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Christine Baranski. Photo: Getty Images
When Diane Lockhart returns for the second season of The Good Fight, she's not the buttoned-up lawyer she once was. She's still powerful, but thanks to the pressures of living under the Trump administration, and a nasty series of deaths of local Chicago lawyers, she's started to spin out of control. In the first few episodes of season two, Diane experiments with sex, drugs (in the form of micro-dosing psilocybin), and a new addiction to cable TV. Ahead of the season premiere, Vulture caught up with Christine Baranski to discuss playing the suddenly freewheeling lawyer, working with her new co-star Audra McDonald, and meeting the younger version of herself in the Mamma Mia! sequel. How did you react when you learned Diane would try out micro-dosing this year? I could understand it. I thought, Well, she's come to a point where she just needs a let-up in her consciousness, and several scotches or a whole bottle of red wine isn't going to do it. She doesn't want unconsciousness in that drunken sense, she wants to have a heightened consciousness that's just a bit of a relief.
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Originally from Gainesville, he and his family moved to Tampa in 2013. He has said he chose to run for state attorney to try to effect change within the criminal justice system. He pledges a renewed emphasis on efforts to rehabilitate criminals and reduce recidivism, rather than focus solely on retribution. Warren, 39, is a former federal prosecutor who specialized in white-collar crime and multi-million dollar fraud cases. Education: Brandeis University, B. A., economics and political science; Columbia University Law School, J. Brandeis University, B. How do you foresee the office moving forward in death penalty cases? Do you support or oppose a unanimous jury verdict in order to impose the death penalty? "I believe there should be a unanimous verdict. If there is unanimity required to convict, it should be unanimity required to impose capital punishment. " He said he would still prosecute capital cases even though the current statute does not require jury unanimity in imposing a death sentence.