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The Big Interview: ‘LegalEagle’ On The Best And Worst Cinematic Legal Representations

Devin Stone never intended to become one of the internet’s most recognizable legal analysts. Instead, he was supposed to follow a predictable path: graduate, grind it out in Big Law, make partner, and spend the next several decades enjoying a conventionally successful career as a lawyer. But a bout of burnout early in Stone’s career led him to YouTube, where he started publishing explainer videos under the name “LegalEagle.” Stone’s channel, which now boasts nearly 4 million followers, started out pretty fluffy, with videos dissecting legal representations on popular TV shows and movies becoming an early audience favorite. While those turned him into a prominent online influencer—yes, there’s at least one for pretty much everything these days—Stone has more recently become a figure both beloved and detested for his prolific video explainers of the Trump presidency’s various legal quagmires and the constitutional crises they’re creating. What Stone now does, it can be argued, is something closer to public service journalism in a YouTube-optimized wrapper: He and his team publish upward of three videos a week unpacking everything from FCC censorship to Donald Trump’s invasion of Venezuela, and often reach more than half a million viewers with a single episode. Stone, who remains a practicing lawyer and teaches at Georgetown University, sat down with WIRED’s Global Editorial Director Katie Drummond to talk about the unique career he’s built for himself—and the particularly precarious legal moment Americans find themselves in. In the conversation, he describes the explosion of legal crises wrought by the Trump administration, talks about building a business off the back of YouTube’s omnipotent algorithm, and explains why he worries that an entire generation may come to see unprecedented political behavior as table stakes.

Released on 04/21/2026

Transcript

There is a lot of fun on the channel, right?

And you have a lot of fun,

but you are also operating in a really unprecedented

context right now when we talk about

the United States of America, the political environment,

and there's a lot of that that shows up on the channel

and I think that that's fascinating.

The channel started as commentary on pop culture

and explaining legal issues

and sort of dipping our toe into legal news.

And so, we slowly started to expand our coverage

of legal issues.

And eventually, the load star of the channel was,

okay, we'll release maybe one news piece a week,

and what we'll do is we'll just find

the single most important legal issue of that week

and we will deconstruct it and explain it to people.

And that has largely continued,

but over the course of the first

and now second Trump administration,

the number of legal issues that sort of reach that threshold

of this is so unbelievably important

that we have to break it down and we have to explain it

has, you know, exploded.

We are now putting out three to five videos per week.

Wow.

Which we have never done before.

But yeah, I mean, that general idea of

we have to explain this stuff

because with few exceptions, no one else is doing it.

You know, we live in a world where,

I'm not exaggerating when I say we have probably had

in the second Trump administration 20 to 30 scandals

and legal issues slash problems that rise to the level

of the severity of Watergate.

Wow.

And so, there are now

essentially multiple Watergates per week.

And so, we feel that it's our responsibility

to cover those things.

And you know, we don't want to sugarcoat things

and say, oh, you know, there is a legal solution to

some of these things when there isn't.

And we're pretty upfront when we say that, you know,

here is what the law covers

and you know, here's what the law does not cover.

And some of these things are sort of moral issues

or norms that are being broken as opposed to a legal rule.

We're upfront about that, but at the same time,

it's just been an absolute deluge.

And I feel like the lawyers are sort of the Cassandras here

where because we know what the law is,

and if you have any knowledge of

presidential administrations going back several decades,

you understand how unprecedented this stuff truly is.