This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. Liberty has never been just a word to we Americans. It has guided every one of our endeavors for the past 250 years. And now it takes form in a new way.
The 2026 Semi-Quincentennial Coin and Metal Program from the United States Mint. It celebrates the founding ideals that have long shaped our coinage. Available one year only, this historic collection features new coin designs, limited edition releases, and reissues. Shop new official coins at usmint.gov forward slash semi-q. That's usmint.gov/slash S-E-M-I-Q.
This July 4th, come celebrate at America's Block Party, hosted by America 250. America's Block Party is a camp miss 4th of July concert happening at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Experience music performances by major artists, patriotic tributes, and the kickoff to Giving Forth, helping to make July 4th the largest day of giving in American history. It's more than just fireworks. Join this landmark celebration and get Your America's Block Party Tickets Now for $17.76 at America250.org/slash LA.
I turned off news altogether. I hate to say it, but I don't trust much of anything.
Alright. It's the rage bait. It feels like it's trying to divide people. If we got clear facts, maybe we could calm down a little. NBC News brings you clear reporting.
Let's meet at the facts. Let's move forward from there. NBC News reporting for America. What's up y'all? Summer's got a different tip-up.
Everything's a little looser, brighter. One plan turns into another. You hear something, you stay a little longer.
Next thing you know, you're somewhere you didn't plan to be. It's those in between moments. That's where the ideas hit. conversations stretch out, little memories sneak up on you.
Sometimes it's just about what's in your hand. that color. That chill, the new tropical butterfly refresher from Starbucks. guava and passion fruit flavors with ango pineapple flavored pearls. Yeah.
That feels like summer before you even taste it. Funny how one small stop becomes the best part of the day. Start your summer rhythm. with Starbucks. Try the new Tropical Butterfly Refresher from Starbucks.
Hi, it's Karen in Georgia from My Favorite Murder. We cruised around LA in the Hyundai Ionic 5 and dove into the fascinating life of actress and inventor Hedy Lamar. Want the full story? Take a listen. She starts dating Howard Hughes.
And in fact, she helps him design a faster plane.
So she finds the fastest bird and the fastest fish and sketches out a drawing of what the two would look like as a plane. And that becomes the plane that we know today. And he calls her a genius. Check out our new episode, Spotlighting Groundbreaking Innovators like Hedi Lamar and Billie Jean King. Presented by the Hyundai Ionic 5.
Goodbye. Uh And we return to our American stories. Founded in 1946, we consider the National Basketball Association, or the MBA, to be a cultural icon, but it certainly didn't start off that way. And it took the hiring of a man named Larry O'Brien to get it on the path. being a serious organization.
here with a story of the rise of the MBA as a business. is Pete Croato. Author of From Hang Time to Prime Time. Take it away, Pete. Uh The MBA in its early days in the nineteen forties, nineteen fifties.
was really a regional league. It was a league whose teams were based in the Midwest and the East Coast. The furthest team west was St. Louis.
So, it really was a regional league, and it was a league that. really struggled for mainstream acceptance. For years, it had trouble getting a favorable national television contract. For years, it played in arenas that really were Antiquated or run down, nowhere close to the entertainment mecca that we see today. It really was a second-tier professional league.
Baseball had always been America's game. Its roots were established for years and years and years. And the NFL had gained a foothold with television thanks to the 1958 NFL Championship game, which was the league's first overtime game. The NBA didn't really have anything like that. It was really an afterthought to college basketball, which was huge in the 1950s, and even to the Harlem Globetrotters.
In fact, NBA games typically were the previews or the first acts, so to speak, to Harlem Globetrotter games, to college basketball games, especially in New York City. And if you read player autobiographies or player biographies from the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, a lot of these players had second jobs. You know, they had other business interests. They weren't making exorbitant salaries. You know, now, if you sign a professional contract as a highly tattered rookie, With any of the four major sports, you're pretty much set for life.
Back then, that wasn't the case.
So the NBA in the 1940s, 50s, even into the 1960s was a league that was looking for relevance. It was looking for a foothold into America's sporting culture. The NBA needed to make a leap to become legitimate. And by putting Larry O'Brien in that position. It is the first step towards saying, hey, we're a business.
We mean business. Larry O'Brien. was A major fixture in democratic national politics. He was somebody who, as time goes on, I think we've forgotten just what a political figure he was in the 1950s, into the early 1970s. Larry O'Brien was part of JFK's Irish Mafia.
He basically helped JFK get to the White House. He was on the plane coming back from Dallas after JFK was assassinated. After that, he was a member of Linda B. Johnson's cabinet. He was postmaster general.
And then after that, he was the chairman of the Democratic National Committee for two terms. He was on the cover of Time magazine.
So he was somebody who was a major, major figure in national politics. But Larry O'Brien, by the time the mid-1970s rolled around, He had become a relic. He's retired for the most part. He is somebody who is really looking for something to do. And when J.
Walter Kennedy decides that he's had enough being the NBA's commissioner, He looks to Lyo Bryan. He reaches out to Lyo Bryan specifically to ask him to take over. And Lyle O'Brien says no, because. Here's the thing.
Now, when someone is elected to be the commissioner of a sports league, That is a career pinnacle. For Roger Goodell at the NFL, for Rob Manfred at Major League Baseball, Gary Bettman at the NHL, that is a pinnacle. When you die, they lead your obituary with the fact that you are the commissioner of the NHL or Major League Baseball. For Ly O'Brien, This was a step down.
So the NBA really courted him because for two reasons. First, They knew that he was a basketball fan because he was someone who grew up watching the Celtics. He had seasoned tickets to the Knicks. But Larry Byron was also somebody who was going to give the league instant credibility. And the NBA ultimately won Ly O'Brien over after numerous attempts.
Because They convinced him: look, you'll have absolute power here. This isn't going to be a real figurehead position. You'll actually be able to do things here. You'll be able to make decisions and carry out policy. You'll have impact.
And his election as commissioner, his hiring as commissioner, was significant for two reasons. First. He gives the NBA, as I mentioned before, instant credibility. This is a league that was really struggling for national relevance. It was struggling to become a player.
And Larry O'Brien gave the NBA cache. It was headline news that he was the NBA commissioner. It made people take notice. There's that, and the second thing is, is that He brings order to the NBA. The heads of the NBA before Larry O'Brien, Maurice Potiloff, and J.
Walter Kennedy. They came of age with the NBA. They were ingrained in the NBA. They didn't have outside influence. And Larry O'Brien came in, and he was not associated with the NBA.
He didn't have allegiances. He was somebody who just wanted what was best for the NBA.
So he came in with no biases, he was his own man. And he also had the ability, the ability to manage. Larry O'Brien ran the best meetings. And that may not sound like much. But you have to understand that meetings before in the 50s and 60s were contentious, bickering affairs, kind of like a Thanksgiving dinner with different political opinions being bandied back and forth.
So Larry O'Brien coming in and just saying, look, this is what we're doing. We're just going to get it down to brass tacks. It doesn't sound like much. But for a league that couldn't get out of its own way, it was huge. This really comes across in the NBA's absorption of the ABA, the American Basketball Association, because Larry O'Brien.
You know Just wanted to get the deal done. And when the two leagues were meeting to try and figure out how to, what teams to absorb and what money should change hands, you know, the meetings are going on and on in 1976. In the closing days, Lara Braun just says to the owners, Look. Up or down, meaning we can stay here and bicker about these contracts, or you can take the money, get into a plane, cash your checks. And make a small fortune before the days end.
And for the ABA, which had a lot of bankrupt owners and financially struggling owners. Gladiator O'Brien was able to just distill their problem into a simple question: up or down. And that's what the NBA needed. The NBA needed someone to just get down to the brass tax of running a business. But one of his greatest gifts.
Wasn't so much policy he enacted or edicts that he handed down, though he did his fair share. What Larry O'Brien did was he recognized talent. any Hideliki. And one thing that he did is that he hired A young lawyer. who was outside counsel for the NBA.
named David Stern, and he bought him in as his second in command. And David Stern Later went on to become the MA commissioner, and in my mind, is the most influential sports commissioner of the last 50 years.
So, Larry O'Brien's ability to recognize David Stern as somebody who could do the dirty work, who could get to know the GMs and the team owners and the union representatives. Having David Stern clear a path and basically get a five-year start. To become the commissioner of the NBA. That was Larry O'Brien's greatest legacy. And I think that's why.
He is one of the most overlooked figures in the rise of the NBA. And we're listening to Pete Croato telling the story of the NBA. And what's so interesting about this take is he's looking at it from a business angle. No business of sports. No sports.
No business of entertainment. No entertainment. In the 40s and 50s, well, the league didn't extend past St. Louis.
Good luck with the TV contract. In the old days, NBA players had summer job. And then comes Larry O'Brien, and then comes David Stern, his second in command. When we come back, More of the remarkable story of the NBA with Pete Proato. author of From Hang Time to Primetime.
Here on Our American Story. Liberty has never been just a word to we Americans. It has guided every one of our endeavors for the past 250 years. And now it takes form in a new way. The 2026 Semi-Quincentennial Coin and Metal Program from the United States Mint.
It celebrates the founding ideals that have long shaped our coinage. Available one year only, this historic collection features new coin designs, limited edition releases, and reissues. Shop new official coins at usmint.gov forward slash semi-q. That's usmint.gov. This July 4th, come celebrate at America's Block Party, hosted by America 250.
America's Block Party is a camp miss 4th of July concert happening at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Experience music performances by major artists, patriotic tributes, and the kickoff to Giving Forth, helping to make July 4th the largest day of giving in American history. It's more than just fireworks. Join this landmark celebration and get your America's Block Party tickets now for $17.76 at America250.org/slash LA. Hi, it's Karen in Georgia from My Favorite Murder.
We cruised around LA in the Hyundai Ionic 5 and dove into the fascinating life of actress and inventor Hedi Lamar. Want the full story? Take a listen. Hetty, she starts dating Howard Hughes, the aviation tycoon. Do you know a lot about him?
I mean, I watch The Aviator, so I know everything Leonardo DiCaprio has allowed me to know about him, but incredible innovator. Right. She says he's a, quote, very strange man. Oh. But they do get along really well.
Give us exams they know. They do. get along intellectually. And in fact, she helps him design a faster plane.
She takes a look at what he's designed. It's got these square wings, and she's like, that doesn't make sense. And so she finds the fastest bird and the fastest fish and sketches out a drawing of like what the two would look like as a plane. And that becomes the plane that we know today. And he calls her a genius.
Check out our new episode, Spotlight and Groundbreaking Innovators like Hedi Lamar and Billie Jean King. Presented by the Hyundai Ionic 5. Goodbye. Let's talk about modern home shopping. It's sort of become a fun side hobby, right?
Scrolling listings at night, dreaming about kitchens you've never seen or back yards you haven't even stepped foot in, all from the comfort of pretty much anywhere. Redfin knows a lot of people like you want to own, but are stuck in this browsing mode loop. That's where Redfin flips the script. With listings that update within minutes and tours you can book right from the Redfin app, you can see your dream home the moment it appears.
Now, liking a listing is easy, but actually landing it, that's where Redfin comes in. Redfin has over 2,200 agents with local expertise. And Redfin agents close twice as many deals as other agents. That means they want to help you win, not just Windows Shop. Redfin is built to help you go from just looking to wait, this could actually be home.
So become the newest neighbor on the block. Visit Redfin.com to start finding and start owning. That's redfin.com. I turned off news altogether. I hate to say it, but I don't trust much of anything.
Alright. It's the rage bait. It feels like it's trying to divide people. If we got clear facts, maybe we can calm down a little. NBC News brings you clear reporting.
Let's meet at the facts. Let's move forward from there. NBC News reporting for America. And we return to our American stories and the story of the NBA. When we last left off, NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien had hired a young lawyer by the name of David Stern to be his second in command.
And Stern himself would soon take over Larry's job. Changing the MBA. Forever. Here again is Pete Croato. Lighterbaum was one of those bosses where he came in at 9 o'clock.
He went to his office, shut the door, and you saw him at five o'clock. David Stern was everywhere. He was at the arenas, he was talking to the GMs, he was talking to the press, he was talking to the networks that aired NBA games.
So every week, David Stern would go on a conference call with the broadcast crew at USA Network, the cable station that aired NBA games. And there's one meeting where David Cern says, look guys, focus on the stars. Don't worry about the records. Don't worry about who's winning or who's losing. Focus on the stars.
If it's a terrible matchup, let's say the Clippers are playing the Celtics, let's say. Focus on John Havelchuk, focus on Dave Cowans. They're folks that people know. And that to me was David Stern's genius, was that he was able to recognize that to generate interest. He had to identify ways for Joe and Jane Public to watch a basketball game beyond.
Two minutes. And that was with stars. That was with Magic Johnson and Larry Bird and Julius Irving. Focus on them. And that star system is what sustained the NBA and what sustains it to this day.
That is David Cern's baby. And it comes about in a number of ways. First, is the establishment of NBA Entertainment, which is what David Stern creates.
So NBA Entertainment becomes this sort of archive. of game footage. and player interviews. And all this material gets culled into halftime features and advertisements that extol the best and brightest of the NBA. Later on, NBA Entertainment takes all this footage that they've stored from Games and whatnot, and they turn that into videos highlighting.
players.
So you have a Michael Jordan video cassette, you have a Magda Johnson video cassette, you have a Larry Bird video cassette. David Stern. partners with the television stations, specifically with CBS. and comes up with a game plan. Each game was going to have at least two players.
Larry Burns. Remap Dojabar. Julia Serving. Magic Johnson. Because that's who the casual fans wanted to see.
They wanted to see stars. Uh So you have MBA Entertainment, you have the television covered. and you also have MBA properties. Which? again, is a David Stern-led development.
which focuses on apparel. that focuses on players. players' faces, what they do. You know, it's not just getting a 76ers t-shirt, it's getting a Julius Irving t-shirt, it's getting a Charles Barkley t-shirt, it's getting a Magic Johnson hat or a Magic Johnson sweatshirt.
So it is a multi-pronged attack that David Stern leads. and it all comes down to the players. Because Think of it this way. Kids I think they get their sports teams from their parents, right? Or from their grandparents, or from their family, or from allegiances in town.
If you are somebody who's getting into the MBA, as a lone wolf like I was. I had parents who were not particularly, not really sports fans. You know, my parents didn't know what hand a baseball club went on. You're gonna gravitate toward players, then go toward a team. And if you know the players through commercials, if you highlight their best attributes like Vader Johnson's smile or Larry Bird's competitiveness.
you are going to win people over. And it also helps if you work with a television network like CBS and CBS Sports. that knows how to frame the games as television dramas. Wow. When you have Magic versus Larry.
You're not just focusing on these two great players, you're focusing on the two sterling franchises of the NBA and the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers. You're focusing on East versus West. and you're turning all those components into a narrative That Anybody can get behind me.
So the NBA Finals, any NBA game, isn't just a sporting event. that becomes an episode of television. where The same way that if you watch a television pilot, you get the characters, you get the storyline, and you get a happy ending or an ending. The same thing happens with NBA games on CPS. You get a beginning, middle, and end.
You get a flashy introduction. You're caught up to speed with where things are. And then you get a game that is filmed almost like a movie with quick cuts and close-ups. and reaction shots. You get personality.
Into the game. And that personality bleeds through every product, whether it's a VHS tape, whether it's a t-shirt. Doesn't matter what it is. Because as David Stern said, It's not what people think about you. It's how they feel about you.
That is The mantra of the MBA. It is an emotional league. And that is the lifeline. For the NBA's story for its success, over the past 35, 40 years. But Marvin Gaye's national anthem at the 1983 NBA All-Star Game in Los Angeles, to me, Is A pivotal point in the NBA's history because that's when the NBA became the world's cool sport.
You have to remember that for the longest time. The National Anthem was performed in a very straight-ahead fashion. But Marvin Gaye's national anthem comes at the right time. It's when hip-hop is making its ways into the American culture. And it's also a major cultural figure in Marvin Gaye, who's Motown and Sexual Healing.
singing the song and it's also the sign that the NBA wasn't going to play by the rules of the NFL. of Major League Baseball, it was going to do its own thing. Because here was an unabashedly African-American version of that song that reflected who was on the court. You had a majority of African-American players playing, but it also represented. what you saw on the court in terms of the style of play.
That natural anthem, if anyone hasn't heard it. Is a soulful, stirring rendition that incorporates RB, gospel. He's singing it over a pre-recorded beat. It reflected what the MBA was and what it could be. It was a cruel sport.
It wasn't a sport for your mom and your dad and your grandma and your grandpa. It was a sport. That was for the cool kids at the table, for the teenagers, for the young Americans. Who wanted something different, that wanted something that was hip, that belonged to them? And that national anthem set the stage for everything that happened afterward in the NBA's cultural history because it was defiantly non-traditional.
But in a way, that was entertaining and fun and exciting and different. And for any Young sports fan who growing up in that era and afterward. That's what the NBA represented when you first saw a basketball team. It represented something different. The players looked different, they carried themselves in a different way, the game was filmed differently, the players did things differently, they talked differently.
That anthem also changed the way the NBA organized its all-star games. It became more than just. East versus West, your best versus my best. It also became What can we do? to give the audience the best time possible.
So Marvin Gaye. in a lot of ways. to launch A business revolution. And you've been listening to Pete Croato tell a heck of a story about the NBA. And we're huge hoops fans in my house.
Heck, when I was a kid, I did Bobby Knights Camp, captain of my high school basketball team, twice. and to hear this story told so well. By someone like Pete, well, it brings back a lot of memories. When we come back, more of Pete Corrado on the story of not only Larry O'Brien, but how David Stern. helped turn the MBA.
into the cool game. the cool thing in American culture. Liberty has never been just a word to we Americans. It has guided every one of our endeavors for the past 250 years. And now it takes form in a new way.
The 2026 Semi-Quincentennial Coin and Metal Program from the United States Mint. It celebrates the founding ideals that have long shaped our coinage. Available one year only, this historic collection features new coin designs, limited edition releases, and reissues. Shop new official coins at usmint.gov forward slash semi-q. That's usmint.gov/slash S-E-M-I-Q.
This July 4th, come celebrate at America's Block Party, hosted by America 250. America's Block Party is a camp miss 4th of July concert happening at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Experience music performances by major artists, patriotic tributes, and the kickoff to Giving Forth, helping to make July 4th the largest day of giving in American history. It's more than just fireworks. Join this landmark celebration and get your America's Block Party Tickets Now for $17.76 at America250.org/slash LA.
Hi, it's Karen in Georgia from My Favorite Murder. We cruised around LA in the Hyundai Ionic 5 and dove into the fascinating life of actress and inventor Hedi Lamar. Want the full story? Take a listen. Hedy, she starts dating Howard Hughes, the aviation tycoon.
Do you know a lot about him? I mean, I watch The Aviator, so I know everything Leonardo DiCaprio has allowed me to know about him, but incredible innovator. Right. She says he's a, quote, very strange man. Oh.
But they do get along really well. Give us examples. I know. They do. get along intellectually.
And in fact, she helps him design a faster plane.
She takes a look at what he's designed. It's got these square wings, and she's like, that doesn't make sense. And so she finds the fastest bird and the fastest fish and sketches out a drawing of like what the two would look like as a plane. And that becomes the plane that we know today. And he calls her a genius.
Check out our new episode, Spotlight and Groundbreaking Innovators like Hedi Lamar and Billie Jean King. Presented by the Hyundai Ionic 5. Goodbye. Let's talk about modern home shopping. It's sort of become a fun side hobby, right?
Scrolling listings at night, dreaming about kitchens you've never seen or backyards you haven't even stepped foot in, all from the comfort of pretty much anywhere. Redfin knows a lot of people like you want to own, but are stuck in this browsing mode loop. That's where Redfin flips the script. With listings that update within minutes and tours you can book right from the Redfin app, you can see your dream home the moment it appears.
Now, liking a listing is easy, but actually landing it, that's where Redfin comes in. Redfin has over 2,200 agents with local expertise. And Redfin agents close twice as many deals as other agents. That means they want to help you win, not just Windowshop. Redfin is built to help you go from just looking to wait, this could actually be home.
So become the newest neighbor on the block. Visit redfin.com to start finding and start owning. That's redfin.com. I turned off news altogether. I hate to say it, but I don't trust much of anything.
It's the rage bait. It feels like it's trying to divide people. If we got clear facts, maybe we could calm down a little. NBC News brings you clear reporting. Let's meet at the facts.
Let's move forward from there. NBC News reporting for America. And we return to Our American Stories and the final segment on the rise of the National Basketball Association. When we last left off, Pete Croado, author of From Hang Time to Primetime, was telling us about how David Stern, Marvin Gaye, the television drama of the NBA, and its superstar players launched it into the success it is today. The NBA was at a high point and they were about to partner with a growing cultural force that would take them even higher.
Here again is Pete Croato. Mm-hmm. The NBA really started to become. A mainstream force in 1979 with the arrival of Matrick Johnson and Ladder Bird. 1979 is also the year that Rapper's Delight hits the airwaves.
Uh Hip hop. rap and the overall culture is a youth culture. It was especially a youth culture in the 1980s into the early 1990s. The MBA has always been about doing what's new, what's relevant. The NBA's tradition is that it has no tradition.
Partnering hip-hop with the NBA, or rather the NBA partnering with hip-hop, was really a no-brainer. Hip-hop has a youthful audience. That has money to spend. And Wants something that's new, doesn't want the same old thing, doesn't want, they don't want to listen to Mick Jagger, the Rolling Stone. They don't want to hear stories about Mickey Mantle and Jim Brown.
They want what's new. The NBA's partnership with hip-hop was a match made in heaven. Mm-hmm. Uh It's also not surprising. Because hip-hop really started as a byproduct of City culture.
Basketball is very much a city game. It did take place in gymnasiums, obviously, and it did take place in the suburbs. But basketball's biggest influence is in the cities. You don't need much room to put up a basketball court. You don't need much room to put up even a hoop.
The game really was a way for city kids to assimilate into American culture, especially Jews and African Americans. It may seem Odd. or unusual that the NBA would partner with hip-hop, but really it's not. As the NBA is becoming a youthful hip league, That's going mainstream thanks to stars like Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson. Hip-hop is enjoying the same renaissance.
MTV starts playing. rap videos. rap starts to mimic Pop songs with choruses and hooks, and also incorporating elements of rock music. For example, walk this way. You've got to fight for your right to party.
Those songs have hooks That a young fan can get into. even if they don't like rap. And it's different. It's the new rock and roll, and that's appealing to kids. And also, you have artists.
that now are really more like entertainers coming to the forefront. You have Will Smith, you have MC Hammer, you have God Help Us Vanilla Ice. They all kind of come into that era.
So as the NBA became mainstream, Hip hop became an instrument. That also generates a line of culture. and a line of clothing. that specifically sneakers. That hooks not only a young audience, but the players.
So it is a natural Marriage of the two. The two go hand in hand even to this day. All the forces aligned. with with Michael Jordan and with Nike and with the market. And here's why.
For a number of years, the NBA stars were always quote-unquote model citizens such as Julius Irving. They came packaged as team-oriented stars. such as Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. part of a rivalry. or they were just boring.
So Michael Jordan comes along. with a shoe. That is quote unquote banned by the NBA. It doesn't look like any shoe you've ever seen. It's got white and black and red.
It is completely foreign. And then you have Michael Jordan, who embodies the spirit of that shoe because he is a soloist. He is. Not part of a team, he's not established, he is brand new. He is marketed as a rebel.
By going over players, by putting the ball in the hoop in ways that many people have not seen. and he can play. He's an extraordinary player and He is somebody. That looks good on camera. He's extremely attractive.
He's a manageable height at 6'6 ⁇ , he is a matinee idol for basketball.
So all of those things come together. and turn the shoe. into a cultural force. It's not just a shoe, you are buying. the 1980s version of the leather jacket or the Davy Crockett hat.
And when it's embraced by not only basketball fans, but by hip-hop artists, by city kids, by whomever, and when clothing comes out to match the shoes, the cat's out of the bag.
So Michael Jordan. really represents The beginning of the fat of the sneaker clothing. fashion trend. in popular culture, I think. Because He was somebody who who you could represent.
who you could aspire to be. just by wearing his shoe. And if you're a teenager, And you want to be rebellious. It's very easy to chalk up $65 or $100 or $150. to become rebellious.
to become part of a movement. Especially when that movement. is represented by somebody. Who is as magnetic, who is as brilliant a player as Michael Jordan is. It's a very easy association to make, and it persists.
So if you want to be like Steph Curry or Kevin Durant, or God forbid Kyrie Irving. buying their shoe, buying their pal. is a way to get closer to them. And Michael Jordan is the start of that. DMA now is a global business.
I mean, it is worth billions and billions of dollars. It has Thousands of employees across the globe. It is constantly trying to sow its seeds of development in different areas of the world. I mean, I think Africa is now the latest continent to come under the MBA's purview.
So it is just now this behemoth. And the NBA is part of our life, whether we're online or watching it on TV. I mean, it's, you know, I think most people know who LeBron James is, they know who Kevin Durant is. They're cultural institutions. I think we forget that the NBA wasn't always like this.
The NBA wasn't always a colossus, an international colossus. Yeah. What's amazing to me is that The NBA we see today came about because of the efforts of people who loved basketball, who just loved the NBA and loved what it could be. These are people that just worked tirelessly to elevate a game that they loved and were passionate about. David Stern, Lyle Bryan.
Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan. But the MBA's rise is the result of so many people that have fallen into The Cracks of History. Men and women like Paul Gilbert, Edesser, Belficket. Ted Shaker and Arlene Weltman, these men and women who who worked tirelessly and sacrificed and sometimes embarrass themselves to turn the NBA into a part of our lives. Their efforts have been forgotten.
And it's a crying shame. The NBA's rise to success didn't come about because of Michael Jordan, David Stern, Larry Bird, and Magic Johnson. It's a story of dozens and dozens of people. working together to create what we see today. And a great job on the production by Monty Montgomery.
And a special thanks to author Pete Corrado, his book. From Hangtime to Primetime is available on Amazon and the usual suspects and what a story it tells. And it starts early. Baseball was America's pastime, football second by the late 50s, but it took Larry O'Brien, David Stern, and a bunch of others to put the NBA on the map. And indeed, it took some great players too.
Bird and Magic, also combining with rap music in this remarkable, markable merger of cultural forces. The partnership between the two, a match made in heaven, as Pete said. Then came Jordan, Nike, and the market. Let's face it, Jordan was a matinee idol, a master salesman, and a virtuoso performer. And the NBA turned into a pop culture force.
Indeed, my own daughter Reagan, for Christmas, won the Nike Blue North Carolina Air Jordans. proving that he's still, and the NBA is still a cultural force. The story of the MBA here on Our American Story. Liberty has never been just a word to we Americans. It has guided every one of our endeavors for the past 250 years.
And now it takes form in a new way. The 2026 Semi-Quincentennial Coin and Metal Program from the United States Mint. It celebrates the founding ideals that have long shaped our coinage. Available one year only, this historic collection features new coin designs, limited edition releases, and reissues. Shop new official coins at usmint.gov forward slash That's usmint.gov/slash S-E-M-I-Q.
This July 4th, come celebrate at America's Block Party, hosted by America250. America's Block Party is a camp miss 4th of July concert happening at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Experience music performances by major artists, patriotic tributes, and the kickoff to Giving Forth, helping to make July 4th the largest day of giving in American history. It's more than just fireworks. Join this landmark celebration and get your America's Block Party tickets now for $17.76 at America250.org/slash LA.
I'm U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy. We all get distracted when we drive, but how we handle these distractions can be a matter of life or death. Please put your phones on silent and take a mental note to focus on driving. Paid four by Nitza.
Hi, it's Karen in Georgia from My Favorite Murder. We cruised around LA in the Hyundai Ionic 5 and dove into the fascinating life of actress and inventor Hedy Lamar. Want the full story? Take a listen. She starts dating Howard Hughes.
And in fact, she helps him design a faster plane.
So she finds the fastest bird and the fastest fish and sketches out a drawing of what the two would look like as a plane. And that becomes the plane that we know today. And he calls her a genius. Check out our new episode, Spotlighting Groundbreaking Innovators like Hedi Lamar and Billie Jean King. Presented by the Hyundai Ionic 5.
Goodbye. Paramount Plus is now the home of all your BET favorites. What? Yes. With all new episodes of Tyler Perry's Divorce Sisters, you've always liked a little drama.
Plus, a whole new world of movies like Gladiator 2.
Now I will control an empire. Original series like The Shy. Just make sure we protect each other. And live sports like UFC. Welcome to the history books.
New home, same family. Your BET favorites are now on Paramount Plus. Subscribe now.