Los Angeles Times

Ex- Clippers make mark with podcast featuring raw basketball talk.

‘ Knucklehea­ds’ Richardson and Miles keep conversati­on in the comfort zone.

- By Andrew Greif

Two years ago, after being approached by the Players Tribune about creating a podcast, Darius Miles and Quentin Richardson set up the audio equipment for a test episode on Richardson’s back patio.

They were f irst- time cohosts but had been friends since basketball brought Miles, a seventh- grader from East St. Louis, together with Richardson, a ninth- grader from Chicago. In 2000, when Miles was 18 and Richardson 20, they became Clippers first- round draft picks and teammates.

The young Clippers didn’t win much, but their personalit­y seeped into the sport’s culture. They followed dunks with two taps of their knuckles to their heads, and what began as a nod to their friends at Westcheste­r High, who originated the celebratio­n, quickly became synonymous with Miles and Richardson.

Scheduling the podcast demo was easy. In retirement, Miles and Richardson lived only seven minutes from each other in Orlando, Fla., and their f irst guest, former NBA forward Drew Gooden, walked over from his house across the street. Without experience to draw from, and with drinks in hand, they began to riff as if the microphone­s weren’t even there.

“The more we drank, the more curse words started to come out,” Richardson said. “By the end of it, it was like all of us yelling over each other.”

To listen to Miles and Richardson now, f ive seasons and 61 episodes into their show, “Knucklehea­ds,” is to hear seasoned podcasters with a refined style. They don’t curse as much. They aren’t as generous with their drinks. What hasn’t changed, however, is their intent of making listeners feel as though they are eavesdropp­ing on a raw basketball conversati­on between teammates.

“That was our aim, to have our vibe kind of like when we on the bus, we in the plane, in the locker room, things like that,” Richardson said. “We wanted to have that type of comfort level.”

Aligning themselves as a guest’s teammate, of sorts, was intentiona­l.

“I don’t think we ever look at ourselves as media or as the interviewe­r and all of that,” Richardson said. “We born hoopers. We played in the NBA. We part of that fraternity, nothing can ever take us away from that. We never going to violate that, so we that before we anything and everybody identif ies us as that, and that’s where that comfort zone comes in because they talking to one of their own.”

The approach has helped guests, including Kobe Bryant, Allen Iverson, Steve Nash, Kevin Durant, Rasheed Wallace and A’ja Wilson get comfortabl­e. It has also created an unexpected second act for the hosts’ basketball careers. The show has a perfect f ive- star rating on Apple,

with more than 2,000 reviews.

Miles, the 6- foot- 9 former forward, initially took longer than Richardson to warm to the idea of a media collaborat­ion. He’d largely been out of the spotlight since his 2009 retirement but has since likened talking on the show to his friends and idols as “like a kid in the candy store.”

Interviewe­d four months before his January death, Bryant recounted his motivation to prove Charlotte’s general manager wrong after the Hornets traded him on draft night. Wilson Chandler talked about celebratin­g his own first- round selection by riding a bicycle around his neighborho­od, drinking Cristal champagne. Dikembe Mutombo told the story of being discovered by coach John Thompson while at Georgetown on an academic scholarshi­p. Episodes begin with guests posed the same basketball icebreaker: Who

was the first opponent to humiliate you as a pro rookie? Baron Davis said John Stockton “embarrasse­d me.” Miles is more apt to guide guests into talking about memorable games or specific dates. Richardson, the 6- 6 former guard, sees his role as helping guests display the personalit­y he and Miles see to a wider audience.

The show’s 11- episode f ifth season, which began last week, was recorded amid the pandemic, which required changes from the previous format in which the hosts sat around a table with guests, often with a glass of Hennessy in hand. Staying at home has made booking reclusive guests easier but the “energy in the room” can’t be replicated over Zoom, Miles said.

“But once me and Q talking, we joking back and forth, and it just gets free, the air gets free,” Miles said. “You just laughing, joking, reminisce on people’s great careers and tell them how much we appreciate what they’ve done.”

“Knucklehea­ds” is part of an industry whose advertisin­g revenues are projected to approach $ 1 billion in 2020, said Sue Hogan, the senior vice president of research and analytics at the Internet Advertisin­g Bureau. Podcasting’s projected 15% revenue growth from the previous year is only half of what was projected — a ref lection of the impact COVID- 19 has had on advertisin­g spending across a wide array of media. Hogan said podcasting’s outlook remains strong, though, with revenues expected to exceed $ 1 billion in 2021

Numbers like that have not only caught the attention of analysts but athletes, even those years away from retirement. In August, after hosting dozens of episodes of his own show for the Ringer, New Orleans guard JJ Redick formed his own production company, telling the New York Times that he hoped food and politics shows could come next. That same month, Durant became an executive producer of his own podcast network, which produces the show he hosts.

Miles and Richardson believe the isolation during the f irst months of the pandemic accelerate­d the popularity of podcasts among athletes seeking creative outlets while also controllin­g their own communicat­ion with fans. In the future, they see players approachin­g retirement with an eye on podcasts instead of hunting for coaching or front- office jobs or traditiona­l media roles, such as television.

They wonder what their reach would have been had social media and podcasting existed during their brief stays with the Clippers. Miles played two seasons with the team while Richardson stayed for four. The team’s cultural significan­ce, from the clothes they wore to the personalit­y they played with, belied its on- court success. An ESPN show followed the team, with nearly half the roster under the age of 21. Magazines put them on covers.

“We were representi­ng the youth because we were the youth at the time in a grown man’s league,” Richardson said. “If you had social media we would have been everywhere because we stayed in the malls, we stayed just being very visible.

“The opposite of us were the Lakers. … They were all basically married and kind of an older team. Our core players, four, f ive, six of us, were all under 20. We were really out there, at the clubs, in the colleges, going to the high school games. We were of that culture.”

Two decades later, amid the saturated world of sports podcasting, they again f ind themselves attempting to stand apart. They have done so, Miles said, by again staying as “real as possible.”

Microphone­s or not, on a patio or over Zoom, they would be having these conversati­ons with their famous friends anyway.

“With me and Darius, this is over 25 years of friendship,” Richardson said. “This is something that we been doing before, and would be doing if it wasn’t here, and still going to be doing that if it ever leaves.”

 ?? Lori Shepler Los Angeles Times ?? DARIUS MILES likes to ask their guests on the “Knucklehea­ds” podcasts about the most memorable games they played.
Lori Shepler Los Angeles Times DARIUS MILES likes to ask their guests on the “Knucklehea­ds” podcasts about the most memorable games they played.
 ?? Anacleto Rapping L. A. Times ?? QUENTIN Richardson, a 6- 6 guard, was selected with the 18th pick in 2000 and played four seasons on the Clippers.
Anacleto Rapping L. A. Times QUENTIN Richardson, a 6- 6 guard, was selected with the 18th pick in 2000 and played four seasons on the Clippers.

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