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Is Maddy real age only 24 ??

  • Thread starter Thread starter Matt725
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Matt725

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I think Tim has a point here. Lawyers take many years before they become lawyers.

Is Maddy a full lawyer or a law student ?

Tim reckons she looks 30. I would say more like 32 to 34 years old.

It is hard to know. Tahan looks 18 but is actually 24. Some people age at slower rates or age badly.
Could be the stress of exams have added a few years to her age of 24.

I've seen some 30 year olds look 50.
 
She's had six years to study law which is enough for a degree. This is just your poor attempt to insult her looks. Let's see your picture so we can rip you a second arsehole.
 
How long does it take to get a law degree in Australia? In the US, it generally takes 4 years of undergrad plus 3 years of law school. Then they need to take the bar exam. So it's unusual for anyone to become a lawyer here before the age of 25.
 
http://www.australianuniversities.com.au/schools/law/

Law Schools in Australia provide professional qualifications at a number of different levels including undergraduate LLB and postgraduate LLM and JD degrees. The Australian postgraduate law schools include those with both a domestic and an international focus, allowing graduates to gain a broad grasp of legal principles and how they are applied in different situations both locally and around the world.

-An Australian Juris Doctor consists of three years of full-time study, or the equivalent. As with graduates of the LL.B, graduates of the J.D. need to complete practical training requirement before they are eligible for admission to practice.

-The programme of study for the common law LL.B. can be either a graduate-entry degree programme requiring a previous bachelors degree (the duration of which is usually three years) or can be undertaken directly after high-school either by itself (the duration of which is usually four years) or with another degree (i.e., B.Comm/LL.B., B.A./LL.B., or B.Sc./LL.B., the duration of which can vary between five and seven years, depending on the specific combination).

-In Australia, the LL.M. is generally only open to law graduates. However, some universities permit a non-law graduate to undertake the degree. The shortage of graduate program/articles places has resulted in some LL.B. graduates proceeding directly to an LL.M. course prior to seeking graduate employment.

There you go.
 
How long does it take to get a law degree in Australia? In the US, it generally takes 4 years of undergrad plus 3 years of law school. Then they need to take the bar exam. So it's unusual for anyone to become a lawyer here before the age of 25.

Steps to practising law

You do it as a double degree so its take 5yrs (3yr in law degree + 2yr in specialised field) and yes, you need to go through training and bar exam too

http://www.law.unsw.edu.au/future-students/careers/steps-practising-law
 
http://www.australianuniversities.com.au/schools/law/

Law Schools in Australia provide professional qualifications at a number of different levels including undergraduate LLB and postgraduate LLM and JD degrees. The Australian postgraduate law schools include those with both a domestic and an international focus, allowing graduates to gain a broad grasp of legal principles and how they are applied in different situations both locally and around the world.

-An Australian Juris Doctor consists of three years of full-time study, or the equivalent. As with graduates of the LL.B, graduates of the J.D. need to complete practical training requirement before they are eligible for admission to practice.

-The programme of study for the common law LL.B. can be either a graduate-entry degree programme requiring a previous bachelors degree (the duration of which is usually three years) or can be undertaken directly after high-school either by itself (the duration of which is usually four years) or with another degree (i.e., B.Comm/LL.B., B.A./LL.B., or B.Sc./LL.B., the duration of which can vary between five and seven years, depending on the specific combination).

-In Australia, the LL.M. is generally only open to law graduates. However, some universities permit a non-law graduate to undertake the degree. The shortage of graduate program/articles places has resulted in some LL.B. graduates proceeding directly to an LL.M. course prior to seeking graduate employment.

There you go.

It sounds like there are numerous ways in Australia to get there, the longest being similar to the US. My daughter went for 2 (very expensive) years of law school after an undergraduate degree before deciding she didn't want to be a lawyer - she would have been 24 if she had completed it all.
 
I think Tim has a point here. Lawyers take many years before they become lawyers.

Is Maddy a full lawyer or a law student ?

Tim reckons she looks 30. I would say more like 32 to 34 years old.

It is hard to know. Tahan looks 18 but is actually 24. Some people age at slower rates or age badly.
Could be the stress of exams have added a few years to her age of 24.

I've seen some 30 year olds look 50.

Madaline's a practising solicitor. She is 24 although she may look older
 
Maddy is at least 32 to 36 unless she had bad plastic surgery.

She does appear to have had botox.... which although makes people appear younger it also makes them look like theyre older trying to look younger

she does have a sort of stuck up maturity about her too which makes her seem older
 
I have friends who are 24-25 and are practising lawyers. Not solicitors though, but they have passed the bar etc.

They are fairly new to the workforce, obviously, so I would imagine Maddie is the same. I do agree she looks older than her age, but some people just do. I also have friends who look older than their years, and then some that look like they could still be in high school.
 
In Australia you don't sit theBar exam unless you are intending to be a barrister. To become a lawyer/solicitor/legal practitioner (all words for the same thing) you complete your law degree which usually takes 4/5 years, unless you study law as a post graduate by doing the JD (which is not the case for Madeline). Then you complete your articles - a year spent working as an Article Clerk then you are admitted as a lawyer after this year is complete. Some people can't get into Artciles, so they complete their year through the Leo Cussens Institure or similar, which allows you to then be admitted as a lawyer.
 
It's 2013 and we have google.
Is it really this hard to find her real age?? If no information is found, perhaps she really is 24.

I haven't looked because I don't care.
 
She's definitely not 24. I'd put money on it. My guess would be 32.
Maddie is a lie. She was only put in as a filler for a few days.
Boog was supposed to be the perma housemate, just like Justynn and Nathan.. Justynn was clearly only meat to go in for a few days, then leave. He was probably contracted as an actor, and was paid as an actor.
Thats why the elimination process was a free poll through jump in app, when a tv show gets people to pay for votes, they can be investigated for fraud if they rig evictions, but since they didn't charge, they could have rigged it however they liked, and chose which intruder to send packing with no questions asked.
Madeline was already a lawyer for dreamworld, they just sent her in for a holiday, but when Nathan quit, they decided to let her stay.
I reckon She was only sent temporarily in to sh*t stir Tully and Jade and make them jealous, although Tully had already left by the time she went in.. I believe that was her sole purpose. And justynns sole purpose was to sh*t stir Tim and ed.
They wanted jade and Tully to feel threatened by maddie, and wanted Ed and Drew to be attracted to her, so they said she was 24 to make her more relatable, and since she was only supposed to be in for a few days, no one would have questioned it.
But now that she's a perma housemate, people are starting to catch on, and catch her out in lies, and see her without makeup, and it's all pointing to a lie.


It sounds like there are numerous ways in Australia to get there, the longest being similar to the US. My daughter went for 2 (very expensive) years of law school after an undergraduate degree before deciding she didn't want to be a lawyer - she would have been 24 if she had completed it all.

Did you ring her neck!?
 
[MENTION=34226]jessy_girl[/MENTION]

Lawyers & Solicitors are the same thing.

In America they say Lawyer, in Australia they mainly say Solicitor. (but you can say both.)
 
She's had six years to study law which is enough for a degree. This is just your poor attempt to insult her looks. Let's see your picture so we can rip you a second arsehole.

I like you.
 
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