yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

David Stern: Why Race Doesn't Matter to the NBA | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

Our business focuses us on diversity because we all work in a sport that was deemed too black to thrive and actually even survive. People forget, but there were articles, “The Dark Clouds Over the NBA…” I literally – when I was executive vice president, Larry sent me up to a newspaper and the television guy said, “You don’t get it, Stern. You guys are just not going to make it. This is a white country and you have a black sport.”

So we developed chips on our shoulder early on. If you worked at the NBA in the 70s, you had to be a believer that America was a good country and that we had something to teach rather than to be afraid of. A sport that, you know, could have Willis Reed from Louisiana and Grambling and Bill Bradley from Crystal City, Missouri and Princeton on a championship team, hmmm, that says something about a sport that has something to teach. That’s about talent.

We sort of rallied around the notion that if you came to an NBA game, it didn’t matter where you sat, you know, whether you were in the nosebleed section or at courtside, your opinion counted regardless of your race. And if you were on the court, your talent counted regardless of your race. You got game, you play. If you don’t have game, you don’t.

And so this was a subject of some discussion at the NBA, always on an ongoing basis. And it has ramifications throughout our whole business. When I was required to act when Ron Artest ran into the stands in Detroit and there was a big brawl, et cetera, the talk radio that weekend – the words "thugs" and "punks" was uttered what seemed to be about a million times. I’m sure it was less, but we all know the code words.

And so we tend to be particularly protective of our players in that regard, and I think it makes us conscious of a lot of different things having to do with the racial discussion...

More Articles

View All
Budgeting and the 50:30:20 rule | Budgeting | Financial Literacy | Khan Academy
Hi everyone, Sal here, and I want to talk a little bit about budgeting. So, at a very high level, a budget is a way of keeping track of how much money you’re bringing in and how much you are spending. The reason why you want to do it is you, at the most …
Tracing function calls | Intro to CS - Python | Khan Academy
What exactly happens when the computer executes a function call? Well, let’s trace a program with a function definition to find out. When we run the program, the computer, as normal, reads the program line by line starting at the top of the file. When th…
What is Cool?
Hey, Vsauce Michael here, and a couple of weeks ago, Vice’s new channel Noisey blind folded me, the Gregory Brothers, about 200 other people, and then bused us to a hidden Skrillex show. It was cool, but what is cool? I mean, what does it mean to be cool?…
TRACTOR PULLS: It's Not What You Think - Smarter Every Day 276
This is an absolutely preposterous tractor and it’s pulling [Music]. Something; all these people are in these stands to watch what’s called a tractor pull because it’s awesome. The winner is whoever pulls this sled the farthest before getting bogged down …
How Pitching Investors is Different Than Pitching Customers - Michael Seibel
Although I’m Michael Seibel and partner Y Combinator, today I’d like to talk about the difference between your investor pitch and your customer pitch. When most founders typically screw up here is that your customer typically knows a lot about the proble…
There's an Art to Getting Brilliant People to Surprise Themselves - Kevin Slavin of The Shed
I had a there were a couple questions from the internet, but I figured we could just start with kind of what we were talking about before about education in general. Sure. So, as you’re a dad now and you’re thinking about education, having now, you know, …