LeBron James sat in the
visitors locker room at Madison Square Garden with ice on his 38-year-old knees
and 28 more points to his name after his Los Angeles Lakers beat the New York
Knicks in overtime. James’ teammate Anthony Davis teased him about how close he
was to breaking Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s NBA career scoring record, then about 90
points away.
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Suddenly, James remembered
something. His mother, Gloria James, was set to go on vacation soon. She might
miss his record-breaking game.
He called her on
speakerphone, with a dozen attentive reporters close by. He asked when she was
leaving, reminding her every once in a while, lest she disclose too much, that
reporters could hear the conversation. Eventually, he looked around,
sheepishly, and said he would call her later.
“I love you,” he said.
Then, just before he ended the call, he added: “I love you more”.
It was typical James: He
brings you along for the ride, but on his terms, revealing what he wants to
reveal and no more. It is perhaps the only way someone who has been so famous
for most of his life could survive the machine of modern celebrity.
As he has closed in on
Abdul-Jabbar’s record of 38,387 points, the very idea of what it means to be a
star has shifted since James scored his first two points on October 29, 2003.
And James has helped define that shift. He has risen above the din of social
media celebrities and 24-hour news cycles, buoyed by the basketball fans who
love him or love to hate him. He’s now 36 points away from breaking
Abdul-Jabbar’s record after a game against the New Orleans Pelicans on
Saturday.
He has been a
selfie-snapping tour guide for this journey, with a portfolio that now extends
well beyond the court. He has a production company and a show on HBO. He’s
acted in a few movies and received some good reviews. His foundation has helped
hundreds of students in his hometown Akron, Ohio, and a public school the
foundation helps run there, the I Promise School, focuses on children who
struggle academically. His opinions are covered as news, given far more weight
than those of almost any other athlete.
“Hopefully I made an impact
enough so people appreciate what I did, and still appreciate what I did off the
floor as well, even when I’m done,” James said in an interview. “But I don’t
live for that. I live for my family, for my friends and my community that needs
that voice.”
Basketball is the ‘main
thing’In early 2002, James was a
high school junior and on the cover of Sports Illustrated. News did not travel
as quickly as it does now. Not everyone had cellphones, and the ones they had
could not livestream videos of whatever anyone did. Social media meant chat
rooms on AOL or Yahoo. Facebook had yet to launch, and the deluge of social
networking apps was years away.
“Thank God I didn’t have
social media; that’s all I can say,” James said in October when asked to
reflect on his entry into the league.
As a teenage star, he was
spared the incessant gaze of social media and the bullying and harsh criticism
that most likely would have come with it.
But social media, in its
many changing forms, has also helped people express their personalities and
share their lives with others. It lets them define themselves — something
particularly useful for public figures whose stories get told one way or
another.
James began thinking about
that early in his career.
His media and production
firm, now called the SpringHill Co., made a documentary about James and his
high school teammates titled “More Than a Game” in 2008. It also developed “The
Shop,” an HBO show James sometimes appears on with celebrity guests, including
former President Barack Obama and rapper Travis Scott, talking like friends in
a barbershop.
James likes to say that he
always keeps “the main thing the main thing” — meaning that no matter what else
is happening in his life, he prioritizes basketball. He honors the thing that
created his fame.
LeBron James warm ups
wearing a “I Can’t Breathe” T-shirt in protest of the grand jury decision in
the death of Eric Garner before a NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets
at the Barclays Center in New York, on December 8, 2014.
He led his teams to the NBA
Finals in eight consecutive years and won championships with three franchises.
He was chosen for the league’s MVP award four times, and he has dished the
fourth-most assists in NBA history.
James’ talent meant that it
did not take long for him to become the face of the NBA.
He has mostly embraced
that, capitalizing on an era when sports fandom was no longer about sitting
down to watch a game so much as it was about catching small bites of the most
compelling moments.
“People’s interest in
athletes moves very quickly, especially with the NBA season,” said Omar Raja,
who in 2014 founded House of Highlights, an Instagram account for viral sports
moments, because he wanted to share clips of the Miami Heat during James’ time
playing there with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.
“LeBron’s Instagram stories
would do as well as his poster dunks, and you were like, ‘This is crazy,’” Raja
said.
House of Highlights
reposted two videos from James’ Instagram stories in May 2019. One showed James
and a former teammate dancing in a yard. Another showed James and friends,
including Russell Westbrook, smoking cigars. Both videos outperformed anything
that happened in the playoffs.
‘I wish I could do normal
things’James has used his fame to
further business opportunities and build his financial portfolio. He has used
it to both shield his children and prepare them for growing up in his shadow.
He has used it for social
activism, most notably in speaking about Black civil rights and racism. That
began in 2012, when he and his Heat teammates wore hooded sweatshirts and
posted a group photo on social media after the death of Trayvon Martin, an
unarmed Black teenager who was wearing a hoodie when he was shot and killed in
Florida. The Heat decided to transfer some of their spotlight to the national
conversation about racism that emerged.
“Hopefully I made an impact enough so people appreciate what I did, and still appreciate what I did off the floor as well, even when I’m done. … But I don’t live for that. I live for my family, for my friends and my community that needs that voice.”
Black NBA players have a
long history of speaking out or demonstrating against racism and
discrimination: Abdul-Jabbar and the Boston Celtics’ Bill Russell were vocal
about the racist dangers they faced in the 1960s and ’70s. But what made the
actions of James and his teammates stand out was that the superstar athletes of
the ’90s and early 2000s — Michael Jordan, most notably — had often shied away
from overt activism.
What James chooses to talk
about (or not talk about) draws notice.
In 2019, when a Houston
Rockets executive angered the Chinese government by expressing support for Hong
Kong, James was criticized for not speaking out against China’s human rights
abuses. James said he did not know enough to talk about them, but some skeptics
accused him of avoiding the subject to protect his financial interests in
China.
And in 2020, when protests
swept the country after the police killed George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, both
of whom were Black, the NBA made social justice part of its ethos. James used
many of his news conferences that season to discuss racism and police violence
against Black people.
The attention to James’
words separates him from others, as does the attention to his life.
“I don’t want to say it
ever becomes too much, but there are times when I wish I could do normal
things,” James said Thursday while standing in an arena hallway in Indianapolis
about an hour after the Lakers beat the Indiana Pacers there. A member of a
camera crew that has been following him for the past few years filmed him as he
spoke.
“I wish I could just walk
outside,” James said. “I wish I could just, like, walk into a movie theater and
sit down and go to the concession stand and get popcorn. I wish I could just go
to an amusement park just like regular people. I wish I could go to Target
sometimes and walk into Starbucks and have my name on the cup just like regular
people.”
He added: “I’m not sitting
here complaining about it, of course not. But it can be challenging at times.”
The offices of
Uninterrupted, a new production company started by LeBron James, in Los
Angeles, on November 12, 2015.
James grew up without
stable housing or much money, but his life now is not like most people’s
because of the money he has made through basketball and business (he is
estimated to be worth more than $1 billion), and because of the extraordinary
athletic feats he makes look so easy. Once in a while, as when he is on the
phone with his mother, he manages to come off like just another guy.
Another example: In October
2018, during his first Lakers training camp, James gave up wine as part of a
preseason diet regimen. He was asked if abstaining had affected his body.
“Yeah, it made me want wine
more,” James said, relatably. “But I feel great. I feel great. I did a two-week
cleanse and gave up a lot of things for 14 days.”
James had also quit gluten,
dairy, artificial sugars and all alcohol for those two weeks, he said.
What was left?
“In life?” James said.
“Air.”
There to see himThe past few seasons have
been challenging for James on the court. He is playing as well as he ever has,
but the Lakers have struggled since winning a championship in 2020.
They missed the playoffs
last season and are in 12th place in the Western Conference, although they have
played better recently. James, his coaches and his teammates all insist that he
spends more time thinking about how to get the Lakers into the playoffs than
about breaking the scoring record.
Still, Madison Square
Garden, one of his favorite arenas, buzzed Tuesday night. Because of him.
Celebrities, fans and media came to watch him, just as they did
when he was a constant in the NBA Finals.
He taped a pregame
interview with Michael Strahan courtside. Then he went through his pregame
warmup, shooting from different spots on the court, working against an
assistant coach, who tried to defend him. He took a few seconds to dance near
the three-point line as he waited for someone to pass the ball back to him.
He was in what he has made
into a comfortable place: the center of the basketball universe.
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