Kim Kardashian Says She’ll Be a Qualified Attorney in Two Weeks — Plans to Become a Trial Lawyer
Reality star and business mogul Kim Kardashian says she’s just weeks away from officially becoming a qualified attorney, revealing she’s serious about leaving behind her celebrity image to pursue a full-fledged legal career.
The 45-year-old SKIMS founder made the comments on BBC’s The Graham Norton Show on Friday, October 24, appearing alongside her All’s Fair co-star Sarah Paulson.
“I have a few projects coming up — I film my first movie in January, and we are hoping for a season 2 of All’s Fair,” Kardashian said. “I always want to be growing, curious and evolving, and I want to see wherever that takes me.”
But amid the glitz of Hollywood and the constant headlines, Kardashian made it clear that her real passion is the law.
“I will be qualified in two weeks. I hope to practice law. Maybe in 10 years, I think I’ll give up being Kim K and be a trial lawyer. That’s what I really want,” she said.
From Reality TV to the Courtroom

While critics often dismiss Kardashian as a reality star, she’s quietly been working toward her law degree for years — completing California’s Law Office Study Program, an alternative path that allows aspiring lawyers to apprentice under a licensed attorney instead of attending a traditional law school.
Her sponsor and mentor, attorney Jessica Jackson, praised her extraordinary commitment:
“Over the course of this program, Kim has dedicated 18 hours a week, 48 weeks a year for six straight years. That’s a total of 5,184 hours of legal study, that’s time she carved out while raising four children, running businesses, filming television shows and showing up in courtrooms to advocate for others,” Jackson said.

Kardashian, who shares four children — North, Saint, Chicago, and Psalm — with ex-husband Kanye “Ye” West, began her legal studies in 2018. She passed California’s notoriously difficult “baby bar” exam in 2021 after several attempts and went on to take the Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam (MPRE) earlier this year, a necessary step before sitting for the final bar exam.

A New Direction — and a New Image
Her legal pursuits are part of a broader effort to reinvent herself beyond fame and fashion. Kardashian’s interest in criminal justice reform — inspired by her late father, Robert Kardashian, a defense attorney who worked on the O.J. Simpson case — has led her to advocate for clemency in several high-profile cases.
Now, she’s looking to merge that passion with a real courtroom career.
Kardashian admitted that balancing business, motherhood, acting, and studying hasn’t been easy.
“I’ve learned you can. It was mentally challenging having to do it all, but I loved it,” she told Norton.
Her All’s Fair co-star Sarah Paulson added:
“The truth of the matter is that she made me feel like a slacker. She’s running a business, she’s looking after four children, she’s studying for the law. She really is an impressive person.”

Beyond the Cameras
For many Americans, Kim Kardashian’s transformation from tabloid icon to aspiring attorney is unexpected — but it also reflects a rare moment of focus and grit in a celebrity world often driven by vanity and drama.
If she passes the bar, she’ll not only have earned her license the hard way — she’ll have proven that determination and discipline still count for something, even in Hollywood.

“Maybe in 10 years, I think I’ll give up being Kim K and be a trial lawyer,” she said. “That’s what I really want.”
It remains to be seen whether the star can transition from TV sets to courtrooms, but for now, she seems determined to trade spotlights for statutes — and glitz for grit.


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