Toronto Star

WHOLE DIFFERENT BALL GAME

Los Angeles is crawling with NBA royalty taking their shots at Hollywood success,

- BROOKS BARNES

LOS ANGELES— Kevin Durant, for the record, has no aspiration­s to act.

“I haven’t really seen a lot of sixfoot-10 actors, so I think I’ll pass on that,” he said with a chuckle. “Not a fit.” Hollywood is very much on the NBA superstar’s mind, however. Durant and his business partner, Rich Kleiman, started an entertainm­ent company, Thirty Five Media, in April 2017. Last month, YouTube tapped them to develop sports programmin­g, including the creation of channels focused on athletes like KarlAnthon­y Towns, an NBA All-Star with the Minnesota Timberwolv­es, and Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman.

On Tuesday, Apple said it was working with Thirty Five Media and Oscar-winning producer Brian Grazer to develop Swagger, a drama partly inspired by Durant’s rough-andtumble adolescenc­e. “I’m looking forward to giving my input and sharing my insight,” Durant said of the project, which Kleiman described as Friday Night Lights with Power and The Wire mixed in.”

NBA players as Hollywood hotshots? It’s not a far-fetched notion at a time when one of the world’s biggest movie stars, Dwayne Johnson, is a former pro wrestler.

Los Angeles is crawling with basketball royalty turned rookie producers. LeBron James and Kobe Bryant hope to build substantia­l entertainm­ent companies that tap into the billions of dollars that Netflix, Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google are pouring into original programmin­g. Tony Parker of the San Antonio Spurs, Blake Griffin of the Detroit Pistons and the retired Steve Nash also have scripted projects in production or developmen­t. Uncle Drew, a comedy starring Boston Celtics guard Kyrie Irving and several other players, will arrive in thea- tres on June 29.

“Celebrity and name recognitio­n is currency in Hollywood,” said Todd Boyd, a cinema and media studies professor at the University of Southern California. Boyd, whose work focuses on race and popular culture, added that the entertainm­ent business was under pressure to diversify its ranks and the stories it put on screen.

“The question is where this goes in the long term,” Boyd said. “How long will the content boom last? Will diversity continue to matter?”

And success on the court in no way ensures success on screens, Boyd noted.

So far, the most serious has been James, whose production company, SpringHill Entertainm­ent, has financial backing from Warner Bros. Early accomplish­ments include The Wall, a game show on NBC where contestant­s play what is essentiall­y vertical pinball. SpringHill has at least 10 series and three films in the works, including Space Jam 2 and a reimaginin­g of the 1990 hip-hop comedy House Party.

Co-founded by Maverick Carter, SpringHill has also built a sportscent­ric video and podcast platform called Uninterrup­ted. Sample offering: The Shop, which finds James and Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors debating music, sports and culture while getting haircuts.

“As the number of platforms and distributi­on channels grows — social media, Amazon, Netflix — there is a big need for unique content and quality storytelli­ng that can cut through the noise,” said Carter, who serves as SpringHill’s chief executive and has known James since boyhood. “We saw an opportunit­y to tell stories about people who look like us and think like us.”

Because he is still playing basketball, James is not sitting in many production meetings. But Bryant, who retired in 2016 after two decades with the Los Angeles Lakers, is taking the opposite approach to building his Granity Studios.

“He’s working on a bunch of novels — fiction, but rooted in sport — and will be building shows and films from there, original from his own head,” said Molly Carter, Granity’s chief marketing officer.

In the near term, Bryant has a basketball-analysis show, Detail, headed to ESPN. And he will appear at the Academy Awards on March 4. He is nominated for an Oscar for producing Dear Basketball, an animated short based on a poem he wrote.

Hollywood has a long history of casting athletes, who come with built-in fan bases and often exude a natural magnetism on screen. Johnny Weissmulle­r, an Olympic swimmer, starred in a dozen Tarzan movies starting in the 1930s.

Among basketball players, Michael Jordan appeared as himself in the original Space Jam, which took in $337 million worldwide in1996, after adjusting for inflation. Shaquille O’Neal, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson have tried acting, producing and hosting over the years, to mixed results.

The current crop of NBA stars are a bit different. With James leading the way, some are trying to build production businesses that can thrive over the long term. (SpringHill is named after a housing complex where James lived as a boy. Granity is a word that Bryant made up by melding “greater than infinity.” Thirty Five Media represents Durant’s Warriors jersey number.)

“LeBron has done such a great job so far,” Durant said. “It’s like, wow, this can actually be done.”

Kleiman, who is also Durant’s manager, added that a generation of athletes had also watched music stars build business empires. “Kevin paid attention to the Jay-Zs and the Puffys that came up ahead of him and provided a blueprint,” Kleiman said.

Durant may not be interested in acting now, but he got his start in Hollywood in 2012 when he starred in the family comedy Thunderstr­uck, which took in just $587,211 at the box office. After that experience, he focused on his basketball career and investing in tech companies.

His affiliatio­n with YouTube formally started in April, when he introduced a channel dedicated to his offcourt life. The channel, which has more than 600,000 subscriber­s, features videos of Durant at home.

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 ?? JAKE MICHAELS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kevin Durant of the Golden State Warriors started an entertainm­ent company, Thirty Five Media, in April 2017.
JAKE MICHAELS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Kevin Durant of the Golden State Warriors started an entertainm­ent company, Thirty Five Media, in April 2017.
 ??  ?? Retired player Kobe Bryant is working on novels and original shows for his company Granity Studios.
Retired player Kobe Bryant is working on novels and original shows for his company Granity Studios.

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