March 29, 2009
The Incredible Drive Of LeBron James
60 Minutes Camera Catches A Spontaneous, Incredible Shot That "One-Take" James Makes Look Easy
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Play CBS Video Video LeBron Steve Kroft profiles Cavalier's superstar, LeBron James, who at only 24, is already among an elite handful of athletes who command tens of millions a year in playing and marketing fees.
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LeBron James (CBS)
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Photo Essay LeBron James "King James" was drafted No. 1 at age 18, quickly became NBA royalty.
LeBron James Documentary
In Fall 2009, Lionsgate will release a documentary titled "More Than A Game," chronicling how LeBron James and his teammates won a national championship title while in high school.
In Fall 2009, Lionsgate will release a documentary titled "More Than A Game," chronicling how LeBron James and his teammates won a national championship title while in high school.
According to no less an authority than the Harvard Business School, LeBron James is now the third-biggest name in the sports world, behind Tiger Woods and soccer star David Beckham, with earnings last year - on and off the court - of $40 million.
It already feels like he has been around for a long time, but he just turned 24 - a prodigy who's lived up to his hype
His team, the Cleveland Cavaliers, lists him as playing the position of small forward, which is a bit of a misnomer since he is big enough to be an NFL linebacker, only much quicker. He also wants to be the first billion dollar sports brand.
"What do people get when they buy into the LeBron James brand?" 60 Minutes correspondent Steve Kroft asked James.
"You wanna buy in?" he replied, laughing. "I don't know. I mean you get me. It's just - it's all real."
"You know, I'm just 6'9" and 260. And just so happen to be very good at playing the game of basketball," James told Kroft.
The Quicken Arena in downtown Cleveland is literally the house that LeBron James built and where the Cavaliers superstar puts on the hottest show in the NBA.
For his opening act, he tosses a handful of chalk in the air - in a ritual that's become his personal trademark. It's his sixth season as a pro, and so far, his best.
He has continued to elevate his game from passing, to shot blocking; from his outside game to defense. Some are now debating whether he will become the best all-around player ever.
But when James is coming at you on the court, don't bother to "debate" - just get out of his way.
But of all the weapons in James' basketball arsenal, he thinks the most powerful may be his brain.
Asked what the strongest part of his game is, James told Kroft, "The way I approach the game mentally. I think, team first. It allows me to succeed, it allows my team to succeed. Because I'm always thinking about, 'How can I help my teammates become better?' I've always approached the game that way, ever since, I mean, I was a kid."
It's an unusual answer for a big time professional athlete. But then James is a smart, well-grounded young family man who is raising two boys of his own with his longtime girlfriend. Loyalty and togetherness are the threads that have held together his life, most of which has been spent within a 40-mile radius of Cleveland.
He was born, raised and still lives in Akron; it used to be known as the rubber capital of the world before the plants closed and moved away. Today it's known as the home of LeBron James.
"How's Akron doing these days?" Kroft asked.
"Just maintainin' baby. It's always a struggle growing up in Akron.
But we maintanin'," he replied.
James told Kroft he lived on "every side" of town, moving many times.
They were not the greatest neighborhoods, and he quickly learned a lot about life and survival, growing up in impoverished circumstances without a father.
Asked if he ever got in trouble, James said, "Never."
"Why, do you think? Lord knows there were lots of temptations," Kroft asked.
"Oh, absolutely. I don't know. I never walked down that path - I don't know why. I think the man above and my mother just led me in the right direction," James explained.
He told Kroft he gives his mother credit for that. "She get all the credit in the world for helping me become the man who I am today. Yep."
His mother, Gloria James, was 16 and unmarried when she had LeBron, and when her mother died at age 42, their situation became dire.
"We had pressures as far as where the hell we gonna sleep at," she recalled. "You know, from night, day to day, night to night. How we gonna eat from day to day, night to night?"
When things would get really bad, she would send him off to live with friends, usually one of his basketball coaches. But she was never far away. "I didn't reside in a steady home at the time. And I wanted him to, attend school until I could make our living situation better," she told Kroft.
Asked if that turned out to be a good decision, Gloria James said, "You tell me. It turned out to be a great decision."
Produced by Harry Radliffe
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 22 CommentsI could be wrong, but such dialog would appear to be consistent with all the stories of the wonder boys that become young CEO's on the path to the American dream without any prior experience.
It's about image, "packaging" the athlete, having us identify with these outrageously and repulsively overpaid kids (24 years old) who play a game - A GAME! - who also happens to be in the shamefully narcissistic profession of entertainment. Look humble, say you're for the team, thank God for your physical gifts...these are all the catch phrases to buy into their image, because once you've come to believe that he's just like one of us, then we can be seduced to go out an buy into the "billion dollar brand of Lebron James." That's what he said, his goal is to become the first billion dollar sports icon.
Isn't that the same money-greedy attitude of Wall Street? What is about us that finds this sort of thing admirable?
Dont tell me it's a team game when NBA games get promoted as "Kobe vs. Lebron", ad nauseum.
I don't blame the kid. It's a heady, heady stuff, getting $500,000 - $1,000,000 checks every MONTH while many will never see that much in a life time. Who can blame him and all the hundreds of other delusional athletes who've come to see themselves above it all.
If there's a value to recession, it's the possibility we get back to what is really important.
David
has a great flair for comedy, it just comes so natural to him.As far as I'm concerned the
sky is the limit for LeBron. Everything he touches turns to gold. He's making a lot of people a lot of money. Wishing him everything he needs to make him happy.
First I want to say Lebron truly seems like a good guy. As another commenter pointed this out earlier, but his mom didn't exactly provide a stable childhood (drug/alcohol issues for her), so it is kinda amazing he turned out the gentleman he is now. His mom is just trash. That said, it is truly amazing how much he cares for her and refuses to blame her for anything. The story definitely should have focused on the true father figures/families in Lebron's life, like the coaches who took him in and looked over him...the people who actually taught him values.
Also, NancyJ, I really have no clue where you are getting at with your comment against anyone who is calling out the 'race card' friend. By making a comment as ignorant as that, it shows he clearly is in over his head. It's not exactly an attitude to make alot of friends in the business world. I just hope all the lawyers and real mba's Lebron hired are looking out for Lebron's best interests. Also, if having African American exec's was a must, it isn't that hard to go to any top law firm and have your pick of Ivy League educated ones. "Race Card" friend sounds like he never heard of a highly educated black man.
As cliched as this sounds, I think Lebron 'cares too much' about the family/friends that have been with him since he was a youth. I really hope he isn't taken down by these people....in some ways I think it would be cheaper for him to just pay all his hangers on 6 figure salaries to get out of his way.
The one part of the interview I disliked was when his long time friend/business partner played the race card. I do not care if you are black, white, Asian, Indian, any race or color you can think of, if you are handed a $100 million empire and you have never completed college or ran a business of your own, I will always say that is a bad decision. I hope they do succeed. They are very fortunate to get to hang on the coattails of Lebron. They are not an asset to Lebron right now, but hopefully with the opportunities they have been given, they can grow into an asset over time and I hope they lose that ?chip? on their shoulder.
I am a white male and a business man and I am not so ignorant to think that race does not exist. I know it does and I know it exists among all colors, races and religions. But when you are handed a high paying job for an entity worth $100 million, please do not cry about race.
Will be one of the all-time greats I think
Go for it, LeBron!
Steve Croft said that LeBron 'literally' built the Cav's arena. I didn't know LeBron was also a bricklayer. Is Steve Croft so stupid he doesn't know the difference between literal and figurative? Apparently.
What a genius.
And LeBron's friend *absolutely* played the race card, which says more about him than anything. Having an entourage is expensive (anyone remember MC Hammer?) white or black, and putting uneducated friends in charge of administering 10's of millions of dollars looks risky, and to gratuitously imply that any concern expressed by the NBA was because the friends were black is a joke. LeBron is black and the Cavs were OK paying him the money... they just didn't want him to get hosed by leeches. Lord knows it's happened before.
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