EXPERIENCE THE SUPREME COURT LIKE NEVER BEFORE
OUR MISSION
On the Docket expands public access to the United States Supreme Court by transforming its decisions into video using the justices' actual voices. Although the Court promptly releases audio of oral arguments, it bans video and does not post recordings of opinion announcements, limiting access to those present in the courtroom. These recordings are instead withheld for months before release to the National Archives. On the Docket fills this gap by converting the justices' audio into engaging videos. Using AI-generated visuals, we present representations of the justices delivering their opinions, making these pivotal moments more accessible to the public.
About usHOW IT WORKS
From archive to screen in four steps
Authentic audio
We start with original Supreme Court recordings from the United States National Archives.
A.I. reconstruction
We use original photographs to generate synthetic still images of the Justices in the courtroom. Then, we employ image-to-video A.I. workflows using the original audio to animate the still images.
Source verification
The source audio is acquired directly from the National Archives and not altered. A.I.-generated visuals are labeled for transparency.
Accessible and immersive experience
The result: a new way to witness the Supreme Court in action — accessible to everyone, not just the few who can attend in person.
CASES
The Supreme Court ruled that federal courts cannot issue nationwide injunctions blocking policies for people not involved in a lawsuit. The case involved President Trump's executive order limiting birthright citizenship, but the Court didn't rule on that policy's constitutionality—only on limiting broad injunctions while allowing individual lawsuits to continue.
In a 6-3 decision, the Court upheld Tennessee's SB1, which bans puberty blockers and hormone therapy for transgender minors, ruling that the law classifies based on age and medical use rather than sex and therefore does not violate the Equal Protection Clause.
The Court ruled that U.S. presidents have absolute immunity from criminal prosecution when exercising their core constitutional powers and presumptive immunity for other official acts. Actions that may be illegal and are beyond the scope of presidential powers can still be prosecuted.
The Supreme Court unanimously held that the National Rifle Association plausibly alleged a First Amendment violation by New York's financial-services regulator, who allegedly used regulatory threats to pressure banks and insurers into cutting ties with the organization because of its gun-rights advocacy.
The Court struck down the Biden administration's student-loan forgiveness plan in a 6-3 decision, holding that the HEROES Act did not authorize the Secretary of Education to cancel roughly $430 billion in federal student debt under the major questions doctrine.
The Court ruled that race-conscious admissions programs at Harvard and the University of North Carolina violate the Equal Protection Clause. Universities cannot use race as a factor in admissions decisions to achieve student body diversity. Applicants may still discuss how their racial background shaped their experiences in personal essays.
Consolidated with Trump v. Miot, No. 25-1084
Addresses whether courts can review the Trump administration's termination of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and Syrian nationals and whether that termination was lawful.
Tests whether geofence warrants—which compel companies like Google to identify all devices in a specified area at a given time—violate the Fourth Amendment's particularity and probable-cause requirements.
Challenges Executive Order 14160, which attempts to deny birthright citizenship to children born in the U.S. to parents without citizenship or permanent residency, raising the question of whether the order conflicts with the Fourteenth Amendment's Citizenship Clause.
THE TEAM
Jerry Goldman founded the Oyez Project, revolutionizing public access to Supreme Court oral arguments. As a Professor Emeritus at Northwestern University, he has made the Supreme Court accessible to millions worldwide through innovative digital platforms. Goldman is the President and CFO of the On the Docket Foundation, an Illinois-registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit that funds onthedocket.org.
Visit Website→Timothy R. Johnson is the Horace T. Morse Distinguished Teaching Professor of Political Science and Law (by courtesy) at the University of Minnesota and a leading scholar of the U.S. Supreme Court, specializing in oral arguments and judicial decision-making.
Visit Website→Spooler leads the media production of On the Docket. A creative A.I. platform, Spooler enables immersive experiences, casual games, and personalized information for users when and where they go. Spooler's technology is always informed and infused with empathy and human-led creative storytelling.
Visit Website→Idib Group is a boutique UX design agency focused on complex digital products and services. Founded by Francesco Stagno d'Alcontres, it helps organizations turn complexity into clear, human-centered experiences through research-driven design and strategy.
Visit Website→
Photo credit: Judy Slagle
LET'S CONNECT
Subscribe to receive updates. Unsubscribe anytime.