Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2020-06-29)

(Antfer) #1

Bloomberg Businessweek June 29, 2020


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investmentfundrunbyentrepreneurJasonStein.Jamesis
chairmanofSpringHill,andCarteris CEO.Joiningthemon
theboard,inadditiontoMurdochandGuggenheim’sScott
Minerd,areSerenaWilliams,ApolloGlobalManagement
co-founderMarcRowan,LiveNationEntertainmentInc.
CEO Michael Rapino,Boston RedSox ChairmanTom
Werner,andWachter.
CarterwasthreeyearsaheadofJames atSt.Vincent-
St. Mary High School in Akron. When the Cleveland Cavaliers
drafted James in 2003, Carter went to work at Nike full time.
“Growing up, that was my favorite company, and I thought
I loved it because of the shoes and sports,” Carter said in
February. “In reality, they told me amazing stories about the
athletes I cared about.”
He became James’s wingman in 2005. Their first major
project, The Decision, was a failure. In a spectacle aired live on
ESPN in July 2010, James announced—30 minutes in—that he
was leaving Cleveland and signing a free-agent contract with
the Miami Heat. “I’m gonna take my talents to South Beach,”
he said. The theatrics didn’t sit well; Cleveland fans who felt
betrayed burned his jersey. The sin was forgiven when he
returned to the Cavs in 2014 and broke the city’s half-century
championship drought two years later.
For many, the failure of The Decision validated suspicions
that Carter was just another star athlete’s friend. But, Carter
said, the fiasco helped him grow as a businessman. Even if their
approach had been off, the importance of owning your own
story, not just hawking someone else’s, wasn’t lost on Carter, or
James—or on anyone else in the NBA, for that matter. What was
underappreciated at the time was that The Decision ushered in
an era of player empowerment that’s spread to other sports,
as well as collegiate and high school athletics. There’s virtu-
ally no athlete who doesn’t feel emboldened to weigh in on just
about anything on social media and demand a semblance of
career control that would have been unheard of 20 years ago.
In 2014, Carter negotiated James’s deal with Nike, which
ultimately will pay him more than $1 billion. Wachter, who’s


advised Bono and Arnold Schwarzenegger, helped James and
Carter team up with Cannondale bikes and Beats Electronics,
a partnership that earned James more than $100 million when
Apple Inc. bought Beats for $3 billion in 2014, say people
familiar with the deal. And an arrangement to fold LRMR
Marketing & Branding, the firm that still handles James’s
endorsements, into Fenway Sports Management—owner of
the Boston Red Sox, the New England Sports Network, and
Liverpool Football Club—gave them equity in the English
Premier League. “Through all of that, they’ve just said, ‘We’re
going to do things our own way, and we’re going to write
our own tickets,’ ” Wachter says. SpringHill, he adds, is “ulti-
mately a manifestation of that.”
With those deals under way, Carter moved to L.A. in 2014
and turned his attention to media. He signed a production
deal with Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. that gave James
and him offices on the lot—on the fictional Wisteria Lane
from Desperate Housewives, the satirical epitome of White
suburban life.
Creating content that caters to the opposite of that is what
Carter, James, and their backers want to do. UC Regents Chief
Investment Officer Jagdeep Singh Bachher says: “This is not a
time to slow down. This a time to double down on what they’re
doing. There’s a need for leadership in the country, a need for
examples that are inspiring for the country, and a need for con-
tent to mobilize the country in the right direction.”
James has cited Muhammad Ali as a role model. “Everyone
was so fascinated about how great a boxer he was,” he said in
February. “I think that was the least thing in his mind. Every
day he was trying to figure out how to better the world. I think
80%, 90% of the people didn’t agree with anything that he
did back when he was doing it. But that didn’t stop him. He
stayed focused on his mission, and that’s what we’re talking
about. The mission.”
On the Zoom call, James praised NBA Commissioner
Adam Silver for encouraging players to speak up and for
using “the NBA shield to back us.” When asked about
the NFL’s treatment of Colin Kaepernick, the former San
Francisco 49ers quarterback who took a knee during the
national anthem to protest racial inequality and hasn’t
played in the NFL since 2016, he said, “We have not heard
that official apology to a man who basically sacrificed every-
thing for the better of this world.” (NFL Commissioner Roger
Goodell said in mid-June that he would “encourage” a team
to sign Kaepernick.)
If there’s pressure on SpringHill to rise to the occasion, the
founders are lucky that neither of them is new to expectations.
James, after all, was on the cover of Sports Illustrated when he
was a junior in high school. “I’m OK having that pressure of
my community and other Black communities across America
that look up to me and look to me for inspiration or for guid-
ance,” he said in our last interview. “It’s just my responsibility,
and I completely understand that. And so every day I leave my
home, or I wake up out of my bed, I understand that it’s not
PODCASTERS AT UNINTERRUPTED IN L.A. just about me. I’m representing so many people.” <BW>
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