USA TODAY US Edition

For LeBron, ‘Cleveland’ is a slam-dunk

CNBC reality show goes to work for city

- Jeff Zillgitt @jeffzillgi­tt USA TODAY Sports

LeBron James’ dream came true in June when he delivered a championsh­ip title to Cleveland.

Now he’s helping to pay it forward with a new reality show.

Executive-produced by James and business partner Maverick Carter, Cleveland Hustles (Wednesday, 10 p.m. ET, CNBC) matches four local business leaders with eight Cleveland-area entreprene­urs. Each leader selects a business to invest in and works with the entreprene­ur to open a brick-and-mortar store in underserve­d neighborho­ods.

“We’re giving people an opportunit­y to live out a dream and giving small-business owners a chance to do what they love to do,” says James, who grew up in nearby Akron.

It’s a reality show with a purpose: creating jobs, supporting local businesses and improving neighborho­ods.

James recruited the investors: Kumar Arora, a self-proclaimed “serial investor”; Kathy Futey, a certified private wealth adviser and winery owner; Alan Glazen, a former advertisin­g executive specializi­ng in revitaliza­tion; and Jonathon Sawyer, an awardwinni­ng James Beard chef.

In the show, which is similar to ABC’s Shark Tank, 20 fledgling businesses pitch their product or business idea to the panel of investors. The eight who make the final cut include a craft-soda manufactur­er, a bagel maker, a barbecue owner, a stylist hoping to open a hair salon, a maker of high-end leather goods and an artisanal honey maker. The businesses ask for an investment in exchange for a stake in profits.

“These people have a real drive and a connection to Cleveland, and they believe in what they’re doing,” James says.

In the opening scene of the first episode, James’ famous words describing the Cleveland ethos are on the screen: “Nothing is given. Everything is earned. You work for what you get.”

Then James lays out his goal: “To revitalize Cleveland, we need to work block by block and street by street. I wanted to invest my time and influence to create a movement that can strengthen our community and transform neighborho­ods.”

Cleveland is on the economic rebound, and Hustles reveals the grit, determinat­ion, work ethic and entreprene­urial spirit of northeast Ohioans. “It’s where my day job is, and to be able to create more opportunit­ies for people in their day jobs is definitely a treat,” James says.

In the first episode, Glazen focused on the bagel company and hair salon owner and put them through a series of challenges. At the end of the episode, he picked the business in which he will invest and helped open a store in Cleveland’s Gordon Square.

The show premieres at an exciting time for James. His LeBron James Family Foundation continues to assist kids in Akron and northeast Ohio, and he just welcomed a new group of third-graders to his Wheels for Education program.

Now, his burgeoning entertainm­ent company — SpringHill Entertainm­ent, named after the apartment complex he lived in in Akron — is helping create economic opportunit­ies for smallbusin­ess owners.

“What I enjoy most about it is I have a passion for doing multiple things and using my vision to be able to bring it to fruition,” James says. “To have that vision and have people around us that can make the vision a reality is the ultimate.”

 ?? PETER YANG, CNBC ?? “We’re giving people an opportunit­y to live out a dream,” says LeBron James, with host B. Bonin Bough.
PETER YANG, CNBC “We’re giving people an opportunit­y to live out a dream,” says LeBron James, with host B. Bonin Bough.

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