Latest
Did we just watch the end of an NBA era in real time?
I’m not a big fan of the NBA.
Really, I haven’t been a fan in quite some time (and apparently, I’m not alone).
It wasn’t always that way, though. I was a diehard Miami Heat fan in my younger years and remember exactly where I was when LeBron James announced he was “taking his talents to South Beach.”
But recently – probably right around COVID – I haven’t had much of a craving to watch NBA basketball.
I don’t even hate it, I’m just indifferent; I don’t care.
For some reason, though, I watched the clips from Friday night’s game between the Golden State Warriors and Phoenix Suns, and I could feel myself getting just a touch emotional.
Seeing three figures that have been so prominent in the NBA for the last decade in Steph Curry, Draymond Green, and head coach Steve Kerr embrace for what is perhaps the final time was a little bit of a gut punch.
When I was younger, I hated players like Kobe Bryant and Tom Brady, because they were all-time great players who didn’t play on my team.
It infuriated me to see players that played on teams I didn’t root for have success and even impede the good fortunes of my own teams.
However, I once had a family friend tell me that I should cherish watching guys like Brady and Bryant play, because I would miss them when they stopped playing.
I didn’t listen to him at the time, because I was a dumb kid who thought I knew everything, but he was spot on.
I often find myself watching Kobe highlights late at night when I’m bored, or I can’t fall asleep, which would be seen as an act of outright betrayal to my 17-year-old self, but I digress.
It feels much the same for the Splash Brothers era of the Golden State Warriors.
It already felt like the crew was on life support thanks to their past several seasons ending in April and one of said Splash Bros (Klay Thompson) being shipped off to Dallas, but this 24-second clip feels like watching the end of an NBA era in real time.
What makes it even more heartbreaking is hearing and reading what Kerr was saying to his two most loyal soldiers as the game clock wound down.
I get it. Steph was annoying the way he would chew his mouthguard and hit his stupid celebrations before the ball went in.
Draymond was a scumbag who probably had as many kicked scrotums to his name as he does All-Defensive team selections.
And Kerr, who is perhaps the most insufferable of them all, couldn’t go more than a week without injecting his coastal elitist political leanings into a press conference for a game where grown men get paid nine-figures to throw an orange ball into a hoop.
But I still feel some weird longing towards their era of dominance.
Maybe it’s Stockholm Syndrome. I don’t know.
Whatever it is, though (likely nostalgia), I know I will miss watching these guys play basketball.
From the way Curry revolutionized the game with his ability to warp the dimensions of the court and hit shots from anywhere, to their 73-9 season breaking the record for most regular season wins, the 2010s Warriors have earned their place in the history of the NBA.
I just hope you all appreciated them while they were at the height of their powers.
You didn’t have to like them. Hell, you likely hated them at some point.
But you have to respect them.
Latest
Eric Swalwell cameo in ‘Jury Duty: Company Retreat’ raises eyebrows following misconduct claims
A very brief cameo from former Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., in Prime Video’s “Jury Duty: Company Retreat” is taking some viewers by surprise following sexual misconduct and harassment allegations that prompted his resignation.
“That’s wild,” one user wrote on X, saying she didn’t realize the former congressman, who she called “disgraced,” had made an appearance as an instructor on the show.
On Threads, one user described seeing Swalwell on the show as “kinda uncomfortable.”
Another, responding to someone who had questioned why no one had raised concerns about Swalwell’s appearance, said they were happy that his airtime was so “clipped.”
BILL MAHER CALLS ERIC SWALWELL A ‘F—ING CREEP,’ SAYS HE ‘NEVER LIKED’ THE DISGRACED DEMOCRAT
According to the entertainment news platform Decider, Swalwell’s appearance came around 18 minutes into Episode 8 of “Company Retreat.”
None of the seminar Swalwell is delivering appears in the episode, but he does appear in front of the cast and asks if anyone has questions, the outlet added.
After calling on one character who asks, “Can you speak on the corrosive influence of money in politics?” Swalwell put his hands in his pockets and lets out a sigh.
ANGER SWELLS AS SWALWELL’S ‘OPEN SECRET’ WITH WOMEN WENT UNREPORTED FOR YEARS
His full response was said to have been cut for time.
The show’s filming concluded approximately two years before recent allegations emerged against Swalwell, Decider stated.
Amazon did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
BROADCAST BIAS: MAJOR MEDIA IGNORED SWALWELL SCANDAL UNTIL DEMOCRATS WANTED HIM GONE
Swalwell’s scant appearance became a point of conversation as the former congressman faces a slew of sexual misconduct and harassment allegations from multiple women who recently came forward to recount their experiences.
Following the allegations, Swalwell suspended his campaign for California governor and resigned from his position in Congress.
While he has denied the allegations of misconduct, he has admitted to making mistakes in the past.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE
“I am deeply sorry to my family, staff, and constituents for mistakes in judgment I’ve made in my past,” Swalwell said in a statement announcing his resignation.
“I will fight the serious, false allegations made against me. However, I must take responsibility and ownership for the mistakes I did make.”
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is investigating the multiple allegations against Swalwell, a source familiar with the matter confirmed to Fox News Digital.
District attorneys for both Los Angeles and New York have also launched their own respective investigations.
Latest
Noah Wyle faces woke fandom meltdown over patient safety in ‘The Pitt’ finale
The season finale of HBO’s medical drama “The Pitt” has sparked a divide among viewers, pitting the show’s gritty medical realism against a vocal online fanbase that is calling the latest plot points discriminatory.
The drama has tackled controversial storylines in previous episodes, but it now faces criticism from viewers on social media who argue the show’s focus on realism conflicts with expectations around diversity and inclusion.
At the center of the controversy is Hollywood veteran Noah Wyle, with some viewers calling his character’s focus on patient safety discriminatory and others directing criticism at the actor himself.
The season 2 finale saw months of tension culminate in a confrontation between Wyle’s character, Dr. Robby, and a female colleague who revealed she had been hiding a serious seizure disorder. When Wyle’s character argued she was unfit to run a high-pressure ER, some social media critics accused the show of ableism.
HBO MEDICAL DRAMA TARGETS ICE IN CONTROVERSIAL NEW HOSPITAL STORYLINE
“I just don’t understand why he’s so against disabled people being able to work when they’ve been cleared to do so,” read one post online.
However, other viewers took to X to defend the show, pointing to the high stakes of emergency medicine. One post with more than 1.2 million views warned about the danger of a doctor seizing while a patient is paralyzed for intubation.
Another viral post added: “It’s so funny that ‘The Pitt’ fandom is unironically like ‘it’s actually fine for an ER doctor to have uncontrolled seizures, it’s fine if it happens while she’s in someone’s chest cavity or intubating them, because of woke.’”
Criticism of Wyle has since grown, in part because he is an executive producer and helps write the show.
Some viewers have blurred the line between Wyle and his character in the wake of a recent GQ interview discussing the role.
“I made jokes [on set] this season where I’d get done yelling at somebody and say, ‘Someone bring me another woman to yell at!’” Wyle said of his character’s gruff relationship with female staff.
He clarified that his character is simply pushing colleagues to be better and that actors come to his set “not to be comfortable, but to work.” The comments left some X users upset.
One user on X wrote, “I honestly think Noah Wyle should quit the arts and become a manosphere streamer,” while another called the remarks “misogynistic, borderline abusive jokes about the women on set.”
The backlash has also extended to the departure of actress Supriya Ganesh, who played Dr. Mohan. Some fans accused Wyle of writing out a woman of color while keeping white male leads, despite the character’s season-long storyline about burnout.
Wyle has said the show aims to reflect the high-turnover reality of the medical field.
Wyle’s team did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Latest
New York radio host boycotting Atlanta rap music as Knicks face Hawks in NBA playoffs
The NBA playoffs hit different when the New York Knicks are involved.
The Knicks are in the conversation to represent the Eastern Conference for the first time since 1999, but first, they have to get through the Atlanta Hawks.
The Knicks and Hawks have had a bit of a rivalry since the 2021 postseason after Trae Young became a Knick killer and ultimate enemy.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
The squads will begin their series on Saturday at Madison Square Garden, but for New York radio host Kazeem Famuyide, the battle began several days ago.
Famuyide, a part of “Mornings with Mero” on the famed New York hip-hop station new Hot 97, said on Monday that his station “should play no Atlanta artists until the series is over.”
That means no Usher, Ludacris, T.I., Lil Baby, and numerous others.
“Day one of my Atlanta music protest starts today, we ain’t trying to hear NONE of that until the first round over lol,” Famuyide posted to X the following day.
The station went Atlanta-less on Monday, and Famuyide said the music was “still good and current.”
The Athletic noted that Famuyide said he wanted to “show some New York solidarity” on Friday’s show. Famuyike also co-hosts a podcast with Knicks legend Carmelo Anthony.
If Atlanta decides to hold up to the same protest, they’d be negating some of the greatest artists of all time, including The Notorious B.I.G, JAY-Z, Nas, and Fabolous.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani took part in the Knicks-Hawks rivalry earlier this week, placing blame on the aforementioned Young for expensive playoff tickets at the Garden. Young, however, no longer plays for the Hawks.
The Hawks defeated the Knicks in five games in their last playoff meeting. New York has the third seed in the conference, while Atlanta finished with the sixth.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
-
Latest4 days agoVance Leaves Meeting, Looks Straight Into Camera, Announces Stunning Arrest
-
News1 week agoAll Hell Breaks Loose On Fox When Jesse Watters Asks Fetterman One Question
-
News4 days agoNBC Stops LIVE Broadcast — Breaks Big Trump News
-
Latest1 week agoMelania Gets Huge Surprise 24 Hours After Making Epstein Announcement
-
News5 days agoFar Left Democrat ‘Squad’ Member LOSES — She’s Out
-
Latest4 days agoSupreme Curt Sides With Trump — He Can Remove The All
-
News4 days agoSwalwell Facing Jail Time After Sickening New Video Leaks
-
News2 days agoAdam Schiff Facing 30 Years In Prison After Bank Records Leak
