers could make fat fees selling dogshit, they didn't care. After all, surviving a crash is easy when you've already made enough to retire (and everything gets cheaper so it's a win-win).
Not even close. Investment Bankers were the reason the crash happened and yet they were the only ones who lined their pockets while everyone else suffered. They made money before and after the crash and to add insult to injury, rather than getting charged by the government for causing the amount of damages they did, they got bailed out. The very first thing the top banker's did with the bailout was give themselves a big fat bonus.
One minute of silence for all good moments about this show I love ❤️
We are already in the big crash, Inflation is a catastrophe. This CPI report is a colossal failure. To bring the housing market to a halt, the FED will have to pull all the stops. The unfortunate issue is that other markets are being decimated. If you want to stay green, you have to rely on a lot of diversification. Currently up 14% and being careful. Still a better deal than leaving it in a savings or checking account yielding 0-1 percent interest.
I completely understand the impact of choler's wisdom on personal finance-it's transformative. While I've found success in investing, especially with the guidance of my advisor, Jenny Pamogas Canaya, I still appreciate the solid foundation choler provides. His principles align with the core values of financial discipline. It's inspiring to see how various approaches, like choler's and strategic investment planning with Jenny's expertise, can complement each other.
You can check her out online.ok
It’s funny because this has nothing to do with what investment bankers actually do. From what I can tell, these guys are more likely a private equity firm.
But “investment bankers” sounds catchier
"sidwell investment group" is acutally a hedge fund but he calls himself and Mike investment bankers because it's sexier
@@adamcummings20 Which is funny because every investment banker wants to work at a hedge fund.
for someone who know about/is in finance, correct.
for other ppl, investment bankers and pe advisors are basically the same ppl
@@MrRooibos123 Law firms would definitely be working with investment banks on M&A?
@@Arhtass absolutely but they wouldn't be demanding meetings with the CEOs or anything. The lawyers are not involved in the runnings of the bank itself. The bank would stop using the firm if a lawyer behaved in this way.
A lawyer once said, "lawyers are just the cleaning personnel".
this clip got me to watch the entire series, honestly thought the investment banker guy was the main character and litt was some cop or something lol would be dope to see a series based on them tho
Originally suits was supposed to be about bankers, but when they were developing the show during the economic crash they changed it as they thought bankers wouldn’t be very popular on American tv, you can tell by the way their shown to be so flashy and larger than life season 4 etc
Just one of the many scenes where Louis gets destroyed
I come to this vid every time I want a chuckle.
To paraphrase Sherman McCoy - Lawyers are functionaries for the Masters of the Universe from Wharton.
Plot twist: Christina doesn't validate his parking.
But he already knew that. That's why he had Peter pre-validate it.
Wharton's first year curriculum: How to read a file in under one second and look like a badass while reading it
Second year: Punchlines to humiliate lawyers and other common earthlings
Haha prob true. Trump went to Wharton and used lawyers for his dirty work. Which is ALL his work
I mean he prolly read the title of the file that's why he said "Balance Sheet" cause IB guys are already aware of the Balance sheets they work on. Maybe.
Never went to Wharton but yes they teach the same thing in the second year of other B-schools as well.
I think people misinterpret what the investment banker meant. Louis is a lawyer who specializes in Finance. They both attended prestigious graduate schools, albeit with different focuses. Wharton is arguably the best business school, so as it relates to dealing with financials, the IB would be the sole expert. Just what the scene shows. "You think you're the first lawyer to try and outsmart us.....we call you for the paperwork". Love Suits!
There is no best". It's just where the most people break into the best positions
Trust me when I say this, Harvard is 100% always considered to be in it's own league when it comes to an MBA. Everyone knows Wharton, but everyone actually at these elite schools know you're splitting hairs between Stanford, Wharton, Columbia, etc. but at the end of the day everyone knows Harvard is on top.
Redeeming Divergence wtf does on top even mean. Stop taking the piss
@@revl6151 I go to Columbia. Google it. HBS is considered the best. It may not mean much in terms of ROI or a difference in what you learn. But we all know HBS is considered the top.
Redeeming Divergence what are you basing it on is my point lol
Suits... where 90% of the plot involves dropping random folders on desks.
My law professors is best friends with the actual commissioner of the FTC.
Same
That ending was brutal!
And Louis deserved that for his attitude
Denzel Washington once said *"TO get what you never had before you have to do what you never did before"*
I'm 51 years old with no retirement plan yet,any suggestions on accumulating a million dollar portfolio within 12-18 months? I have currently saved a capital of $100k
In times like this,the best thing any American can do for him or herself is to have another source of income apart from his or her salary,invest wisely people!
I totally agree with you,Forex trading is the most profitable venture I ever invested in,I reached my goal of $500k yearly trade earnings, setting realistic goals is an essential part of trading
But successful people don't become that way over night,what most people see is a glance wealth,a great career,purpose is the result of hard work and hustle over time
@@armstrongbill6805 Starting early is the best way of getting ahead to build wealth,investing remains the priority. Forex trading has plenty of opportunities to earn a decent payout,with the right skills and proper understanding of how the market works
If I ever seen a person who resembles a gopher it oughta be this guy
Bankers are the admins for real businesses
What a cheesy clip
the2step the whole show was just layers of cheese
haha yes
the2step and hey have many more my dude. A LOT of the times they repeat metaphors >.< ugh I’m tired of the ball park, and “in bed with you” etc
no it wasn't, intellectual superiority is what its called. got it ....spank..
Not to mention basketball and football references in every episode
Anyone notice how they keep referring to investment bankers but considering the type of deals and the way they apply themselves and seem to be more buy-side than sell-side, they sound like Private equity firms or corporate raiders....or more so, a conglomerate like Berkshire Hathway
IBs do plenty of advisory and bridging for PE... this comment makes no sense
anyone notice how this guy wasn't just staring at excel sheets the whole time trying to correct #REF!? Also notice how this guy seems to be getting more than 5 hours of sleep? Maybe just C-Suite seeing as how his immediate higher up is friends with the FTC Commissioner.
Not Me pure gold
True. I thought it was a hedge fund
Yea I think they just use that term as a broad umbrella that people will have heard of just for TV, more like activist hedge fund
“By the way, Mr Giannapolis is in Monaco 👍🏼” that wasn’t necessary 😂 savage bro
Aah the guinea pig looking lawyer
The title of this video should be: Litt gets Rekt
The amount that no one talks like this in the real world
We Did not go to Harvard, we went to Wharton
So true. hahah Lawyers like this guy who practice corporate law and regulatory compliance are paper pushers. The 'paper work' jab was spot on. Though interpretation of various industry regulations can get "exciting" sometimes. If it gets to the quasi judicial bodies, even better.
Eat shit nerd
Martin Nietzsche go get a job scrub
Nty ima kill myself instead :D
Martin Nietzsche I'll have two number 9's, a number 9 large, a number 6 with extra dip, a number 7, two number 45's, one with cheese, and a large soda.
onee Why the bigsmoke line here? Lol
Next level: "We are meme coin investors. We YOLO our life savings!"
Judging from this I'm glad I chose business over law XD
always fun to see a lawyer get roofed
Tbh suits does NOT show how lawyers actually are, but they were pretty accurate with these bankers.
Only with the top level investment bankers, of course. Majority of them just punch numbers into excel sheets.
Louis put a balance sheet in a folder 😂
We didn't go to Havard. We went to Wharton and we saw you coming from a mile away.
Just letting him know that Havard isn't all that😂
This scene teaches that you should always work on your come- back's.
I prepared for my first graduate job by diligently studying "the suits". I got fired on my third day for spanking a lawyer, what did I do wrong?
That line at the end is the harshest burn i have ever heatd
That scene would have made more sense if they had kissed at the end rather than just flirting
This was the clip that got me to watch suits
do people ever talk like this in real life? I mean really? When I was an immature 22 year old, i was impressed by the confidence, but now I'm just disgusted by arrogance.
No they probably just send nasty emails and never step foot in someone else’s office.
They love to portray them like Italians in New York back in the 90s who used to speak off the cuff without a filter, even though most of it never made sense but that's the New York way and from experience working in NYC, no one talks like this in offices or upper management, do they get cocky and arrogant? ofc they do but not too this level of bravado and confidence. It's a mix of professionalism and ball breaking but you honestly can't risk offending your clients since they are your money bags.
@@Jameslawz no reason to pin this sort of attitude in Italians this sort of bravado as been present long since. Wasn’t Trump a popular socialite in the 80s? There’s more just like him and even before him
Maybe I’m missing something from this clip and there’s some context behind here but knowing what lawyers and Investment bankers do, I’m confused as to why they are even interacting on this level.
@@rimun5235 because it's a show, not a documentary. If they needed an exoskeleton Arnold Swartzennegger to teleport in, they would do it, to move the plot along.
Key and Peele should re-enact this scene and drag out the exchange with plot twists
Mexican stand off😭
Louis Litt is one of the best TV characters of all time
Episode name?
Great ad for the Wharton School !
This is so cringeworthy, business interaction in this video is so unrealistic lol
MegaMd1998 It isn’t actually a business interaction, a low key extortion attempt by the lawyer
@IkeGee1973 nah, its cringey
The lines are pretty smooth though. The part about wharton and calling for the paperwork
Dude u won't like them if they show real banking stuff
M&A rankings
1) Buy side (PE funds)
2) Investment bankers
3) Lawyers, strategy consultants (CDD)
If they disclosed it wouldn't the lawyers have known about it?
Probably should have, maybe he is just a trash lawyer
@@habibbialikafe339 no luis is the best finance lawyer they have. What the banker is saying is they disclosed it personally to the head of the ftc because they know him. So if a charge or accusation is ever brought to him he wont do anything because he approved it after being asked. Basically the fox is guarding the chicken coop.
@@elreytriton makes sense. Thx
Louis getting played is the thing that made happy!
So that's what the guy from the movie Hostel did for a living. Lmao
LMFAO True. His actual name is Louis and he is partner at the corporate law firm 😂😂😂👍
Him and the 2 guys from the second movie probably know each other from work 💀
I was looking for this scene actually
Oh and there’s an error on the balance sheet you just gave me- line 52 under current liabilities shows an outstanding credit card balance of $57,211.18. It should be $57,212.18. Lol thought I wouldn’t catch that.
Investment banking in the show is kinda skewed. In reality, they’re acting more like private equity guys rather than investment bankers.
True idk what hes doing with the ipad looking at graphs and charts I think we both may be mistaken it turns out he's a management consultant 😂
They are private equity portfolio managers
@@ashishc7900 give him a Patagonia vest and we’re good 👍
Chipmunk tries to get through metal doors
The show is basically a summary of a what Lawyers do which is highly exaggerated and sped up. But if Suits literally did what normal lawyers do in each episode, each Season wouldn't even Cover to complete a single case filed in the Courts and who wants to watch people reading stacks of files and then typing, editing them. 1 legal proceeding could take Years! So yes, Suits is basically a lawyers life on a constant FF 10x speed
This clips makes me want to go watch this show now.
I've seen that guy in porn movies
Someone find the key
@@oscarvitlue2922 I wish
He thought he was Mr.BigDick and walked into a locker room where SHAQ was about to shower.
I have seen this so many times, and this was totally badass 🔥
That guy appears on Hostel and I cannot stop being scared of him
0:40 that sniff was subtle... just a little amuse-bouche playing off the cokehead stereotype
clearing out the recent line he just did
In real life this would of been done the exact same way. Except, it'd be over 7 emails and neither of them would be wearing pants.
I always wondered, what is actually in those folders.
Do they recycle the papers for different scenarios and scenes? If not, it’s a colossus waste of paper.
it could be just blank paper. Those folders are almost never opened
I can't look at this guy the same way after watching hostel imao
Episode name?
ZOMG this is _exactly_ how investment banking goes down!
honesty is a business virtue 🙂