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There may be no figure in Lakers history more misunderstood than Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. And âWinning Timeâ tries to correct, or at least complicate, the record.
In Episode 5 of âBinge Sesh,â hosts Matt Brennan and Kareem Maddox discuss the perception and reality of the NBAâs all-time leading point scorer. With insights from an array of special guests â including Solomon Hughes, who plays the Lakers legend in HBOâs drama series â we look back over Abdul-Jabbarâs career as a star center and civil rights activist to answer the question: Has he been unfairly excluded from the conversation about basketballâs greatest-ever player?
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Catch up on Episode 4: Does âWinning Timeâ get Claire Rothman and Jeanie Buss right?
Robert Wade: I went to a party at UCLA, would have been 1966. And it was predominantly Black people.
Kareem Maddox: Thatâs my Uncle Robert. He grew up in L.A. in the 1950s and 1960s.
Wade: And it was early in the party before the real music and dancing part started. And the woman who was hosting the party, uh, yells out, âCan somebody turn on the light?â And I see what looks like an arm reach from the opposite side of the room â 10, 12, 15 feet, it looked like â and hit the light switch.
It stands out as a memory because, man, the guy was long. Iâd never seen anybody with a reach like that before. And it was Lew Alcindor.
Everything you need to know about the true story of the Showtime Lakers, all in one place.
Maddox: I just love this image of a literal wallflower, like someone whoâs trying to blend in but canât help but to stand out. Because weâre of course talking about the man who would become Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the NBAâs all-time leader in points scored, a six-time NBA champion, the Finals MVP twice, the league MVP six times, and a 19-time All Star.
Matt Brennan: That is a wild list of accomplishments.
Maddox: Yeah. And he did it because he was the king of the sky hook, and he played in the league for a solid two decades, which is unheard of. But when people are talking about whoâs the NBAâs greatest player of all time, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar actually doesnât come up all that much. This week on âBinge Sesh,â weâre going to try to figure out why.
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Maddox: Welcome to âBinge Sesh.â This season, weâre diving into the stories behind HBOâs âWinning Time,â the saga of the Showtime-era L.A. Lakers. Iâm Kareem Maddox, professional basketball player â and kinda named after Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Brennan: And Iâm Matt Brennan, TV editor of the Los Angeles Times. Iâm named after the Catholic saint, I guess.
Maddox: St. Matthew. One of my favorites. So, Matt, if you had to sum up the public line on Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, what would you say?
Brennan: I think it depends on how charitable the person that youâre asking is. I think a charitable person would say that he was aloof. Above the fray. Cold. Not interested in engaging with the fans.
I think less charitable people would have described him as an aâ.
Maddox: Your sentiment actually is summed up by Los Angeles Times columnist Bill Plaschke.
Bill Plaschke: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the greatest least loved player in Laker history. Heâs just so distant. So hard to embrace. It is sad, sad to me. Heâs gotten more affectionate as the years have gone on, but you can just tell at Laker games, when someone, one of the former Lakers, walks into the house, what the cheers are like. They see James Worthy, they go crazy. They see Coop, they go crazy. They see Magic, they go crazy. They see Kareem, ehhhhh. Itâs really sad. And thatâs the narrative that has been written for him.
Heâs brilliant. Think about it. Heâs, statistic-wise, heâs the best Laker ever. Yet would somebody even say heâs a top five Laker of all time? I donât know, because of his popularity. Thatâs how I think heâll be remembered here: as kind of aloof, brilliant, bold, strong and very unembraceable.
Brennan: Itâs interesting because the conversations that weâve had with people that weâve interviewed for the podcast have tended to focus on the outside perception of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and I think maybe what weâre trying to add in this episode is a little bit more of, like, âWhat would Kareem say?â
A lot of the discomfort he felt wasnât just not being comfortable with being famous â although that may be the case â but being uncomfortable, having to walk this line between being this star NBA player and being someone who had real and legitimate objections to the way that American domestic and foreign policy was going and the way that most professional sports tried to skirt or avoid that. Kareem would be more in the category of Muhammad Ali or, say, Spencer Haywood, who stood up to the NBA in order to get drafted straight out of high school.
Brennan: Rachel Laws Myers, the author of âRace and Sportsâ and an expert in this subject, talked to us about this.
Rachel Laws Myers: He was too political. When you think about sort of this pre-Kareem or like Kareem as sort of the measure bar, you see a lot more athletes that had this kind of solidarity and knowledge of, of those who came before them, you know, whether it was, you know, Wilma Rudolph and Jesse Owens and Muhammad Ali and the fight and the fight and the fight.
Brennan: So how do you find someone who can shine a light on one of the most elusive, misunderstood and righteous figures in NBA history? Thatâs coming up right after the break.
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Maddox: Welcome back. Matt, so, I think the search for an actor that could play Kareem Abdul-Jabbar kind of represents what itâs like to be Kareem Abdul-Jabbar himself, if that makes sense.
Brennan: Can you elaborate on this idea? âCause I like it, but I donât have any idea where youâre going with it yet.
Maddox: Thatâs fine. Listen to âWinning Timeâ co-creator Jim Hecht describe his relief when the team finally found Solomon Hughes, whoâs the actor who plays Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Jim Hecht: Itâs just, itâs so lucky. Like how do you find a guy whoâs like 7 foot, he played college basketball, whoâs also a professor, you know, at a major university. And by the way, also just one of the best people Iâve ever met, like, you could not find a nicer guy on the planet.
Brennan: Solomon Hughes grew up in Southern California.
Solomon Hughes: I lived in Riverside, and Riverside is approximately an hour outside of L.A., during the era of â80s, during the Lakers dominance, so we were big fans as a family. Watched them pretty religiously on television. And Kareem was the literal and figurative center of our appreciation for the team because of his history. Because of just how he did â the contributions heâs made to the world. The way heâs stood up for the oppressed and how he always was resistant to this idea of being boxed into just being a basketball player.
Maddox: And thatâs kind of why Solomon is sort of uniquely qualified to play the role of Kareem. Heâs always thought of himself as more than just a basketball player.
Hughes: I feel like I had this experience when I played basketball, where I was often told by coaches that I didnât love the game to the point where I only thought about the game.
Brennan: Hughes has a PhD in education and has been a professor at both Duke and Stanford. Itâs a pretty legitimate resume. As a former academic, I can tell you that that is an enviable resume.
Maddox: Yeah. And he was fascinated by some of the more complex parts of Kareemâs story.
Hughes: Every time I learned something new about him, I feel it, it just crystallizes that this man is one of the most fascinating people in the history of this country. Just thinking about just the width and the breadth of how he has contributed yet as a writer, as a spokesperson, as an activist.
His book âGiant Steps,â his autobiography, thatâs one of the first big books that I read as a kid growing up, right alongside the autobiography of Malcolm X. I think Kareem has written like 14 books? Thereâs books where heâs talking about history, Black history. So I wanted to read what he wrote about. I was also interested in the things that he was interested in.
So obviously if youâre a fan of Kareemâs, you know that jazz music is really central to who he is as a person. And he had this famous collection of jazz albums. And the fact that he knew Thelonious Monk when he was coming of age in New York, itâs like, what?
I always joke that if thatâs the one thing Kareem could brag about, he has the most interesting story at every cocktail party he goes to, but then heâs also a six-time MVP, you know, an NBA champion, a jazz aficionado, a writer, just such a complex, complex figure, such a fascinating and influential figure. So I wanted to learn about what he said about himself. I wanted to learn about the ecosystems that he came up within. So reading about New York, especially in that era, was important to me.
READ MORE >>> Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: Remembering Central Avenue, L.A.âs jazz oasis
Brennan: But Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was operating in a culture that made it uncomfortable for him to embrace that complexity, as a Black man in America in the 1960s and 1970s and as someone who spent his entire adult life in the spotlight.
Hughes: I mean, there were so many different things that were going on. Itâs like, when you think about sportswriters, especially in that era, right? Not many sportswriters looked like him. So heâs interacting with these journalists who kind of see him from a distance.
Right. And the reality is like, thereâs â especially in that era, right? â the backdrop that racism, etc., is to so many of these different conversations.
You talk about the hyper-visibility of being someone like Kareem. You have these political perspectives that make you somewhat of an outlier. Youâre also 7-feet-2. And so just this idea of how to exist in this space where everything you say is scrutinized, where you ultimately, you know, your vision for this planet, for this world, is that people get along and that people can enjoy a life of equity.
Maddox: Solomon Hughes talked about how Abdul-Jabbar prioritized his beliefs above his basketball career and above his own personal gain, even before he was an established pro.
Hughes: When you think about the decision that Kareem made when he went to the Cleveland summit as a sophomore in college to essentially support Muhammad Ali and his protesting the Vietnam War â the risk involved in that, right? I mean, itâs just such a profound amount of risk. Especially as this is the era where the commercial opportunities, right? The brand opportunities are starting to come together for athletes. And the fact that he went and was really frontline in this conversation.
Maddox: Matt, I came across a story about Kareem that illustrates this point almost perfectly.
So when Kareem was turning pro, he had two offers, one from the Milwaukee Bucks, one from the Brooklyn Nets. And heâs told both teams that he was only going to take one offer. And when they did make their offers and he chose Milwaukee, Brooklyn made a counteroffer that was like double the money and offered him 5% of the Brooklyn Nets franchise. And Kareem turned it down and kind of scolded the ABAâs commissioner at the time because, he said, this is not a respectable way to do business.
Brennan: So weâre talking about someone who turns down what must now be worth in the tens, or even hundreds of millions of dollars in order to protect his integrity. And this is not because of some kind of external system of rules, but because of a rule that he imposed on the negotiation process himself.
Itâs interesting: I think talking about his business acumen and this moment of the leagues merging leads to an important broader point because Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was the leagueâs biggest star at this transitional moment that weâve been talking about all season. In the league, in the culture, in business, in American politics. And until you unpack all of those, you canât really know Kareem either â which is what weâre going to get to right after this break.
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Maddox: Welcome back.
Brennan: You know, Kareem, it occurs to me that the more you learn about Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and his long career, the more likely you are to reconsider your preconceived notions about him.
Maddox: OK, why do you say that?
Brennan: Jim Hecht told us a story that I think sort of gets at this.
Hecht: He did tell people to eff off, you know, when they asked for autographs. I, as a kid, had a run-in with Kareem where, as my dad tells it, when I was standing outside the Forum and waiting for an autograph. Kareem was basically not going to stop. And I basically remember seeing knees come at me and my dad lifting me out of the way. And he didnât love, didnât seem to have a great love for fans or the media or any of those people. And, so, not only does Solomon bring a lot to it, but our writers, I think, really dug in beyond that surface level of Kareem and what people know and see.
Brennan: In âShowtime,â the book on which âWinning Timeâ is based, Jeff Pearlman says some things â like that Kareem hates white people â that probably paint with too broad of a brush. But he also includes stories that you might not know about Kareem. Like at one point his house burned down. At one point his manager fleeced him of a bunch of money. He had a coach call him a racial slur when he was in high school. You start to get a sense of someone who had been wounded enough times to justify their self-protective measures.
READ MORE >>> $55-million action alleges financial mismanagement: Abdul-Jabbar sues former manager
Maddox: Yeah. And I think Jeff Pearlman when he wrote âShowtime,â probably leaned too hard into that mean image of Abdul-Jabbar. But since, it seems like heâs kind of softened a little bit.
Pearlman: I almost feel like I was a little too hard on him in the book. That guy was a museum piece from the time he was very young, and everywhere he walked, [people said,] âHowâs the weather up there? Howâs the weather up there? Whatâs it like up there?â And after a while you just want to start ignoring people.
So itâs a classic example, especially with the Black athlete being labeled as brooding and moody. And why is he always scowling? The truth of the matter is he was just tired of people asking him whatâs the weather like up there and staring at him all the time.
And then of course he changes his name from Lew Alcindor to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar while heâs in Milwaukee. Everyone whoâs white and in the NBA discourages him from doing so. A lot of people refuse to call him Kareem Abdul-Jabbar; they still call him Lew Alcindor, just like Muhammad Ali got that with Cassius Clay. And he just built up this wall of distrust. And again, I think I was too hard on him, because if you really think about it, it makes sense.
Maddox: âWinning Timeâ picks up when Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is 32 years old. And to this point in his life, heâd really actually been through a lot. In 1967, Abdul-Jabbar sat alongside Jim Brown, Muhammad Ali and Bill Russell to support Muhammad Ali as he was protesting being drafted to the Vietnam War. At the time, Abdul Jabbar was just 20 years old. And the next year was 1968 and thatâs when he refused a spot on the U.S. Olympic team, which is a guaranteed gold medal, especially with him on the team. And he refused that spot because he was protesting the treatment of Black people in America.
So on the one hand, Abdul-Jabbar clearly considers himself as coming from this long line of powerful civil rights activists who are also athletes at the top of their professional sports.
Brennan: And on the other hand, he has to watch as a new generation of players comes in and maybe benefits from some of the doors that heâs opened.
Maddox: Thatâs something that Rachel Laws Myers talks about further:
Myers: And then you kind of get to â80s into â90s, and you start, you see O.J. Simpson and you see Michael Jordan and you start to see this booming profitability off of not being political. Iâve always seen Kareem more of as this serious, really kind of wise man who has always had, I think, this kind of political lens. Heâs written that he was really influenced by the leaders of the â50s and the â60s, the Muhammad Ali, the Malcolm X.
Thereâs something to be said about the real choice, and kind of act of bravery of putting it on the line and being willing to sacrifice â even with Tommie Smith and John Carlos in the â68 Olympics, right? Stripped of medals, all of this, etc. Fast-forward, right, theyâre being honored in the athletic hall of fame and, like, [Smith and Carlos are hearing] âweâre so sorryâ and âour mistakes.â
And then also the very real, again, choice when youâre faced with, âHey, hereâs some money for this or this, that, and the third,â or âHereâs this opportunity. And if youâd like this opportunity, weâre going to set some parameters on how youâre going to engage. Right. And that might be, youâre not going to talk about the political situation, right? Youâre youâre not gonna mention X, Y and Z.â
MB: âWinning Timeâ highlights this generational divide when Spencer Haywood goes to visit Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at his house and talks about the tension that has arisen between the sort of two factions here.
[âWinning Timeâ clip: Spencer Haywood character: I saw his face when he was hugging you, hanging off your neck like a damn koala bear.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar character: You know I canât dig the clown show, the dancing and grinning for the crowd.
Haywood character: So you mad âcause he happy.
Abdul-Jabbar character: You know itâs more than that. When we came up, we put it on ourselves to stand for something more. We took the boos. We took the hate. Black man, you took the league to the Supreme Court. It was a racist-ass rule, and you made a difference.]
Brennan: How the culture was changing under Kareem Abdul Jabbarâs feet informed how the writers of âWinning Timeâ sort of shaped his character in the show, according to Jim Hecht.
Hecht: And now he comes into Los Angeles in the â80s and all of a sudden, itâs just about like, what color BMW do you have? If youâre standing there in Los Angeles in 1980 on the verge of the Reagan revolution and you open the paper and it really did, like, he talked about âmake America great again,â that has to be so hugely disappointing. I can understand why youâd have some reticence about dealing with people in that culture at all.
Maddox: I just feel like people donât know what to make of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Like, they think heâs moody and broody, but also brilliant. And they understand where he comes from and they donât judge him for how he interacts with the public.
Brennan: I mean, the thing that occurs to me that youâre kind of dancing around is the difference between being respected and being loved.
Maddox: Yeah.
Brennan: The way that people talk about Kareem Abdul-Jabbar comes from a place of respect. Itâs sort of logic based. Itâs a brain feeling.
Maddox: Yeah.
Brennan: Whereas the way that people talk about Magic is love. Itâs like a heart feeling.
Maddox: Hereâs Bill Plaschke again.
Plaschke: Heâs a brilliant pioneer, and such integrity. Such strength. All heâs been through â his fight for social justice. He wrote a story for our paper that just got a million views and people couldnât get enough of it. Canât get enough of his wisdom, but he never had the magnetism.
Maddox: The sports world doesnât seem to be giving Kareem Abdul-Jabbar his due, but his social justice work and his lifeâs mission have been recognized. In 2012, he was selected by then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to be a U.S. global cultural ambassador. And then in 2016, President Barack Obama awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. So itâs like, his impact is stronger off the court, despite being the best scorer that the NBA has ever seen.
Brennan: So I think the argument that weâre making then is that Kareem Abdul-Jabbarâs really important political advocacy work over the years, and his interest in culture, has actually unfairly taken him out of the GOAT conversation.
Maddox: Thatâs what it feels like. Or am I off there?
Brennan: Uh, well, Iâm not having the GOAT conversation regularly in my day-to-day life, so I donât really know.
It occurs to me that both Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson have produced major docu-series about their own careers. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar has produced docu-series about major Black historical figures. Like thatâs a very distinct approach to oneâs sort of cultural power in the world. And I donât think you have to make kind of a moral judgment on one side or the other about that approach. But I think that contrast is telling.
For someone who doesnât know basketball very well, there were two players in this story who I knew their names going in, and I would recognize those names by first name alone: Magic and Kareem. And the one who I feel like I really didnât have a good understanding of until watching the show and talking to you about him is Kareem. Magic feels like more of a known quantity to me, maybe thatâs âcause he wears his heart on his sleeve a little bit more. Maybe thatâs because he was prominent in the slightly later era where I was paying a little more attention. Maybe itâs because of HIV diagnosis and the sort of life that heâs lived after his career. But to me, the fact that Kareem could be known by his first name alone and yet have very little known actually about him kind of says it all.
READ MORE >>> A last hurrah: For Abdul-Jabbar, a season of farewells will be capped today
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Maddox: Do you have a favorite actor of all time?
Brennan: Oh, God. Yeah. Probably, like, Cary Grant.
Maddox: Dude, Cary Grant?
Brennan: Yeah, why would â donât, donât say it like that. That is not a strange selection for favorite actor of all time.
Maddox: Do you know who Sean Connery is? Have you ever heard of Sean Connery?
Brennan: Heâs dashing, heâs funny, heâs completely charming. He was in a bunch of great movies. He could do drama. He could do comedy. He worked with all the great directors of his era.
Maddox: Was he ever Bond?
Brennan: No.
Maddox: So how could he be the greatest actor of all time if he was never Bond?
Brennan: I am going to shut off this Zoom if you donât stop. Cary Grant is basically like the proto Bond. He was Bond before Bond. He was that suave and sexy without Bond existing yet.
Maddox: See, but this is the generational difference, right? This is like, who was more dominant, Wilt Chamberlain or Shaq? Whoâs better, Cary Grant â but now youâve got Daniel Craig, I mean, that guyâŠ
Brennan: I thought you were talking about the generational difference between you and I âŠ
Maddox: Oh, no!
Brennan: ⊠and I was about to punch you through the screen. Iâm not that much older than you.
Maddox: I guess you could argue that Cary Grant â well, this is how these GOAT conversations go, you know?
Brennan: Yeah. Although I would say that the difference here, and what I think makes the sports one almost more interesting, is, like, statistics can give you a sense â or maybe itâs an illusion â of objectivity. Whereas like there isnât, I mean, I guess with an actor you could kind of compare who won the most Oscars, but as we have discovered, the Oscars are a flawed thing.
Maddox: Yeah. They have their issues, donât they?
Brennan: So there truly is no one-to-one comparison that you can make between actors. Itâs purely a heart-gut reaction.
Maddox: Totally. Yeah. No, totally.
Brennan: We have gone so far off the rails here.
Additional resources
Kareem Adbul-Jabbar, âCoach Wooden and Me: Our 50-Year Friendship On and Off the Courtâ (2017)
â and Peter Knobler, âGiant Steps: The Autobiography of Kareem Abdul-Jabbarâ (1983)
â and Mignon McCarthy, âKareemâ (1990)
â and Raymond Obstfeld, âBecoming Kareem: Growing Up On and Off the Courtâ (2017)
â and Raymond Obstfeld, âOn the Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissanceâ (2007)
â and Raymond Obstfeld, âWhat Color Is My World? The Lost History of African American Inventorsâ (2012)
â and Stephen Singular, âA Season on the Reservation: My Sojourn with the White Mountain Apachesâ (2000)
â and Alan Steinberg, âBlack Profiles in Courage: A Legacy of African-American Achievementâ (1996)
â and Anthony Walton, âBrothers in Arms: The Epic Story of the 761st Tank Battalion, World War IIâs Forgotten Heroesâ (2004)
Rachel Laws Myers, âRace and Sports: A Reference Handbookâ (2021)
Jeff Pearlman, âShowtime: Magic, Kareem, Riley, and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty of the 1980sâ (2013)
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