I got you.
Again, this is a bad comparison. I’m not even some huge LeBron fan, but you’re talking about a guy who’s been a billionaire with a mic in his face basically every day of his adult life. If he gets a little sassy sometimes, that’s the cost of living under a microscope for 20+ years.
The bigger point: he’s a billionaire with no real public scandals, raising his kids and leveraging the access he has. That’s not unique to him. Sports is full of legacy pipelines. Curry, Griffey, Kobe, Klay, Shanahan, McVay, Luke Walton, Austin Rivers, GP2 and hundreds of others all benefited from proximity and opportunity through their fathers. That doesn’t mean they didn’t have to perform, but let’s not pretend those doors open equally for everyone. Comparing that to some “overcompensation from not having a father” psych analysis is a reach.
And yeah, Bronny getting drafted to play with LeBron is fair to critique. I didn’t love that at all either. But let’s keep the same energy across the board. In the NFL alone there have been dozens of father-son coaching pipelines where the first job came directly from dad; coaches need to perform too. In the NBA there are several also. Legacy access in sports and business is normal. For some reason, when a Black player does it publicly, it suddenly becomes a character study. That double standard is what people are reacting to.
There are 10,000 other fatherless problems to pick at; and hear me... I DON'T LIKE that LeBron did it, BUT I suspect buddy doesn't even LIKE LeBron which is probably what's driving why he made this whole video. People ALWAYS move the goalposts for black folks and the shame of it is, some of it be your own people.
You make valid points all I’m saying is when you take into context he didn’t grow up with a father it helps explain some of his behavior.


